210 S.W. 505 | Tex. | 1920
Lead Opinion
On April 25, 1917, the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas reversed a judgment of the District Court of Bexar County, in favor of the relators Hallie B. Dignowity et al., against the respondent Imogene T. Hambleton, for eleven thousand five hundred and thirty dollars, and remanded the cause for a new trial. Motions for rehearing were overruled in the Court of Civil Appeals on June 30, 1917. The respondent, Imogene T. Hambleton, thereupon presented her petition for writ of error to the Supreme Court, and on February 6, 1918 the writ was denied.
On August 20, 1918, the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals issued a certificate that no mandate had been taken out on the judgment reversing and remanding said cause, and the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals having denied a motion to recall the mandate, this proceeding was begun to compel, by mandamus, the recall of said certificate.
The right of relators depends on the construction of that portion of article 1559, R.S., which provides: "In cases which are, by the supreme court, or courts of civil appeals, reversed and remanded, no mandate shall be taken out of either of said courts and filed in the court wherein said cause originated, unless such mandate shall be so taken out within the period of twelve months after the rendition of final judgment of the supreme court, or court of civil appeals, or the overruling of a motion for rehearing." *615
In our opinion, the twelve months allowed by the statute for taking out the mandate runs from the date of the judgment of the Supreme Court, in a case reversed and remanded by a court of civil appeals, and in which a writ of error is denied.
The result of construing article 1559 as requiring the mandate to issue, in reversed and remanded cases, within twelve months from the judgment of reversal of from the order overruling a motion for rehearing in the Court of Civil Appeals, might be to authorize the dismissal of a cause in the trial court, for the non-issuance of mandate, while it was still pending on petition for writ of error to the Supreme Court. For, the Supreme Court might not dispose of the petition for writ of error within twelve months from the date of the last action of the Court of Civil Appeals. No such result could have been intended by the Legislature.
The evident purpose of the statute was to allow twelve months from the rendition of a final judgment for the issuance of the mandate We can see no good reason for declaring the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals to be the final judgment meant by the statute, while subject to review by this court, when it is the settled law that an appeal, with or without supersedeas, operates to continue a pending suit, so as to deprive the judgment appealed from of that finality "necessary to entitle it to admission in evidence in support of the right or defense declared by it." Texas Trunk Ry. Co. v. Jackson Bros.,
Article 7764, R.S. allows the plaintiff, who recovers land, "the term of one year after the date of judgment" to pay the amount adjudged to the defendant who has made improvements in good faith, and article 7765, R.S. allows "six months after the expiration of said year" to the defendant to pay the plaintiff the value of the land without the improvements, when the plaintiff neglects for a year to pay the amount adjudged to the defendant. It is held that neither the term of one year nor the additional term of six months, as allowed by these articles, begins to run so long as an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals or an application for writ of error to this court is pending, because the judgment is thereby deprived of the necessary character of finality. Fain v. Nelms,
The mandate in this case having been issued within less than a year from the denial of the writ of error it ought to have been recalled, and hence the mandamus applied for has been awarded by this court. *616
Addendum
On February 5, 1919, a judgment was rendered by this court awarding a writ of mandamus to Hallie B. Dignowity, Dorothy Currier and Donald E. Currier, against the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas and the judges thereof, the clerk of the court, Hon. Joseph Murray, Imogene T. Hambleton and the Southwest Texas Baptist Hospital, directing that a certain mandate be issued at any time within twelve months from the 6th day of February, 1918, upon the payment of court costs or upon the making of affidavit in lieu thereof. The grounds for the issuance of the writ are stated in the opinion of the court, reported in
When this judgment was entered there were already on file two affidavits of inability to pay the costs or to give security therefor. The affidavits were filed after the institution of the original proceeding for mandamus and were not before us when our judgment was rendered. The affidavits were made by Hallie B. Dignowity and Dorothy Currier. Donald E. Currier, who was a party to the suit pro forma as the husband of Dorothy Currier, did not make an affidavit, but that of his wife covered his inability to pay the costs or to furnish security, and showed that his failure to join in the affidavit was due to his being at the time engaged in active service with the army of the United States.
It is not denied that the same effect should be given to affidavits already on file as to affidavits which might have been afterwards filed. The sufficiency of the affidavits to entitle the relators to the issuance of the mandate, under the previous order of this court, is challenged for only two reasons. The first is that Donald E. Currier did not join in the affidavits. The second is that under a contest of the affidavits, filed in May, 1919, by the clerk and by and adverse party, the Court of Civil Appeals adjudged that the averments of the affidavits were not true.
In our opinion the affidavits substantially complied with article 1557 of the Revised Statutes, in the absence of objection thereto.
This conclusion is not different from that of the Court of Appeals in Crocket v. Maxey, 4 Tex. App., Civ. Cas., sec. 292. In that case the objection that the husband did not join appears to have been seasonably presented, and besides the affidavit of the wife did not show "that the husband, the necessary party to the suit was unable to pay the costs or give security therefor." Here, as shown above, the wife did swear to the inability of her husband to pay or secure the costs, and she stated a good reason for swearing in his behalf to the facts, which she knew.
It thus appears that within twelve months from the 6th day of February, 1918, proper affidavits were filed of the relators' *617 inability to pay the costs or to give security for same, to which no contests were made by the clerk or by any party, before the expiration of said twelve months, notwithstanding the affidavits had been on file for more than fifty days. We do not think that the judgment of this court could be fully obeyed without the issuance of the mandate under the conditions existing after its rendition, and before the expiration of the twelve months from the date of refusal of the writ of error. The relators having become entitled to the mandate, under that judgment, it was plainly beyond the power of the clerk, the parties to the suit, and the Court of Civil Appeals, to defeat the relators' right by means of a subsequent contest and hearing.
In order that our previous judgment may be executed, it is ordered that a writ of mandamus issue, directing the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals to immediately issue the mandate applied for by relators, on the affidavits filed, and that the costs herein be taxed against respondent Imogene T. Hambleton.
Opinion delivered June 9, 1920.
Mandamus awarded.