Guy Aldridgе appealed from a trial court judgment awarding a recovery from him by North East Independent School District of damages in the sum of $30,000.00. The Court of Civil Appeals dismissed the appeal upon a holding that the trial court’s judgment was not a final judgment.
School District’s suit was based upon an alleged breach of a written contract between it and Aldridge. By the terms of the contract Aldridge agreed to sell and School District agreed to buy a tract of 20.963 acres of land at a price of $3,500.00 рer acre, and Aldridge obligated himself to construct a sewer line along a section of the southern boundary and streets along the northern and western boundaries of the tract. The petition alleged that School District had fully -performed its obligations, but that Aldridge had failed-to construct the sеwer line and the streets. Aldridge’s amended answer included a plea in abatement, a general denial, a plea that the contract was in reality made by School District with King-G-Hills Development Company *895 for which he acted only as agent in executing the contract, and, with permission of the court, a cross-action against King-O-Hills Development Company to recover any sum which he might be adjudged liable to pay to School District. At a later date he filed a supplemental answer in which he pleaded that School District was estopped to assert its claim against him. King-O-Hills was duly cited and filed its answer to the cross-action. The record indicates that on June 5, 1964, the case was set for trial on the jury calender for the month of October, 1964.
School District moved for summary judgment on its claim against Aldridge for the damages sued for, or, alternatively, on the issue of Aldridge’s persоnal liability for damages for breach of the contract. Al-dridge filed an answer to the motion in which he asserted that there was an issue of fact concerning his personal liability inasmuch as School District knew that in executing the contract he was acting only as agent for King-O-Hills Company, and also an issue of fact concerning the amount of the damages. On July 8,1964, the trial court granted School District’s motion on its alternative prayer and rendered judgment that Aldridge was personally liable for damages for breach of the contract. The judgment also directed that “this cause prоceed to triál upon the sole remaining issue of the amount of damages to which the plaintiff is entitled.”
On October 5, 1964, the attorneys for School District and the attorney for Al-dridge entered into a written stipulation that the damages suffered by School District as a result of the failure to construct the sеwer line and streets amounted to $30,000.00. Thereupon, the court rendered judgment that North East School District recover of and from Guy Aldridge the sum of $30,000.00 with interest and costs. The judgment was approved as to form by the attorneys for both parties. There is no mention in the judgment of the third-party defendant, King-O-Hills Company, and no disposition is made therein of the cross-action by Aldridge against such defendant. It was because of the failure of the judgment to dispose of the cross-action that the Court of Civil Appeals held that it was not a final judgment. It is that holding which we are called upon to review.
The finality of judgments for ap-pealability has been a recurring and nagging problem throughout the judicial history of this State. We have steadfastly adhered through the years to the rule, with certain exceptions not applicable here, that an appeal may be prosecuted only from a final judgmеnt and that to be final a judgment must dispose of all issues and parties in a case. Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Fort Worth & N. O. Ry. Co.,
In Linn v. Arambould,
*896
In 1896 this Court decided Rackley v. Fowlkes,
“The proposition seems to be sound in principle' and well supported by authority that where the pleadings and judgment in evidence show that the pleadings upon which the trial was had put in issue plaintiff’s right to recover upon two causes of action, and the judgment awards him a recovery upon one, but is silеnt as to the other, such judgment is prima facie an adjudication that he was not entitled to recover -upon such other cause.”
The Court arrived at the rule by indulging “the presumption that the [trial] court performed the duty devolved upon it upon the submission of the cause by disposing of every issue presented by the pleadings so as to render its judgment final and conclusive of the litigation * * Taking no notice of the rule announced in Linn v. Arambould, or of the distinction between rules governing finality of judgments and those relating to res judicata, the Court in Davies v. Thomson,
The decision -in Davies v. Thomson obviously did not necessarily settle the issue of finality of a judgment which granted relief to a plaintiff but failed to dispose expressly of a cross-action or counterclaim by the defendant against the plaintiff. The Courts of Civil Appeals were badly divided in their rulings on the finality of judgments of that character. The issue was settled by this Court in favor of finality in Trammell v. Rosen,
In Burton Lingo Co. v. First Baptist Church of Abilene, Burton Lingo Co. sued a number of defendants, including a contractor and the sureties on his bond, on an account for materials furnished the contractor. A joint answer was filed on behalf of the contractor and the sureties. Bankruptcy was pleaded as a defense on behalf of the contractor, and the sureties pleaded their suretyship, and by сross-action sought a recovery over against the contractor. At the conclusion of the evidence the trial court instructed a verdict against the plaintiff on its claim against the contractor, and in favor of the plaintiff against the sureties. No instruction was given with respect to the sureties’ cross-action. The trial court’s judgment decreed that the plaintiff recover the amount of its account from the sureties, but it neither disposed of nor mentioned the sureties’ cross-action against the contractor.- The sureties appealed. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the judgment was not a final judgment and dismissed the appeal,
Notice should be taken of the holding in Davis v. McCray Refrigerator Sales Corp.,
There are a great number of decisions by Courts of Civil Appeals and by the Commissions of Appeals dealing with finality of judgments in various fact situations. It would serve no good purpose to review them here. Analysis of the decisions we have discussed is sufficient to lеad us to the statement of a rule for determining, in most instances, whether judgments in which parties and issues made by the pleadings are not disposed of in express language are, nevertheless, final for appeal purposes. When a judgment, not intrinsically interlocutory in character, is rendered and entered in a case regularly set for a conventional trial on the merits, no order for a separate trial of issues having been entered pursuant to Rule 174, Texas Rules of Civil *898 Procedure, it will be presumed for appeal purposes that the Court intended to, and did, dispose of all parties legally before it and of all issues made by the pleadings between such parties. A claim duly severed under Rule 41 is a “case” within the meaning of the foregoing rule. The rule will be subject to the exception created by Davis v. McCray Refrigerator Sales Corporation; but it will apply tо separate claims of the plaintiff, cross-actions and counterclaims by defendants against the plaintiff, cross-actions, by defendants against other defendants and cross-actions by defendants against third-party defendants. Of course, the problem can be eliminated entirely by a cаreful drafting of judgments to conform to the pleadings or by inclusion in judgments of a simple statement that all relief not expressly granted is denied.
The rule announced disposes of the question to be decided in this case unless the statement contained in the court’s summary judgment is regarded as an order for a separate trial of the issue of damages. As heretofore noted, that judgment decreed that Aldridge was personally liable to School District for damages caused by breach of the contract, and then directed that “this cause proceed to trial upon the sole rеmaining issue of the amount of the damages to which the plaintiff is entitled.” We are not disposed to regard the quoted order as one entered under Rule 174 for trial of the separate issue of the amount of damages. The order speaks of the “cause” proceeding to trial of a particular issue; it does not speak of a separate trial of an issue as a preliminary matter or as independent of final trial o'f the cause. It indicates that at that stage of the proceedings the court overlooked the fact that under the pleadings there were other issues and parties to be disposed of when the case was reached for trial on the October, 1964, jury docket.
Under the rule announced, the presumption is that the judgment entered on October 7, 1964, disposed of Aldridge’s cross-action against King-O-Hills Development Company; and in the absеnce of a contrary showing in the record, we hold that the judgment entered on that date was a final judgment.
The proper judgment to be rendered by this Court is one reversing the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and ordering the cause reinstated on the docket of that court for consideration of the appeal on its merits. See Bay v. Mecom, Tex.Sup.,
Notes
. Emphasis ours throughout unless otherwise indicated.
