14 Tex. 594 | Tex. | 1855
This was a suit for injunction against a judgment from a Magistrate’s Court. The petitioners aver that they applied for and obtained a writ of certiorari, from the Clerk of the District Court, under the act of February 10th, 1852, but that after the law had been adjudged unconstitutional, by the Supreme Court, the cause was, on motion of defendant, dismissed; that more than ninety days had then elapsed, from the date of the judgment; that the failure to apply for a writ of certiorari, from the District Court, in proper time, had arisen from their mistake in bringing up the cause under the law of the 10th of February, 1852. Many grounds were set forth for the relief. The injunction was issued ; but on the coming in of the answer, it was dissolved, and the petition dismissed. The first question is, whether the mistake of the plaintiffs, as to the validity of the writ of certiorari, under the law of 1852, would give them a right to bring up the cause -in this mode, on a showing of sufficient grounds for the grant of a new trial; and we are of opinion that this must be answered in the affirmative.
The plaintiffs, in bringing up the cause by certiorari, issued from the Clerk, relied, by mistake, upon the validity of a Stat
But it is unnecessary to state, in detail, the reasons why such mistake of the law, as that made by the plaintiffs, should not operate to their prejudice, as the point, in relation to a like mistake, was decided in the case of Miller, adm’r, v. Hall, 12 Texas, 556.
There, an appeal was taken from a judgment of a Justice, before the law authorizing such appeal was pronounced unconstitutional, and it was held in substance, that the right of the appellant, to a new trial, should not be thereby prejudiced, provided he could not have, by reasonable diligence, been apprised of the decision, until too late to prosecute the ordinary remedy by certiorari.
There is no doubt that the appellants, in this case, were not apprised, until after the expiration of the statutory limit for certiorari, that the law, under which they were prosecuting their rights, had been pronounced unconstitutional; and we are of opinion that the fact of their not suing out a legal writ of certiorari, in the proper time, should not defeat their right to a new trial, provided their shewing of merits be otherwise sufficient.
The appellants allege various grounds for a new trial, of which I shall consider but one; and I will refer to some of the facts of the case, that this may be understood. The appellants were sureties of one Mansfield Garret, a Constable, in whose hands had been lodged a writ of attachment against
The petition avers, and this is admitted in one part of the answer, that it was proved Waggoner never had owned more than one horse at a time since he became a citizen of Texas ; and the defendant answers that he does not remember that there was any proof of Waggoner’s citizenship. This was not essential or necessary; for, although the Statute employs the phrase “ every citizen,” yet this is not to be taken in a restricted sense, as designating only the native born or naturalized citizen, but in its general acceptation and meaning, as descriptive of the inhabitants of the country. There is no evidence as to whether Waggoner was a single man or the head of a family; but this was immaterial, for the Statute extends as well to single men, or individuals, as to married men, or heads of families. The terms are, every citizen or head of a family—that is every individual independent of,
It appears, then, - from the Statute, that Waggoner’s horse was not liable to the attachment. The question is, whether exemption of the horse will extend to the saddle and bridle. It is very clear that by these reservations, the Legislature intended a real, substantial benefit. A horse was not reserved because he was a horse, but because of his useful qualities and his almost indispensable services ; but what would be the benefit of a horse, without shoes, or without saddle and bridle, or without gears if employed for purposes of agriculture. It
Mr. Waggoner had, therefore, no property on which the
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be in all things reversed, and the cause be remanded for further proceedings according to-law.
Reversed and remanded.