Worth Steel Corporation v. Gartman

361 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 1962
Docket16351
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 361 S.W.2d 426 (Worth Steel Corporation v. Gartman) 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
Worth Steel Corporation v. Gartman, 361 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Clarence E. Gartman, plaintiff, brought a common law suit for personal injury damages against defendant Worth Steel Corporation. Intervening in the suit was a Workmen’s Compensation insurance company which was subrogated to a portion of Gartman’s right to recover damages, if any, by suit against 'the defendant. This intervenor may be disregarded in our discussion.

Trial was to a jury, and upon its verdict judgment was entered against the defendant Worth Steel Corporation. From this judgment appeal was perfected.

Judgment reversed. Cause remanded for another trial.

At the outset we are confronted with a motion to dismiss the appeal, based upon the plaintiff’s contention that the defendant failed to timely perfect its appeal and that jurisdiction to entertain the same was never lodged in this court. In the alternative to the motion to dismiss, plaintiff has moved this court to strike from the record the instrument denominated “Defendant’s Amended Motion for New Trial” (filed November 28, 1961), and the order of the trial court purporting to overrule the same (signed January 5, 1962). The motions were filed prior to the expiration of thirty days after the transcript was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals.

It appears that the defendant’s “Original Motion for New Trial” was timely filed, and that the “Amended Motion” was also timely filed if indeed its character was that of an amended motion for new trial. Plaintiff’s contention is that such was not its character because nowhere therein or appended thereto was there any request or prayer for a new trial. There was a prayer which concluded the motion, but it merely moved the court “to set aside that part of the verdict herein consisting of the jury’s answers to special issues * * * and to set aside its judgment heretofore rendered and entered against the defendant on October 31, 1961, and to enter judgment that the plaintiff and intervenor take nothing by their suit against the defendant”.

The purported amended motion for new trial was “presented” to the trial court on December 18, 1961, and a “hearing” was had thereon on January 5, 1962, with an order entered that day overruling the same. The order did not state that it was an order overruling the amended motion for new trial, but recited that it overruled “defendant’s motion captioned ‘Defendant’s Amended Motion for New Trial’ ”. Transcript was timely filed in the Court of Civil Appeals. At the same time the statement of facts was filed — under agreement of all parties that it might “be filed in the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District of Texas, as the statement of facts in this case”.

There is a dual contention made by the plaintiff in respect to the situation. First, plaintiff contends that the purported amended motion could not be treated as an amended motion for new trial, and that the only motion for new trial filed was the original motion for new trial; second, that the original motion for new trial, never having been “presented” to the trial court, was overruled as a matter of law on December 8, 1961, at the expiration of thirty days from the date of its filing (rather than forty-five days). Under the second .contention the plaintiff insists that the only proper motion for new trial in the case had already been overruled on dates of December 18, 1961, and January S, 1962, when defendant attempted to “present” the instrument purporting to be an amended motion for new trial, and,when the “hearing” was held thereon.

We believe that the plaintiff is in error in his interpretation of sec. 4 of Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 329b, “(Motion for New Trial) — District and County Court Cases”, in his contention that when a motion for new trial is not “presented” *429 within thirty days after the date it is filed it is overruled as a matter of law at the expiration of said thirty day period. The contention is based upon certain language in Chekanski v. Texas & New Orleans Railroad Co., 1957 (Tex.Civ.App., Houston), 306 S.W.2d 935, writ ref. n. r. e. The statement appears at page 937 in the right-hand column. From the whole opinion it is obvious that the language in question expressed a statement upon the law which had no effect upon the disposition of the case and therefore constituted dictum. Furthermore, we are of the opinion that it was inadvertently and unintentionally made. The unmistakable intent of the rule, as applied to the situation before us, and where there has been no formal presentation and no affirmative order overruling the motion for new trial, is that the same shall not be treated as having been overruled by operation of law until the expiration of forty-five (45) days after the date on which it was filed. Holland v. Foley Brothers Dry Goods Company, 1959 (Tex.Civ.App., Texarkana), 324 S.W.2d 430, error refused.

It is worthy of note that the original motion for new trial, which the plaintiff contends should be the only motion for new trial in the case, did not contain any adequate assignment of error upon which a point of error was founded that would require a reversal of the judgment entered in the case. Nevertheless, jurisdiction of the appeal was acquired by the Court of Civil Appeals in view of the timeliness of other “steps” in the process of perfecting the appeal, were any verity accorded plaintiff’s contention of impropriety. It could only be said that other “steps” were not in time, by reason thereof jurisdiction was not acquired by this appellate court, if the plaintiff was correct in his “30 day contention”, heretofore discussed.

The question of whether the instrument was an amended motion for new trial would be most important, for, as we have said, the original motion did not present an adequate assignment of error upon which a point of error on appeal was grounded which would justify a reversal of the judgment. By a certificate dated January 22, 1962, included in the transcript and referring to the instrument captioned “Defendant’s Amended Motion for New Trial”, the trial judge certified that the court had considered the instrument as an amended motion for new trial within the meaning of T.R.C.P. rule 329b, and that in the oral argument made thereon upon hearing on January 5, 1962 (when the order was entered overruling the motion) defendant asked that a new trial be granted, but that the court overruled the motion because he did not consider that the assignments of error therein justified the granting of a new trial.

As pointed out in the defendant’s brief the plaintiff is in the position of urging that defendant should in any event be deprived of the benefit of relying upon the assignments of error made therein because the prayer of the instrument captioned “Defendant’s Amended Motion for New Trial” did not contain what plaintiff contends are the magic words “and that a new trial be granted”. No case cited by plaintiff in support of his contention involves a motion for new trial. The cases cited involve prayers for relief, or absence thereof, in plaintiffs’ petitions upon which trials were conducted.

If the instrument in question had any effectiveness whatever it could only have been as an amended motion for new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
361 S.W.2d 426, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 1875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worth-steel-corporation-v-gartman-texapp-1962.