163 S.W.2d 824 | Tenn. | 1942
Petitioners brought suit in the circuit court of Davidson County, Tennessee, against the respondent railroad company to recover damages for the alleged wrongful killing of Helen Olilia Cantrell. The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict against the railroad company for $4,000. On the appeal in error of the railroad company, the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment and dismissed the suit on the ground that the verdict was not sustained by any material evidence and that the trial judge erred in overruling the railroad company's motion for a directed verdict in its favor.
Will C. Cantrell et al., on June 27, 1942, filed their present petition in this court complaining that certiorari was denied without first affording them the opportunity for oral argument before this court. In support of this insistence reliance is placed upon section 10639 of the Code, which is as follows: "The appellate courts are forbidden to reverse any case tried or triable by jury in the lower courts, and to dismiss the same upon the merits without giving the parties an opportunity to be heard through their counsel by oral argument in such *182 appellate court. This section shall apply to all such cases brought into said appellate courts by certiorari as well as those brought up by appeal or writ of error. (1911, ch. 25.)"
The above section of the Code must be construed in parimateria with section 10629 of the Code governing applications made to this court for writs of certiorari to the Court of Appeals, which section in the portions thereof material to the question here under consideration, is as follows: "The supreme court, or any judge thereof, shall have the right to require, by certiorari, the removal to that court for review of any case that has been finally determined in the court of appeals, upon a sworn petition, for this purpose filed in the supreme court, which petition shall state the substance of the case to be decided, and shall be accompanied by assignments of error and brief in conformity with such rules as the supreme court may prescribe; and there shall be no other method of review. Uponsuch writ being granted, the original transcript filed in the court of appeals, and the opinion and judgment of that court shall be filed in the supreme court, and, with said petition, assignments of error and briefs, shall constitute the record inthe supreme court, and no further cost bond shall be required therefor. . . . and no certiorari shall be granted unless thecase shall at the same time be set down for oral argument in thesupreme court. . . ." Chapter 100, Acts 1925. (Italics ours.)
It will be noted that this court "or any judge thereof," may grant the writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals. When the writ is granted, the case "shall at the same time be set down for oral argument." Unless the writ of certiorari be granted, the case does not get *183 into this court. It is not until the writ is granted that "the original transcript . . . shall be filed in the supreme court." If the writ be granted and the case is thereby brought into this court then, and not until then, must the case be set down for oral argument. When certiorari is denied, the result is that this court thereby refuses to take jurisdiction of the case. Code, section 10639 is by its terms applicable alone to cases "brought into" the appellate courts by certiorari, appeal or writ of error. A case is not brought "into" this court by denial of writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals. Wherecertiorari is granted under Code, section 10629, then the case must be set down for argument. Thus there is complete harmony between Code, section 10639 and Code, section 10629.
Petitioners rely on West Construction Co. v. White,
In Cunningham v. Union Chevrolet Co.,
The petition is without merit and is dismissed at the cost of petitioners. *185