Rhoades v. El Paso & S. W. Ry. Co.

230 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 205
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1921
DocketNo. 1825.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 481 (Rhoades v. El Paso & S. W. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhoades v. El Paso & S. W. Ry. Co., 230 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 205 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

In the above cause now pending in this court’on writ of error from the *482 district court of Oldham county, the plaintiff in error has filed an application for a writ of mandamus to require the Hon. Reese Tatum, judge of said court, to file a bill of exceptions tendered by the plaintiff in error. A brief statement of the case and proceedings leading up to the plaintiff in error’s contention in reference to the said bill of exceptions is necessary to an understanding of the merits of the application.

The plaintiff in error brought the suit against the railway company for damages for personal injury. The jury answered the issues of liability adversely to the plaintiff, and the court entered judgment for the defendant. The jury also found that plaintiff was not permanently injured, and that $1,000 would compensate him for the injury sustained, for which he claimed the railway was responsible. Plaintiff in error filed a motion for new trial, alleging, in addition to other grounds not necessary to set' out here, the following: (1) That “said case was not tried by a fair and impartial jury”; (2) that, “by reason of bias and prejudice of the jury which tried said cause, plaintiff’s property has been taken from him without due process of law, as specifically shown in the following paragraphs of the motion”; (3) that “several of the questions submitted to the jury, the answers to .which were vital to his recovery, were answered adversely to him, without any evidence whatever to support such answers”; and in support of this statement it was alleged that the finding of the jury that plaintiff was not permanently injured was contrary to the uncontroverted evidence; and also that the finding that plaintiff was damaged only in the sum of $1,000 was contrary to the uneontradicted evidence in the case, which showed that he had sustained damages in a much larger amount. The motion for new trial having been overruled, the plaintiff tendered to the trial judge an instrument, styled “Plaintiff’s' Bill of Exception No. 2,” which set out the fact of the filing of the motion for new trial and that it contained the grounds already mentioned. These statements in the bill were followed with a statement filling some 22 typewritten pages, which counsel for plaintiff in error contends is “all the testimony introduced on the trial bearing on the foregoing issues,” and that the language just quoted preceded the statement of such testimony. Then following such statement the bill recited that the court overruled the motion for new trial, to which action the plaintiff in error excepted, etc. The plaintiff in error, in the application for mandamus, alleges that the said district judge refused to approve said bill of exceptions so tendered and “refused to make out and file any bill of exceptions by which the matters complained of by plaintiff in error could be presented to this court in such way as the same could be ' considered by the court.” A bill of exceptions No. 2 does appear in the transcript, though it does not appear whether the judge or counsel for plaintiff in error tendered it to the clerk for filing. The plaintiff in error alleges that the bill contains many alterations and interlineations made by the judge, which changed the meaning of the bill presented by the attorney and not in conformity with the facts. In particular it is contended that the word “not” was interlined in the language preceding the statement of facts made in the bill so that the language of the bill was made to read thus: “The following is not all the testimony introduced on the trial,” etc. The prayer of the application is that the said judge “be cited by writ of mandamus to appear before this honorable court and file a true bill of exceptions substantially as requested by plaintiff in error,” etc. There is no statement of facts brought up in the record in this court.

[1, 2] We think the petition should be dismissed. A bill of exception is not the proper way to bring up for review the action of the court on the motion for new trial. Rule 53 for district and county courts. But, if it were proper to take a bill of exception in such case if a decision of the assignments in the motion for new trial and referred to in this bill depended oh the evidence introduced oh the trial, then the appellant should bring up a statement of facts. A bill of exception cannot be considered as a substitute for a statement of facts, and we do not think that the plaintiff in error had the right to have these facts stated in the bill, since we could not consider them in detei> mining the assignments ■ referred to. Dull v. Drake, 68 Tex. 205, 4 S. W. 364; Round-tree v. City of Galveston, 42 Tex. 612; Caro-lan v. Jefferson, 24 Tex. 230; Cates v. McClure, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 459, 66 S. W. 224; Texas Midland Railway Co. v. O’Kelley, 203 iS. W. 152. In the case of Dull v. Drake, supra, the Supreme Court said:

“We know of no authority for bringing to the knowledge of this court the facts proved upon a trial of the cause, through the medium of a bill of exceptions. Such a bill brings to our attention rejected testimony, or such as has been admitted over objection; but such as was introduced without complaint, and formed part of the ease made before the court or jury, must find its place in the statement of facts; otherwise it will not be noticed.” •

This being the law, it would do the plaintiff in error no good to have this bill of exception made to read as he alleges it should read, and the mandamus would be useless.

[31 But, even if it were proper practice to take such a bill and to incorporate the evidence in the bill of exception in this way, we do not think we could supervise the making of the bill of exceptions as the plaintiff *483 in error would have us áo. Eustis v. Frey, 204 S. W. 117; Neville v. Miller, 171 S. W. 1111, and authorities cited in those two cases. The statute provides how a bill of exceptions may he secured and the bill prepared by the trial judge contested. E. C. S. arts. 2065-2067; article 1607. We know of no other .way. The trial judge has no right to change a party’s bill of exception presented to him, over such party’s objection. In the event the party presenting the bill does not agree to the modification suggested by the judge, it is the duty of the judge to prepare a bill in accordance with the provisions of the statutes, and it may be that the appellate court would, in a proper case, have the power by mandamus to require the trial, judge to pursue such course. The appellate court could not, however, retry the case and tell the trial judge what he should put in the bill. Authorities above cited.

[4] But if the trial judge, upon presentation of the bill, should modify it, and the party presenting it should take such bill so modified and file it, without objections, he is bound by the modifications, and cannot attack the bill appearing in the record, in the appellate court. Brunner Fire Co. v. Payne, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 501, 118 S. W. 604; Jolley v. Brown, 191 S. W. 180, paragraphs 5-8. As already stated, the transcript contains the bill of exception as changed by the district judge, and to the bill is a qualification in which the said judge states that the proceeding is unknown to him, and that the statement does not contain all of the testimony produced on the trial, and is not approved as a statement of the facts produced upon the trial of said cause.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhoades-v-el-paso-s-w-ry-co-texapp-1921.