This is a venue case which arises under § 9a, art. 1995, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Plaintiff, Clyde E. Barber, filed this suit in Ector County against Intercoast Jobbers & Brokers for the death of his wife in a collision between defendant’s truck and the car his wife was driving. The trial court overruled Intercoast’s plea of privilege, but the court of civil appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment and ordered the cause transferred to Dawson County.
Our first problem is one of jurisdiction. Barber’s application for writ of error asserts that the decision of the court of civil appeals is in conflict with the decision in Buckaloo Trucking Co. v. Johnson,
The decision in Buckaloo was rendered on December 15, 1966. Since there was no motion for rehearing, the judgment was final after December 30, 1966. The intermediate *157 court rendered its decision in the instant case on December 14, 1966, but there was a motion for rehearing which was not overruled until January 4, 1967. Intercoast’s motion to dismiss urges that Buckaloo cannot be “a prior decision” since the court handed down its opinion one day after the court’s opinion in this case. Barber contends, however, that Buckaloo was “a prior decision” because it became final prior to January 4, the time that the decision in this case became final.
The meaning of the term “decision” depends upon the context in which it is used and the purposes served. See Palmer Pub. Co. v. Smith,
Our conclusion that the term “a prior decision” means a final decision is fortified by Rule 483, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, which states the powers possessed by the Supreme Court in acting upon an application for writ of error. It provides in part:
“In cases of conflict named in subdivision 2 of Art. 1728 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, as amended, the Supreme Court shall grant the application for writ of error, unless it be in agreement with the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals in the case wherein the application is filed, in which event said Supreme Court shall so state in its order, with such explanatory remarks as may be deemed appropriate. In cases where the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals is in conflict with a previous opinion of the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court may, in its discretion, without the necessity of granting the writ and hearing the case, reverse the same on the application for writ of error, making, at the same time, such further orders as may be appropriate.”
The quoted portion of the rule directly refers to § 2 of art. 1728 and twice uses the term “decision” in the sense of a final decision since an application for writ of error can be filed only in a case in which the decision has become final. We conclude, therefore, that a conflict with “a prior decision” means a decision that is final. This court has jurisdiction.
Our second problem is one of judicial notice with respect to the location and boundaries of counties. Barber in discharging his burden to prove that the accident occurred in Ector County introduced evidence that it happened at the intersection of 81st Street and Highway 385, four miles north of downtown Odessa. The trial court then judicially knew that the point of the collision was in Ector County. In our opinion that fact is one which is “certain and indisputable,” Harper v. Killion,
This court held as early as 1866 that a court may judicially know that the state is divided into counties, the location of the counties, their contiguity with each other and their boundaries, dimensions and extent when defined by public laws. Wright v. Hawkins,
In
Buckaloo,
supra, the court judicially knew as a certain and indisputable fact that the western boundary of Nueces County is several miles west of Robstown, and Clark-wood is between Corpus Christi and Robstown. Brown Express Co. v. Dieckman,
The court of civil appeals relied upon the case of Miller v. Burke,
Our final problem is Intercoast’s insistence that the decision of the court of civil appeals was a correct one because all of the evidence showed that the driver of its truck was outside the scope of his employment at the time and place of the accident. The court of civil appeals discussed the point but reserved judgment. According to the evidence, the driver lived in Odessa but worked out of Lamesa. The day before the fatal accident he went to Lamesa and spent the night. The next day, about noon, he drove the truck from his employer’s business destined to pick up a load of grain at Three Leagues which he was to deliver to California. He completed loading the truck at three o’clock in the afternoon and then drove west until he intersected the Lamesa-Mid-land Highway. He drove to Midland and on toward Odessa. Instead of proceeding along the main highway, at a point several miles north of Odessa he turned west on a loop to avoid the city traffic and to go directly to his home where he planned to spend the night. The accident occurred about five o’clock in the afternoon.
The evidence further showed that the driver’s employer knew he would spend the night at home and leave early the following morning for California. One of the owners of Intercoast testified that the driver had been away from home and “had to go by the house and get the clothes. I told him to go by his home and get the clothes and spend
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the night and to leave tomorrow morning.” This was a customary practice. The driver was on a direct route to his home where he was authorized and needed to go, at least to pick up clothes he would need on the trip from Texas to California. There was evidence that he was in the course of his employment. United East & West Oil Co. v. Dyer,
The judgment of the court of civil appeals is reversed and that of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
I. “The Supreme Court shall have appellate jurisdiction co-extensive with the limits of the State, extending to all questions of law arising in the following cases when same have been brought to the Courts of Civil Appeals from appealable judgment Of trial courts:
* * * * *
“2. Those in which one of the Courts of Civil Appeals holds differently from a prior decision of another Court of Civil Appeals, or of the Supreme Court upon any question of law material to a decision of the case.”
