30 Tex. 291 | Tex. | 1867
This is a writ of error sued out upon a judgment of the district court of Harrison county, rendered upon an award of arbitrators, making said award the judgment of the court, and decreeing execution for its enforcement.
There are twenty-six assignments of error, many of them predicated upon papers, dates, &c., not found in the record. Upon an examination of the record, we find the entry of the judgment, which embodies, by way of recital, the agreement to submit and the award of the arbitrators. This, and the proceedings on the application for writ of error, is everything shown in the transcript. There is not a single file-paper of the district court copied into the re
The twelfth assignment of error charges .error in rendering judgment upon an award made during the term of the court at which judgment was rendered. This assignment is sustained by the record in its allegation of facts, and, in our opinion, is well taken. It appears from a recital of the judgment that the award of the arbitrators was made on the 18th day of April, 1866, and the record, while it does not disclose the day on which the judgment was rendered, does show that it was rendered during the term of the district court of Harrison county commencing on the 19th day of March, 1866. It follows necessarily that the award was made during the term of the court at which the judgment was rendered.
While liberal presumptions in favor of-this mode of settling disputes have uniformly been indulged in by this court, it has always been held that, in order to entitle
If any doubt should remain as to what is meant by the “first regular term,” as used in the statute, it is dispelled by the concluding clause of the same section, which says: “But should either party appeal from the decision of the arbitrators, the appellant shall file his application with the clerk of the district court within the first three days of said court, wherein the case shall be tried de novo” &c., &c. [Paschal’s Dig., Art. 66, Note 249.] The entry of this judgment on the award at the spring term, 1866, is in express contravention of this section of the statute. The plaintiff in error could have waived the time and consented to the entry of the judgment at that term. But the record does not show that she did this, and such consent or waiver cannot be presumed. Hor can her presence in court, or a knowledge on her part of the motion to enter the judgment
Judgment reversed, and cause
Remanded.