159 S.W. 135 | Tex. App. | 1913
On appeal from a justice's court appellee recovered a judgment in the county court of Jones county against the appellant, T. J. Head, for the sum of $136 as commissions for the sale of a tract of land owned by appellant. The trial in the county court was before the court without a jury, on the 2d day of March, 1912. On the 21st day of March, 1912, the court, pursuant to a request, filed his conclusions of fact and law. No motion for a new trial was filed, and the court adjourned for the term on the 30th day of the same month. An appeal has been prosecuted, appellant assigning errors which charge conflicts in the court's finding of fact, an insufficiency of the evidence to sustain certain findings, and an entire absence of evidence to sustain the judgment, also urging objections to a number of the court's conclusions of law.
We are met at the threshold of the case with a motion on appellee's part to strike out all of appellant's assignments of error. The contention, is that under the operation of rule 71a for the district courts (145 S.W. vii) and rules 24 and 25 for the Courts of Civil Appeals (142 S.W. xii), that complaint cannot be made on appeal of proceedings upon the trial, unless the matters complained of have been presented to the trial court in a motion for a new trial. Rule 23 (142 S.W. xii) provides that the record on appeal must contain assignments of error, as required by the statutes in the absence of which the appellate court will not consider any error but one of law that may be apparent upon the record, if the judgment is one that could legally have been rendered in the lower court and affirmed in the appellate court.
Rule 24 reads: "The assignment of error must distinctly specify the grounds of error relied on and distinctly set forth in the motion for a new trial in the cause, and a ground of error not distinctly set forth in a motion for a new trial in the cause and not distinctly specified in reference to that which is shown in the record, or not specified at all, shall be considered as waived, unless it be so fundamental that the court would act upon it without an assignment of error as mentioned in rule 23."
Rule 71a provides that: "A motion for a new trial shall be filed in all cases where parties desire to appeal from a judgment of the trial court, or sue out a writ of error in the cause, unless the error complained of is fundamental, except in such cases as the statute does not require a motion for a new trial." Rule 71a is an amendment that took effect in January, 1912, and has been construed by the Amarillo and El Paso courts as having been intended to apply to trials before the court without a jury, as well as to trials before a jury, and as precluding a consideration on appeal of any assignment of error unless the error has been distinctly set forth in a motion for new trial in the court below. See Davidson v. Patton,
It may be said that the statute requires motions for a new trial in the court below to be filed within two days after the rendition of the judgment, if the term of court shall continue so long, and inasmuch as the court's conclusions of fact and law in the present case were filed more than two days after the rendition of the judgment, that the assignments of error are not objectionable under the very rule of construction that we have suggested is the proper one. But while the statute is as indicated (Revised Statutes 1911, art. 2023), it has been often determined that the trial court may nevertheless entertain a motion filed thereafter (Linn v. Le Compte,
We conclude that appellee's motion to strike out appellant's assignments of error must be sustained, and, no fundamental error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.