Sessions v. Whitcomb

329 S.W.2d 470, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1959
Docket13482
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 329 S.W.2d 470 (Sessions v. Whitcomb) 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
Sessions v. Whitcomb, 329 S.W.2d 470, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

*472 WERLEIN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment in favor of appellee, American Surety Company. Appellant sued Gail Whit-comb, d/b/a Whitcomb’s Clear Creek Farms, and appellee, to recover against Whitcomb damages for personal injuries sustained by appellant while working as a ranch or farm hand for Whitcomb. In the same suit appellant sued appellee on a voluntary workman’s compensation policy which had been issued by appellee to cover employees of Whitcomb, including appellant. Appellee filed its motion for severance and for summary judgment based upon the ground that appellant had, by filing a suit against Whitcomb, terminated any liability appellee owed to appellant as a beneficiary under said voluntary workman’s compensation insurance policy.

On April 22, 1959, the court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment without decreeing a severance. On motion of appellant, the trial court on June 3, 1959, dismissed the defendant Whitcomb. The order dismissing Whitcomb does not contain any notice of appeal, but the order granting the summary judgment on April 22, 1959, does contain appellant’s exception and notice of appeal from such order. Appellant filed his appeal bond May 16, 1959.

Appellee filed a motion to dismiss this cause of action for lack of jurisdiction, which motion this Court ordered to be taken along with the case, and must now pass upon.

Appellee contends that if the trial court’s order of June 3, 1959, dismissing Whit-comb, made the order for summary judgment of April 22, 1959 a final judgment in favor of appellee, no appeal therefrom has been perfected since no notice of appeal was given by appellant from the order of dismissal. Appellee further asserts that the notice of appeal given in the order of the trial court of April 22, 1959 granting summary judgment as to appellee, was premature and therefore insufficient to confer jurisdiction on this Court on appeal therefrom.

Appellant, on the other hand, contends that the orders of the court dated April 22, 1959, and June 3, 1959, together constitute the judgment of the court and that such judgment is appealable, and that there was a timely and sufficient notice of appeal. Appellant, in part basing his contention on Rule 306c, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, asserts that there can be no logical reason why the rule providing that a motion for new trial and appeal bond would not be held ineffective because prematurely filed, should not apply also to a notice of appeal if prematurely filed. We do not agree. The rule speaks for itself. Any extension or change in the rule must be made by the Supreme Court and not by this Court.

Under the authorities the order of April 22, 1959 decreeing the summary judgment was interlocutory. Hence, the notice of appeal contained therein was in itself premature and ineffective. We must, therefore, consider whether the order of dismissal and the order of summary judgment may be construed together so as to make the summary judgment order a final appealable judgment containing a sufficient and timely exception and notice of appeal.

Appellant’s motion for non-suit and dismissal of his cause of action against Whit-comb which the court acted on shows clearly that appellant desires to appeal from the summary judgment order and desires that the order granting the summary judgment become a final order from which he can appeal, and further that appellant desires to enter a non-suit against Whitcomb, so that the judgment of the trial court in granting the motion for summary judgment would amount to a final order and give the Court of Civil Appeals jurisdiction of the cause of action.

The order of the court was based on such motion, and reads as follows:

“The Plaintiff’s Motion for a Non-Suit having come on and been heard, *473 the Court being of the opinion that the Non-suit should be granted so that the Order heretofore entered in this cause of action granting the Summary Judgment will amount to a final order, hereby
“Orders, Adjudges and Decrees that the Non-Suit be granted; that the suit as against Defendant, Gail Whitcomb d/b/a Whitcomb’s Clear Creek Farms, is hereby dismissed without prejudice to any parties.
“Entered June 3, 1959.”

This Court will presume that the trial court had in mind the allegations contained in such motion when it recited in its order that the court was of the opinion that the non-suit should be granted so that the order granting the summary judgment would amount to a final order. When such order of dismissal was entered, the summary judgment became a final ap-pealable judgment, since it together with the dismissal order effectively disposed of all parties and issues in the case. The sole purpose of the order of dismissal is shown both in it and also in the motion upon which it is based. That purpose was to make the summary judgment a final order which, as stated in the motion, could be appealed. Rule 301, T.R.C.P., formerly Art. 2211, R.S.1925, provides that “Only one final judgment shall -be rendered in any cause * * * ” We think the rule is not violated in this cause. See Lubell v. Sutton, Tex.Civ.App., 164 S.W.2d 41, 44, writ ref., in which the court stated, “The entry of an interlocutory decree and the subsequent entry of a decree in the same cause, the effect of which latter decree is to make the former final, does not violate the provision of said statute.”

Rule 353, T.R.C.P., provides in part that an appeal when allowed by law may be taken by notice of appeal “(1) in open court, noted on the docket or embodied in the judgment, order overruling motion for new trial, or other minute of the court.” (Emphasis supplied.) In the present case notice of appeal is embodied in the summary judgment. Had the order of dismissal contained no recitation with respect to the summary judgment, we think that the notice of appeal given in the summary judgment would not be sufficient since given at a time when the order for summary judgment was interlocutory and before it became an appealable judgment. Without something to bring it forward and relate it to a final appealable order, it would remain ineffective and be unnoticed and ignored because originally ineffective. We have concluded, however, that the order dismissing Whitcomb stating that the court was of the opinion that the non-suit should be granted so that the summary judgment will amount to a final order, re-affirms the summary judgment in toto and makes it as of June 3, 1959 a final appealable judgment embodying in it a notice of appeal. We think also that the motion upon which the non-suit was based may be considered as it was before the court and was the basis of the order of dismissal. The record does not show, and no complaint is made, that appellee did not receive a copy of such motion. True, it in itself does not constitute the notice of appeal required, but reading the dismissal order in light of such motion and in conjunction with the summary judgment which was made final by the dismissal order, we are of the opinion that notice of appeal was sufficiently given and that it was unnecessary under the record in this case to give in the order of dismissal or after its entry any additional notice.

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Bluebook (online)
329 S.W.2d 470, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sessions-v-whitcomb-texapp-1959.