delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent sued Petitioner, a resident of Rusk County, Texas, in Cherokee County which adjoins Rusk County. Petitioner filed his plea of privilege which Respondent controverted by invoking Exception 7 of Article 1995, V.A.C.S. Upon hearing, the evidence established that the acts of fraud were committed in Jacksonville, Texas, but no proof was ¡made that Jacksonville is located in Cherokee County. The plea of privilege was overruled. There was no formal request that the trial court judicially notice that Jacksonville is located in Cherokee County and no affirmative showing appears in the record that the trial court did so.
On appeal, Petitioner presented the one point that the trial court erred in overruling his plea of privilege since plaintiff failed to prove that the acts of fraud were committed in Cherokee County. The Court of Civil Appeals took judicial notice that Jacksonville is located in Cherokee County and affirmed.
The Courts of Civil Appeals have differed in the use of judicial notice in the context of our question; see the following cases, all with no writ history: Conner v. Manning,
This Court, speaking through Chief Justice Stayton, in Texas-Mexican Ry. Co. v. Jarvis (1891),
In Ballard v. Carmichael,
It was recognized in 1892 that “There is a growing disposition for the courts to extend the area of judicial knowledge.” Miller v. Texas & N. O. R. Co.,
“As a general rule, a court in making its conclusions, is to take no notice of facts not in evidence. * * * There are certain facts, however, which may be judicially noticed by the courts, because of their public notoriety and indisputable existence. Railroads are public highways, and it is a matter of history that important lines of railroad, once established, have remained as fixed and permanent in their course as the rivers themselves. Their locality becomes so notorious and indisputable that the courts will take notice thereof. * * * Care must be taken that the requisite notoriety exists, and every reasonable doubt on the subject should be promptly resolved in the negative.”
This Court in Turner v. Tucker,
In Reynolds v. McMan Oil & Gas Co. (Comm. App.),
After recognizing that “in making decision, the courts will take judicial notice of all matters of science or common knowledge without the necessity of proof,” the court continued by saying, “Of course, this judicial notice implies the absolute truth of the fact known, and, such fact being undisputed, its effect becomes matter of law.”
Johnson v. McMahon,
Chief Justice Cureton, speaking for this Court in International-Great Northern R. Co. v. Reagan,
In Brass v. Texarkana & Fort Smith R. Co.,
In Burtis v. Butler Bros.,
Under the safeguards of the decisions by this Court reviewed above, we hold that a district court sitting in Cherokee County can judicially notice the certain and indisputable fact of common knowledge that the entire city of Jacksonville is located in such county, and that the Court of Civil Appeals properly did so in this case notwithstanding the district court was not formally requested so to do and did not formally announce that it had done so.
We recognize the holdings of the Court of Criminal Appeals to the contrary in the field of criminal law. See Hunt v. State,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is affirmed.
