163 S.W. 1043 | Tex. App. | 1914
Albert Bodeman sued the city of San Antonio for nine months' salary, at $85 per month, as detective in the police department of said city. He alleged that on July 20, 1911, a commission duly signed by the mayor and attested by the city clerk of said city, under the corporate seal of said city, was issued to him appointing him to the office and position of detective in the police department of said city, he having been previously appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the city council to said office and position as provided by the charter of said city, said appointment, under the Constitution and laws of the state and charter and ordinances of the city, being for the term of two years and until his successor *1044 should be appointed and qualified; that by ordinances of said city and under the budgets thereof the salary of said position was fixed at $85 per month, payable each month, and the city council of said city regularly made provision therefor for the full fiscal years and each month during the two-year period ending May 31, 1913, and paid plaintiff such salary for each month until August 31, 1912, when, without authority of law and without action by the city council as by the charter of said city required, plaintiff was unlawfully by the mayor and city marshal discharged from the service of said city; that he was entitled to a warrant for his said salary at the end of each and every month as by the charter and ordinances of said city provided, but since said last-named date defendant has not paid plaintiff such salary and has refused to issue him any warrant therefor, though provision had been made throughout said period of time for the amount and payment of such salary for such position. Plaintiff alleged further that he had a lien upon the current revenues of the city for the fiscal year ending May 31, 1913, and prayed that said lien be established and that defendant and its officers, agents, and employés be enjoined from disbursing the funds properly applicable to his claim, and also that a mandamus issue requiring them to issue him a proper warrant for the sum due him, including interest, and requiring them to pay same out of the revenues for said fiscal year and of any other year properly applicable thereto. Defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial. Upon a trial before the court judgment was rendered awarding plaintiff $797.92, and granting the relief by mandamus and injunction as prayed for by him. Defendant appealed.
By the first and second assignments of error it is contended that the general demurrer should have been sustained. Appellee objects to the consideration of these assignments because the judgment fails to show any action on the demurrer. Our courts have frequently stated that, where the record does not show that demurrers and exceptions were called to the attention of the trial court and passed upon, they will be considered as waived. Moore v. Woodson,
It will be noticed that the case of Chambers v. Miller,
In the cases of Stansbury v. Nichols,
The sufficiency of the petition in the instant case being assailed, we must examine the same, and see whether the objections made thereto demonstrate that no cause of action is alleged. No answer having been filed, except a general denial, the petition must be tested by its averments alone. But every reasonable intendment arising upon such petition must be resolved in favor of its sufficiency. Rule 17 for District County Courts. We must consider everything as properly alleged which by reasonable construction is embraced within the allegations contained in the petition. Martin v. Brown,
Three objections are urged: (1) The failure to allege the creation by ordinance of the office of "detective in the police department" and the existence of such office ac the time of plaintiff's alleged appointment. (2) The failure to set out the ordinance which creates the office in hæc verba or in substance. (3) The failure to allege that the mayor was authorized by ordinance to employ and appoint a person to fill the office or position of "detective in the police department" for the term for which plaintiff claims to have held the office.
The failure to set out the ordinance which creates the office in hæc verba or in substance is a defect which clearly should be asserted by special exception and cannot be ground for sustaining a general demurrer. City of Austin v. Walton,
In support of indulging the intendments above mentioned, we cite the following cases: Rutherford v. Smith,
If the return of a verdict or rendition of judgment by the court sitting without a jury cures defects additional to those cured by indulging every reasonable intendment, then this is manifestly a case in which the rule should be applied. The assignments are overruled.
By the third assignment it is contended that the court erred in rendering judgment for the plaintiff because the salary was not fixed by the city council by ordinance. Objection is made to the consideration of this assignment because this ground of insufficiency of evidence was not mentioned in the motion for new trial. Said motion was filed October 23, 1913. By chapter 136 of the Acts of the Thirty-Third Legislature (Regular Session) which became a law on April 4, 1913, article 1612 of the Revised Statutes of 1911 was amended so as to read as follows: "The appellant or plaintiff in error shall in all cases file with the clerk of the court below all assignments of error, distinctly specifying the grounds on which he relies, before he takes the transcript of record from the clerk's office; provided, that where a motion for new trial has been filed that the assignments therein shall constitute the assignments of error and need not be repeated by the filing of the assignments of error, and provided further, that all errors not distinctly specified are waived, but an assignment shall be sufficient which directs the attention of the court to the error complained of."
By the terms of this act, when a motion for new trial has been filed, the assignments therein shall constitute the assignments of error, but may be repeated by the filing of formal assignments of error. We do not understand this to mean that the formal assignments of error should be literal repetitions of the paragraphs of the motion for new trial, but that such assignments must be based upon the points presented in the motion for new trial, as no authority is given for presenting additional assignments to those mentioned in the motion for new trial. We think it was the intention of the Legislature that if a motion for new trial be filed all matters relied upon as error should be called to the trial court's attention in such motion. By the concluding paragraph of the amended article an intention is evidenced to do away with matters of form which do not affect the real merits of an assignment of error, but in this case in the motion for new trial the attention of the trial court was not directed to the particular point now complained of, and, as such paragraphs raise the only questions upon which assignments of error could be predicated, we do not think the last clause of the amendment can be invoked to aid appellant's third assignment of error. Our attention is directed by the assignment to the error complained of, but, as no such error was hinted at in the motion for new trial, much less distinctly specified, we hold that it was waived. The assignment will not be considered.
Judgment affirmed. *1047