ON APPLICATION FOR WRIT OF ERROR
We refuse the writ of error in this case, no reversible error, but we disapprove that part of the opinion which holds that Rule 324, Tex.R.Civ.P., required the plaintiff in a non-jury action to file a motion for new trial as a predicate to preserve the alleged error.
The trial court dismissed Reverend Rodney Howell’s suit after sustaining a special exception which stated that the action was barred by limitations. Plaintiff’s fourth amended petition had dropped the defendant that had been sued in the first three petitions and named a new and different defendant in the fourth amended petition. The court of civil appeals, after holding that the suit was barred, made the additional holding that plaintiff had waived his point because he failed to file a motion for new trial.
Effective January 1, 1978, Rule 324 was amended to eliminate the necessity for a motion for new trial even in most jury cases. Rule 324 states in part “A motion for new trial shall not be a prerequisite to the right to complain on appeal, in any jury or non-jury case.” At the same time, Rule 325 was repealed. That rule required a motion for new trial in certain named instances which occurred in the course of trial.
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The court of civil appeals in this case has construed Rule 324 to require a motion for new trial even in a non-jury case. A similar holding was made in
Brock v. Brock,
We disapprove the holdings in this case and Brock v. Brock. The intent of Rule 324 was to eliminate motions for new trial, but the construction given that rule by this case and Brock, actually requires motions for new trials even in non-jury cases. See Appellate Procedure in Texas § 10.1-10.5 (2d ed. 1979).
The application for writ of error is refused, no reversible error.
