145 S.W. 622 | Tex. App. | 1912
Appellant filed this suit in the county court of Wichita county, on January 21, 1911, against appellee, seeking $1,000 damages alleged to have been sustained by appellant as a result of a wrongful arrest made by appellee in November, 1909. At the conclusion of the introduction of evidence on a trial before a jury, the trial court peremptorily instructed a verdict for appellee, and verdict and judgment were so rendered on March 10, 1911. Appellant's motion for a new trial having been overruled, he excepted and gave notice of appeal, and on the 29th day of March, 1911, filed with the clerk of the county court of Wichita county an affidavit of his inability to give an appeal bond or to pay the costs or any part thereof, and the record is before us on this affidavit, no appeal bond having been filed in the court below. Under these conditions, the first question with which we are confronted is, Does the record as a whole show that the affidavit in lieu of an appeal bond, as it appears in the record, show that article 1401, Sayles' Annotated Civil Statutes, has been so complied with as to perfect the appeal, and thereby confer jurisdiction on this court to dispose of the case on its merits? If it does, we should then dispose of the appeal on its merits. If it does not, then this court is without jurisdiction so to do.
An inspection of said article 1401 will show that hut two modes of perfecting an appeal on the oath in lieu of bond is provided; one being to make the proper proof before the county judge of the county of the residence of the applicant, and the other is to make the proper proof before the court trying the case, not before the judge trying the case. The affidavit in this case shows that at the time the appeal was attempted by making and filing the affidavit the applicant was a transient person, and therefore not a resident of Wichita county, and that, therefore, this clause of the statute *623 cannot he held to have been complied with, and it therefore remains to be seen whether or not from the record before us the appeal has been perfected by a compliance with the requirements of the statute as to the other mode mentioned.
We have reached the conclusion, after due deliberation, that this court is without jurisdiction to entertain this appeal for the reason that, as we view the matter, the record does not show that the statute regulating appeals by affidavit in lieu of bond has been complied with so as to perfect the appeal in this case. While the affidavit itself was made before the county judge who tried the case, and is we think in form and substance sufficient under the law, were there anything in the record sufficient to show that same was made before the judge in open court, or presented to him in open court after it had been made, yet there is nothing in the entire record showing either that the affidavit was presented to the trial court in term time and in open court, or even that it was made before the court in open session of court, or that he in any way judicially acted upon the same in such way as to authorize the appeal to be prosecuted on the affidavit in lieu of bond.
An examination of the authorities has convinced us that there are many apparent conflicts in the decisions of the Courts of Civil Appeals In this state on questions growing out of an attempted appeal on affidavit, though we have found no case in which the direct question here involved has been passed upon. In the case of Graves v. Horn,
The affidavit being in this condition, we think it cannot be sustained on the theory that the proof was made before the county judge of the county of the residence of affiant as contradistinguished from its having been made before the court in which the case was tried.
Believing that this court is without jurisdiction to dispose of the case upon its merits, under the authorities, and for the reasons above given, the appeal will be dismissed, and all costs incident to the appeal will be taxed against the appellant, and it is so ordered.