OPINION ON APPELLEE’S MOTION TO DISMISS
Appellant Linda Polley sued appellee Rex Odom for property damage when the commercial building she leased from Odom was consumed by fire. The trial court signed a partial summary judgment order in favor of Odom on November 29, 1995, and later signed a take-nothing judgment on April 30, 1996, disposing of all the issues in the cause. Polley tendered her motion for new trial to the district clеrk on May 29, 1996, and she filed a cash deposit in lieu of bond on July 25, 1996.
In a motion filed in this court on December 2, 1996, Odom, relying upon
Arndt v. Arndt,
In her response Polley asserted that, after receiving Odom’s motion to dismiss, she paid the filing fee on her motion for new trial, although she admitted that it was six months’ overduе at the time of payment. Recognizing the untimeliness of the filing fee, Polley argued that this court should follow the holding of the San Antоnio Court of Appeals in
Spellman v. Hoang,
a case essentially identical to the one before us, to conclude that Polley’s tеnder of her motion for new trial extended the appellate timetable, notwithstanding the latefiling of the filing fee, and that this court thereby obtained jurisdiction over her appeal.
In
Jamar v. Patterson,
the Supreme Court considered the issue of whether a motion for new trial was effective to extend the appellate timetable when it was tendered to the court clerk within thirty days of the judgment’s signing but the $15 fee was not paid until more than thirty days after the judgment.
In finding that the appellant’s motion for new trial was timely, at least insofar as the appellate timetable was concerned, the Supreme Court held that a motion for new trial is “conditionally filed” when it is tendered to thе district court and that the date of tender controls for purposes of the appellate timetable.
Jamar,
In
Tate v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Inc.,
the Supreme Court again addressed a similar issue to the one in
Jamar,
although with a slight difference in the facts.
The appellee in
Tate,
relying upon language in
Jamar
that a trial court should not, absent “emergency or other rare cirсumstances,” consider a motion for new trial until the fee is paid, argued that the appellant’s motion for new trial was ineffective to extend the appellate timetable because it was filed after his motion for new trial was overruled by operation of law.
Id.
at 84;
see Jamar,
The Supreme Court, however, held that the appellant’s motion for new trial was effective to extend the appellate timetable.
Tate,
The facts of the case before us represent one step further along in the progression from
Jamar
to
Tate.
Here, not only did the appellant fail to pay the filing fee within the time the trial court could rule on her motion for new trial, she also failed to pay it before the trial, court lost its plenary authority over the cause.
See L.M. Healthcare, Inc. v. Childs,
In
Spellman
and
Ramirez v. Get “N” Go #103,
Odom’s motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction is denied.
Notes
. The court in
Arndt v. Arndt
wrote, "[A] motion [for new trial] will not act to extend the appellate timetables if the required $15 fee is not paid before the motion is heard or before it is ovеrruled.”
. Notwithstanding the language of section 51.317, the filing of the motion for new trial
*625
obviously would not be due at "the time the suit or action is filed.”
See
Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. § 51.317(a),(b)(2) (Vernon 1988 & Pamph.1997);
Arndt,
