182 S.W. 1158 | Tex. App. | 1916
This suit was brought by appellants to recover of appellee the value of a race horse shipped by W. B. Freeman, from Dallas, Tex., to El Paso, Tex., on appellee's line of railroad. It is alleged that while en route the horse was taken with shipper's fever from exposure and want of attention, and died in a few days after reaching its destination. Appellee is charged by appellants with negligence in not properly caring for the horse while in its care and custody, negligence in failure to exercise ordinary care in transporting the horse within a reasonable time. The view we take of the case we need not further state the issues. The case was submitted to a jury. A verdict was returned in favor of appellee under a general charge submitting only the issue of negligence in the alleged failure to exercise ordinary care to transport the horse within a reasonable time. Appellants filed an amended motion for a new trial, which the court heard and overruled.
Appellants submit two assignments of error, each referring to paragraphs in the motion for new trial, as the basis for the assignments, and each assignment followed by several propositions thereunder, but neither of the assignments conform to the statute and rules for the preparation and submission of cases to appellate courts. They each fail to correctly copy in the brief as the basis for the errors assigned, the corresponding ground for a new trial as stated in the motion. Article 1612 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by the Thirty-Third Legislature (chapter 136, p. 276), makes the grounds assigned in the motion for a new trial, where such motion is filed, to constitute the assignments of error. The Courts of Civil Appeals have uniformly held that the rules for briefing cases contemplate that the assignments of error in the briefs shall be true copies of the corresponding paragraphs of the motion for new trial, and not rewritten or reconstructed assignments or grounds. Ruth v. Cobe,
We deem it unnecessary to copy the grounds stated in the motion for new trial, and the corresponding assignments in the briefs, as the grounds in the motion and the assignments in the briefs are lengthy; but an inspection of the two discloses that no effort was made to correctly copy in the briefs as assignments of error the grounds stated in the motion. Judge Hendricks, of the Seventh Court of Civil Appeals, in Edwards v. Youngblood,
For the reasons stated in this opinion, the assignments cannot be considered. The case is affirmed.