299 S.W. 847 | Tex. | 1927
This is a certified question from the Ninth District. Upon an inspection of the record, we have reached the conclusion that the certificate should be dismissed. The certificate first gives a history of the transaction involved in the suit with much detail, upon which the pleadings were evidently based, concluding with the statement that the trial court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to find in favor of the appellee $40,000, upon which judgment was entered in accordance therewith, and the further statement that the case was pending in the Court of Civil Appeals for the Ninth District. The reason given for certifying the questions to the Supreme Court is that these questions appear to be of much importance in connection with the corporation laws of the State of Texas, in consequence of which the Court of Civil Appeals concluded that it was advisable to certify to the Supreme Court the following questions:
Art. 1851 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925, provides:
"Whenever there shall arise an issue of law which a Court of Civil Appeals should deem advisable to present to the Supreme Court for adjudication, the Presiding Judge shall certify the question to be decided by the Supreme Court."
In the case of Taylor et al., appellants, v. Higgins Oil
Fuel Co. et al., appellees (
"This clearly contemplates that an issue of law involved in a pending case rather than the case as a whole should be certified. Such has been the holding of our Supreme Court in numerous cases. It was never contemplated by the Legislature that the duty devolved *183
upon the Court of Civil Appeals to decide a given case could be transferred to the Supreme Court through the medium of a certificate. If this were permissible it would follow in those cases where, by statute, the jurisdiction of the Court of Civil Appeals is made final that the Supreme Court would in truth be called upon to decide the case, in effect exercising the jurisdiction made final by statute in the Court of Civil Appeals." Citing Owens v. Tedford,
An inspection of the certificate in this case shows that it is subject to the objections quoted in the case above cited as well as in the case of Owens v. Tedford and many others which might be cited.
We therefore recommend that the certificate should be dismissed.
The opinion of the Commission of Appeals dismissing certified questions is adopted, and the dismissal order certified to the Court of Civil Appeals.
C. M. Cureton, Chief Justice.