ON APPLICATION FOR WRIT OF ERROR
This is an eminent domain proceeding in which special commissioners were appointed and made an award of $3,200.00. The award was filed with the Judge of the County Civil Court at Law No. 1 of Harris County on August 31, 1972, and neither party filed objections within the time provided by Art. 3266, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ. St. On October 11, 1972, the award was entered in the minutes and made the judg
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ment of the court. On October 20, 1972, the landowners, who are petitioners here, filed a motion to set aside the judgment and extend the time for filing objections. After a hearing at which evidence was introduced, the trial court sustained the City’s plea to the jurisdiction and denied the petitioners’ motion on the ground that, no timely objections to the award having been filed, the court had no jurisdiction to decide any issue raised by the motion. Petitioners appealed, and the Court of Civil Appeals dismissed the appeal because it concluded that the proceeding had never become a civil case and that no appeal would lie from the trial court’s judgment.
When no timely objections to a condemnation award are filed and judgment is entered on the award, there is no appeal from that judgment. Pearson v. State,
The motion filed by petitioners in the trial court contains no allegation of fraud, accident or mistake and does not purport, on its face, to invoke the equitable powers of the court. A statement of facts was tendered for filing in the Court of Civil Appeals 70 days after the trial court rendered judgment denying the motion, and a motion for extension of time for filing the statement of facts was overruled by the intermediate court. The propriety of that action has not been brought here for review, and without a statement of facts there is no basis in the record for treating the motion in the trial court as a petition for a bill of review. On the present record it cannot be said that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in dismissing the appeal and the application for writ of error is accordingly Refused, No Reversible Error. *295 children reached age of 18 years or until further ordered by the court was ambigúous as to father’s obligations when children reached age of 18 and did not support comtempt proceedings against father, who reduced his payments by one-quarter as each of the four children reached age of 18.
