Roberts v. Landrum

3 Tex. 16 | Tex. | 1848

Opinion delivered by

Chief Justice Hemphill.

The petition for the writ of error was filed in October, 1846, and bond for its prosecution executed on the same day. No citation to the defendant in error issued until the 10th September, 1848, and she now- brings up the record, and prays for an affirmance of the judgment.

We have often ruled, that an appeal or writ of error must be prosecuted at the term succeeding the application for appeal; and consequently, neither party ean have the cause docketed at any subsequent term of the court. The defendant, it is true, had no express notice by citation, until nearly two years after the writ of error had been obtained; but the supersedeas on the execution opei’ated as virtual notice of the fact, and she should, at the first term after the suing out of the writ, have had the cause placed on the docket, and disposed of: or, by obtaining the usual certificate that the cause was not on the docket of this court, she might have had her execution below. The supersedeas lost its force after the expiration of the term of the supreme court succeeding its. issue, and the defendant might have proceeded, as if no such writ were in existence.

Citations on writs of error should issue immediately after *17the writ is sued out, with alias zaáplv/ries citations, in case the first he not served. The citation was improperly issued in this instance. The proceeding had lost all vitality, and could not be revived by a citation, which should never be issued when a term of the supreme court has intervened after the application for the writ of error.

The case is improperly on the docket, and it is ordered that the same be stricken off.

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