3 Tex. 18 | Tex. | 1848
delivered the opinion of the court.
There appear to have been other points made in*the district ■court, but the only ground relied on in argument for a reversal of the judgment, and the only question which is deemed to require particular notice, is as to the propriety of the ruling of the court in refusing a continuance.
It does not appear, and it is difficult to conceive, upon what ground a continuance was refused. It was a first application, and went even beyond what, has ever been required by any statute, upon the first application for a continuance. It embraces, indeed, a literal compliance with the requirements prescribed on a second application. [Acts of 1848, p. 110.] It does seem, therefore, that a continuance ought to have been granted. And in this conclusion we are confirmed, when it is seen that in the progress of the trial the testimony of Frederick Bissell, one of the witnesses, on account of whose absence the continuance had been moved, was most material and essential to prove his signature to the receipt for one hundred dollars.
That the evidence then was material, and that the defendant was denied the benefit of it, and apparently without any fault of his, is undeniable. In view of these facts, we cannot resist the conclusion that injustice may have resulted to the defendant in the trial. They at least afford, in the language of Blackstone(3 Com. 392), “ strong probable grounds to suppose that the merits have not been fairly and fully examined, and that the decision is not agreeable to the justice and truth of the case.”
It seems clear that the party was entitled to a continuance, and the only question, we think, which can arise is, whether this court will revise the decision of the district court refusing it. Upon, tins question there is a diversity of decisions and
In the case of Ward et al. vs. Boone, decided by the late supreme court (Dallam, 561), the question was considered, but not decided, the court being of opinion that a continuance in that case had been rightly refused, or that the objection was. not rightly taken. A majority of the judges, however, seem to have been of opinion that the discretion of the court upon an application for a continuance, being a legal and not an arbitrary discretion, was subject to revision; and since that case, at least, such it is believed has been regarded by the profession as the rule which must prevail in our courts.
Our legislature has seen fit to prescribe certain rules applicable to this subject, and it can scarcely be supposed that the discretion of the judge can rise superior to these rules. Such a supposition would elevate judicial discretion above the law of the land. It would make it, in effect, arbitrary and absolute. Such a principle would be intolerable, and cannot be recognized.
When there is no rule, or when the rule is inapplicable, or does not afford a perfect guide, then there is room for discretion ; and, from the necessity of the case, it must exist. There may be cases to which no known rules or fixed principles can-be applied; and the discretion which must be exercised cannot be the subject of revision. But when there are known rules of action prescribed, there can be nowhere a discretion to dispense with those rules. Especially can there be no discretion to disregard those positive regulations which have been established by the law-making power for the government of the courts. Where the legislature has undertaken to prescribe the course which a party shall pursue, and the rules he shall observe to entitle him to a continuance, we suppose they in
If, in the first instance, there had been a doubt as to the materiality of the testimony sought in this case, that doubt, it seems, must have been removed on the trial. And the defendant, without any apparent fault of his, having been deprived of his evidence, and what seems to have been his just defense, a new trial, we think, ought to have been awarded. [See 8 Smedes & Marshall, 401.]
We are of opinion, therefore, that the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
After the foregoing opinion was pronounced, the case was re-investigated by the court, upon the suggestion of the counsel
Since the judgment was pronounced in this case, our attention has been directed to some discrepancies in the record, which were not noticed in the opinion, for the reason that they were deemed immaterial.
The answer, which appears in thé record, consists of a plea of payment, couched in very general terms, and an amended plea, which is that noticed in the opinion; both certified to have been filed on the 16th day of March, 1848 — the latter, however, is entitled of the fall term, 1848. It appears that at the fall term, 1848, after the overruling of a motion for a continuance, the defendant asked leave to amend his answer, which leave was given by the court; but there is no amendment in the record other than that made, or at least stated by the clerk to have been filed at the former term. It has been suggested that this amendment was not in fact made until after the refusal of the continuance, and the concurrence of the leave to amend, with the entitling of the plea, favors this supposition.
It has also been suggested that the application for a continuance in the record was not, in fact, as it appears, a first, but a second application. If this be so, there must have been the most culpable negligence and carelessness on the part of the clerk. But we have no evidence, of which we can take judicial cognizance, in support of these suggestions. Uo diminution of the record has been suggested by either party — no c&rtiomri for a more perfect transcript is asked — and unless this had been done, or the verity of the record questioned in a manner of which we can judicially take notice, we must regard the record as perfect, and hold conclusive the positive statement of the clerk, that the amended answer was filed, on the 16th of March, 1848, whatever reasons we may have to suspect there may have been some mistake committed.