120 S.W.2d 831 | Tex. App. | 1938
March 26, 1938, final judgment was entered in this case against appellants, Edgar Hanks, et ux., in favor of appellee, Texas Employers Insurance Association; on that day the lower court duly entered appellants' notice of appeal to this court. June 23, 1938, within ninety (90) days after appellants had duly perfected their appeal to this court, but more than seventy-five (75) days, they presented to our Clerk their transcript and statement of facts in this cause, and requested that they be filed. On the day they were received, the Clerk notified appellants, in writing, that their record would not be filed "because received too late." July 9, 1938, appellee filed its motion "to affirm on certificate;" July 13, 1938, appellants filed their motion "to require the Clerk to file transcript and statement of facts." September 20, 1938, we entered our order consolidating these two motions, and our further order granting appellee's motion to affirm on certificate, and overruling appellants' motion to require the Clerk to file their transcript and statement of facts. These matters are now before us on appellants' motion for rehearing.
We do not analyze appellants' authorities, nor do we express an opinion on the construction given by the court to the practice act in issue in those cases. It has been the uniform holding of this court to read Art. 1839 into, and make it a part of, Art. 2092. This is the first time our construction of this Article has been challenged. We adhere to our construction because, thereby, we are enforcing in this district a uniform practice regulating appeals. Art. 1839, as amended, was passed long subsequently to the enactment of Art. 2092; as we construe its language, it is broad enough to regulate appeals from all courts.
Appellants' motion for rehearing is overruled.