ON MOTION TO SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD
Deerfield Land Joint Venture and DB-WS Limited Partnership (collectively *609 “Deerfield”) move this Court for leave to file seven pretrial depositions as part of the record on this appeal. Southern Union Realty Company (“Southern Union”) does not oppose the motion and has filed its own motion seeking leave to filе four of the same seven depositions in a supplemental transcript, because it intends to rely upon that deposition evidence itself for its argument on appeal. For the reasons given below, we deny the motions.
Deerfield sued Southern Union on several claims, including claims based on the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. Southern Union answered, but did not seek affirmative relief. Both parties filed motions for summary judgment; the motions were later supplеmented. Southern Union’s motion for summary judgment was granted and Deerfield’s motion was denied. The order results in a take-nothing judgment against Deerfield and in favor of Southern Uniоn, and constitutes a final judgment.
Singleton v. LaCoure,
During discovery, the parties took at least seven depositions, all of which were transcribed. They apparently tendered the transcriptions of those depositions to the clerk of the district court, who, relying on rule 206 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, declined to file the complete texts of the depositions and filed only copies of the court reporters’ certificates. TEX.R.CIV. P. 206(1). Rule 206 was amended by order of July 15, 1987, to become effective January 1, 1988. Order of the Supreme Court of Texas, 50 TEX.B.J. 850, 860 (1987). Before the amendment, rule 206(1) required the court reporter to file the сomplete deposition with the clerk of the trial court. Tex.R.Civ.P. 206(1).
The certificates of the seven depositions were filed with the district clerk, and the certificates appear in the transcript prepared by the clerk. Yet the district clerk’s file stamp does not appear on the reporter’s transсriptions of the complete depositions. There is no other indication that the depositions in their entirety were actually filed with the district clerk or that thе trial court considered them at the time that it granted Southern Union’s motion for summary judgment.
See Munoz v. Gulf Oil Co.,
The seven depositions at issuе, not having been before the trial court, are not properly part of the record on this appeal.
Marek v. Tomoco Equipment Co.,
The parties request that the record bеfore this Court be supplemented with these depositions, because the parties have agreed that they should be included in our record. They rely on rule 55(b) оf the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, which provides that, “[i]f anything material to either party is omitted from the transcript or statement of facts, bеfore submission the parties by stipulation ... may direct a supplemental record to be certified and transmitted by the clerk of the trial court.... The appellate court shall permit it to be filed unless the supplementation will unreasonably delay disposition of the appeal.”
In their trial pleadings, the partiеs copiously referred to the depositions that were never filed. Some of the motions and responses did no more than to quote unverified portions оf the depositions. While some of the summary judgment motions and responses contained extracts from the depositions attached as exhibits to the *610 pleadings, these extracts were never properly authenticated or supported by affidavit. We note that, while the motions and responses do have, attаched as exhibits, certain documents that have been properly authenticated, the parties overlooked the need to authenticate deposition extracts not otherwise placed before the trial court.
Rule 207 provides that “[a]t the trial or upon the hearing of a motion or an interlоcutory proceeding, any part or all of a deposition taken in the same proceeding, insofar as admissible under the Texas Rules of Civil Evidence, mаy be used by any person for any purpose against any party who was present or represented at the taking of the deposition or who had reasоnable notice thereof.” TEX.R.CIV.P. 207(l)(a).
Compare Sturm Jewelry, Inc., v. First National Bank, Franklin,
The portion of a deposition upon which a movant for summary judgment relies must bе offered as summary judgment evidence. If the deposition has not been previously filed independently with the trial court, the deposition must then be offered as аny other summary judgment evidence is offered. The law is clear on how evidence is to be brought forward in a summary judgment proceeding.
See Robinson v. Bullock,
If an attorney has an originаl deposition and wishes to rely upon the deposition in its entirety to support a motion for summary judgment, he or she can attach the entire deposition, with thе original court reporter’s certificate to authenticate the deposition, to the motion as an exhibit. If an attorney has only a copy of а deposition or wishes to rely only on excerpted portions of a deposition (so that the excerpted pages are copies), he or she can nonetheless attach the copy or the page copies as an exhibit to the motion for summary judgment, together with a copy of the сourt reporter’s certificate, and his or her own original affidavit certifying the truthfulness and correctness of the copied material. The deposition mаterial is then filed, as an exhibit to the motion for summary judgment itself, and placed before the court; it has been authenticated by the court reporter’s original certificate or by the attorney’s original affidavit.
Instead, the parties now request that we file, in this Court, depositions that were never placed before the trial court. We cannot do so, even with the parties’ stipulation. We are required to consider only the evidence tendered or admitted at the time of the summary judgment hearing.
See Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. v. Griffith,
Deerfield’s motion for leave to supplement the record and Southern Union’s sub *611 sequent motion for leave to supplement the record are denied.
