Knodel v. Equitable Life Ins. Co.

221 S.W. 941 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1920

TAYLOR, J.

This suit was by plaintiffs in error to recover on two life insurance policies issued on the life of Herman Knodel by the Equitable Life Insurance Company, the obligations under the policies being subsequently assumed by one of the defendants in error, Great Southern Life Insurance Company. Judgment was rendered by the district court denying recovery on the ground that the policies lapsed on account of failure to pay the premiums. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 193 S. W. 1138.

Under the law providing the time in which motions for rehearing may be filed in the Court of Civil Appeals, the time for filing such motion in this case expired on April 19, 1917. The motion which appellant (plaintiffs in error) sought to have filed reached the court by mail on the morning of April 20th. Upon the refusal of the clerk to file it, appellants filed a motion, with affidavit attached thereto, asking leave to file the motion nunc pro tunc, which was overruled.

The Committee of Judges in granting the writ expressed the view that they were inclined to think the Court of Civil Appeals erred in refusing to allow plaintiffs in error to file the motion for rehearing, citing Sams v. Creager, 85 Tex. 497, 22 S. W. 399; Vin*942son v. W. T. Carter & Bro., 106 Tex. 273, 166 S. W. 363.

[1] It is essential to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to review a case of this character, for the application for writ of error to show that a motion for rehearing was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals presenting the points on which the writ is asked. Rule 1, Sup. ,Ct. Rules, §' e. (159 S. W. viii). It appears from the application in this case that such motion was not filed; and, unless the Court of Civil Appeal’s refusal to permit the motion to be filed was error, the application should be dismissed.

The motion with the attached affidavit was not included in the record when sent up from the court below, and is not among the papers in the case. Upon suggestion of the Supreme Court, the clerk sought to bring up the motion; but the clerk of the Court of CiviJ Appeals advised that he was unable to locate it.

The petition for the writ, however, contains the following statement of the grounds set up in motion and affidavit:

“That the United States mail clerk instead of placing said letter which contained said motion, in the United States post office, at San Antonio, took the same out of the United States mail box at the Southern Pacific Depot where the same had been placed by plaintiffs in error’s agent, on the evening of April 19, 1917, at about 7:15 o’clock, and mailed same on the train >n the Southern Pacific going east at about 11:30 p. m., and it again reached San Antonio, Tex., on the morning of April 20th by the Southern Pacific train reáehing San Antonio about 7 o’clock April 20, 1917, and was then delivered to the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals, which will more fully appear in said motion and affidavit by Ernest Williams attached thereto, which said motion is among the records of the clerk of Court of Civil Appeals at San Antonio.”

It does not appear from the forgoing statement that the mail clerk, before mailing on the train the letter containing the motion received it at such time on April 19th that it could have been delivered by him at the post office in time for it to have been delivered thereafter in due course on that date at the office of the Court of Civil Appeals.

[2] In the absence of a showing that a failure to file the motion resulted from accident, or some cause beyond the control of plaintiffs in error, we do not feel warranted in concluding that the Court of Civil Appeals, cognizant of all the facts, erred in refusing permission to file.

The case of Sams v. Creager, supra, holds that the reasons shown in the affidavit accompanying the motion for rehearing, as to why the motion in that ease was not filed within the time prescribed by law, furnished no excuse for such failure within the rule stated, and dismissed the application for the writ. In Vinson v. W. T. Carter & Bro., supra, the Court of Civil Appeals overruled a motion for leave to file the motion for rehearing, and subsequently overruled a second motion of the same nature. The Supreme Court dismissed the petition for writ of error for the reason that it was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals more than 30 days after the overruling of the first motion for leave to file the motion for rehearing.

Nothing is suggested in either the Creager or Vinson Case to indicate that the Court of Civil Appeals was in error in this case.

We recommend that the application for the writ be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.

PHILLIPS, C. J. We approve the judgment recommended in this case.

<S=^>3Tor other eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes

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