Southern Pacific Co. v. Winton

66 S.W. 477, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 503, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 477 (Southern Pacific Co. v. Winton) 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
Southern Pacific Co. v. Winton, 66 S.W. 477, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 503, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 329 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

EEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by Minnie Win-ton, as surviving wife, and Annie H. Winton as the mother, of Benjamin *505 <S. Winton, against appellant and the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company to recover damages occasioned by the death of Benjamin, who was alleged to have been killed by the defendant’s negligence, when in the employ of appellant as a brakeman and while attempting to couple two passenger cars equipped with mismatched couplers—one a Miller hook and the other a Janney coupler.

The defendants answered by general demurrer, a plea of not guilty, and pleaded specially, assumed risks; contributory negligence; disobedience by decedent to rules of the company; that the cars between which he was killed came beyond the State of Texas and appellant was obliged by the laws of the State to receive and transport them without delay, and that it was a part of the duty of decedent’s employment to inspect such ears and report any imperfections or defects therein.

Messrs. Patterson & Wallace, attorneys at law, claiming an interest in plaintiff’s cause of action, through contract with Minnie Winton authorizing them to sue for plaintiffs on this cause of action and agreeing to .give them one-half of the recovery, intervened in this suit. The court having sustained exceptions made by plaintiffs to the petition of intervention, the defendants, by a trial amendment in the nature of an inter-pleader, prayed to be protected against the claim of interveners, and asked that they be retained as parties. However, the petition of intervention was dismissed.

The case was tried before a jury, whom the court peremptorily instructed to return a verdict in favor of the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, and submitted the case on the law and facts against the appellant only, against whom a verdict was returned in favor of Minnie Winton for $10,500, and in favor of Annie H. Winton for $2500. From the judgment entered on this verdict the Southern Pacific company has appealed. Messrs. Patterson & Wallace have also ¡appealed from the judgment dismissing their petition in intervention.

Before considering the questions of fact or law arising from the trial, we will first determine a preliminary question of jurisdiction, and then dispose of interveners’ appeal. There are two district courts for El Paso 'County,—the Thirty-fourth and Forty-first judicial districts. This suit was originally instituted in the Thirty-fourth district, and on April 20th it was transferred to the Forty-first. On June 30, 1900, it was retransferred to the Thirty-fourth. On November 15, 1900, it was again transferred to the Forty-first, where, on the 10th day of January, 1901, the case was tried, and, on the court’s announcing after argument that it would instruct a verdict for defendants, the plaintiffs took a nonsuit, and judgment of nonsuit was entered. On February 15th, 1901, the Forty-first district court, on motion of plaintiffs, transferred the case to the Thirty-fourth district, and on February 18, 1901, the Forty-first -district court set aside its judgment of nonsuit. The case was after-wards, on the 27th of May, 1901, tried in the Thirty-fourth district, when the judgment appealed from was rendered.

The appellant, upon these matters shown from the record, by its first *506 assignment of error complains that “the court erred in hearing the cause and in rendering judgment therein, as said court was without jurisdiction and its proceedings and judgment are void.”

In passing upon- the question raised by this assignment we can only consider such matters as are disclosed by the record. This requires us to exclude from our consideration, as being no part of the record, the affidavit of appellees’ counsel and certificate of the clerk, made after the appeal was perfected, and filed for the first time in this court, to the effect that the record does not speak the truth, and that in fact the order transferring the cause to the Thirty-fourth district was made after the one setting aside the judgment of nonsuit. If there were a mistake in the record of the court as to the respective dates of these orders it should have been corrected, on motion, in that court. Its records as disclosed by the transcript import to us absolute verity. It is for the district court,—not an appellate tribunal,—to correct a mistake in its minutes. We have no authority of law to consider papers filed in this court for the purpose of contradicting the minutes of the court from which an appeal is prosecuted, or of the court from which the cause was transferred to the one which rendered the judgment. For can we agree with appellees’ counsel in the assertion that the orders of transfer made by the Forty-first district are no part of the record and can not be considered on this appeal. If this were so, there would be no means of showing, after a case had once been transferred from the court wherein it was originally instituted to the other district court, how it ever got back on the docket of the court which made the first transfer. When a case is transferred, all the orders and proceedings of the court making the transfer are certified by the clerk and are transmitted together with the original papers in the case to the court to which the transfer is made, and become ipso facto a part of the record in the cause.

Looking alone to the record for the purpose of determining this question of jurisdiction, we find that on the 15tli day of May, 1901, after the date of the last order of transfer to the Thirty-fourth Judicial District and of the order setting aside the judgment of nonsuit, the plaintiffs filed in the court of the Thirty-fourth Judicial District their “second amended original petition” in this cause, and that on the 23d day of the same month the interveners likewise filed in said court their “second amended plea in intervention.” No citation on either of these petitions was issued to the defendants after the nonsuit was entered, nor did either of them up to the date of the trial appear or file any pleading or any other paper in the cause. The judgment of nonsuit did not destroy nor bar plaintiff’s cause of action. After it was entered they had the right to renew their suit in any court having jurisdiction of the subject matter and person of the parties. It can not be contended that the court of the Thirty-fourth Judicial District did not have this jurisdiction. If, then, it should be conceded that the order of February 15, 1901, was inoperative because of the existence of the judgment of non-suit, and that therefore this cause was not transferred from the Forty- *507 first district, it would follow that, as the so-called “second amended original petition” stated the cause of action of which the Thirty-fourth district court had jurisdiction, it was the institution in that court of a suit against the defendants upon the same subject matter involved in the old suit pending in the court of the Forty-first Judicial District.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 477, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 503, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-co-v-winton-texapp-1901.