OPINION
This is an appeal from a final judgment ordering appellant, Bumice Joe Birdo, take nothing from appellees, Dr. J.M. Holbrook, Sharon E. Nelon, and Tarrant County, Tеxas. Birdo has perfected this appeal from the judgment.
We affirm.
Birdo submitted a hand-printed brief to this court. Briefs “may be typewritten or printed.” TEX.R.APP.P. 74(j). The ordinary meaning of the wоrd “print” may include either handprinting or the product of a printing press. WEBSTER’S NINTH NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 935 (1988);
see also Hatch v. Turner,
Birdo’s twеnty-seven-page brief is in a different and more legible handprinting than his seven-page reply brief or the approximately 300 pages of handprinted documents filed in the trial court in the case at bar. Nonetheless, reading this quantity of handprinted material is a cumbersome, time-consuming process. This is not the first time Birdo has been before this court. This court may take judicial notice of its own records.
Victory v. State,
The State has not complained of Bir-do’s handprinted briefs, but we find them
unacceptable.
Cf. In re Martin-Trigona,
Other courts have employed a variety of restrictions to control
pro se
plaintiffs.
Procup,
In his first ten points of error, Birdo contends the trial court abused its discretion when it permitted Nelon additional time to respond to requests for admissions and allowed Holbrook to amend his response to a request for admission. Birdo inundated the defendants аnd the trial court with a flood of repetitious, confusing, handprinted documents. The Tarrant County District Attorney represented Nel-on in the instant case, but was also defense counsel in another action in which Birdo was plaintiff. The District Attorney misfiled Birdo’s fifth request for admissions to Nelon with the other case and failed to timely answer the request. TEX.R.CIV.P. 169(1). Birdo’s requests for admissions improperly asked for admissions on questions of law.
Gaynier v. Ginsberg,
In his fourth request for admissions directed to Dr. Holbrook, Birdo requested he “[ajdmit or deny that each allegation made in plaintiff’s First Amended Original Complaint are [sic] true as to you.” Due to a clerical error, Holbrook’s counsel answered “admit” instead of “deny.” In addition to his general denial, Dr. Holbroоk had already denied the same or similar requests in his answers to the first three requests for admissions. The trial court granted Dr. Holbrook’s motion to correct the resрonse.
TEX.R.CIV.P. 169(1) is a tool for the fair and expeditious disposition of litigation. The rule is not intended to be a trap for the unwary.
Taylor v. Lewis,
[A] negligent garnishee is no more entitled to protection that [sic] any other negligent party, and he is as much bound to look after the proceedings against him, and protect himself from an improper judgment, as a defendant in an ordinary suit is. If, by his failure in this respect, the plaintiff gain [sic] an advantagе over him, he is without relief.
Id. Burke does not discuss rule 169(1), but Birdo would have us interpret this language to mean the trial court abused its discretion. Nelon and Dr. Holbrook were, to sоme degree, negligent in misfiling or giving the wrong answer to requests for admissions, and Birdo seeks to maintain the advantage he obtained through these admissions. Nelon and Dr. Holbrook are not without relief.
The trial court could consider the redundant, harassing nature of Birdo’s discovery tactics. Birdo could not hope to gain new informаtion from his repeated requests on the same issues, and his continued discovery served no purpose beyond setting traps for the defendants. The trial court *414 did not abuse its discretion. Birdo’s first ten points of error are overruled.
In his eleventh and final point of error, Birdo contends the trial court abused its discretion in denying his pеtition for a writ of
habeas corpus ad testificandum.
The trial court ruled that Birdo would be allowed to proceed by affidavit in lieu of personal appearance. The right to acсess to the courts does not give Birdo an absolute right to leave prison to appear in court.
Brewer v. Taylor,
Lawful incarceration brings about the necessаry withdrawal or limitation of many privileges and rights, a retraction justified by the considerations underlying our penal system. Among those so limited is the otherwise unqualified right given by seсtion 272 of the Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C. sec. 394, [now 28 U.S.C. sec. 1654] to parties in all the courts of the United States to “plead and manage their own causes personally.”
Price v. Johnston,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Birdo сontends our order directing the Clerk not to accept any more of his hand-printed briefs violates TEX. CONST, art. I, sec. 13. We write to clarify this point. TEX.R.APP.P. 100(c).
The provision оf Section 13 that “[a]ll courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, good, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course оf law” is based largely upon Magna Carta which states in Chapter 40: “To none will we sell, to none deny or delay, right or justice.”
TEX. CONST, art. I, sec. 13, interp. commentary (Vernon 1984) (emphasis addеd). Deciphering Birdo’s lengthy handprinted documents inevitably delays the other business of this court. We do not violate the “open courts” provision by creating and enforcing requirements which promote the expeditious administration of justice.
Platel v. MaGuire, Voorhis & Wells, P.A.,
Finally, Birdo contends we shоuld reverse the judgment of the trial court and render judgment in his favor so he will have sufficient funds to hire attorneys to handle his other pending cases. We are not at liberty to adopt this method of financing Birdo’s litigation.
Appellant’s motion for rehearing and en banc reconsideration is denied.
