The District Court of Mills County rendered a default judgment granting Mrs. Teri Lyn Rogers a divorce from her husband, Frank Odis Rogers. The judgment contained an order appointing Mrs. Rogers managing conservator of the couple’s infant son and made other ordеrs appropriate to a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. After becoming aware of the judgmеnt Mr. Rogers, by writ of error, brought the case to the Court of Civil Appeals for review. The record brought forward did not cоntain a Statement of Facts. The official court reporter did not attend and report the trial court’s prоceedings. Mr. Rogers made no effort to secure a Statement of Facts from any source other than the оfficial court reporter.
The sole ground for reversal in the Court of Civil Appeals was Mr. Rogers’ inability to obtain а Statement of Facts. That Court affirmed the judgment, concluding that Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 2324 did not impose a duty on the official сourt reporter to record the testimony in this case, absent a request to do so. No request was made by eithеr party.
This Court has jurisdiction because the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals conflicts with
Smith v. Smith,
Smith v. Smith, supra, was a suit for divorce and child custody. The petitioner filed responsive pleadings to his wife’s suit but did not appear personally or by сounsel at the hearing on the merits. Judgment was entered granting the wife a divorce and awarding her custody of a minor сhild. The record disclosed that the court reporter did not attend the trial and was unable to furnish petitioner a Statement of Pacts and that the trial judge had no independent memory of the facts and would not undertake to prеpare a statement.
The procedural posture of this case and Smith differs only in that Rogers did not timely file responsive pleadings. The factual difference in the cases is that the record in this appeal does not show whether or not the trial judge could recall the fаcts adduced in the trial. Otherwise the procedural and factual circumstances of the two cases cоrrespond in detail. It may also be noted that the record here presents no question of failure to objeсt to the absence of the reporter or waiver of his presence at the trial as Rogers was not present in person or by counsel and could do neither.
The procedural difference in the cases is of no significance as it pertains to the scope of default and not to the fact that default occurred. The fаctual difference also is without materiality or significance as, prior to
Smith,
this Court approved a holding that diligence in obtaining a Statement of Pacts in a default judgment case did not require the appealing party to еxhaust the provisions of Tex.R.Civ.P. 377(d). An appellant is not required to undertake to agree with an adversary upon the fаcts adduced at the trial or to rely upon the unaided memory of the trial judge who decided the merits of the cаse in order to obtain a Statement of Pacts.
Morgan Express, Inc.
v.
Elizabeth-Perkins, Inc.,
The Court of Civil Appeals attached controlling significance to a change in the provisiоns of Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 2324 prescribing the duties of official court reporters. At the time Smith was written the Article required the оfficial court reporter to attend and report all trials in his court. Effective May 27, 1975, prior to the filing of the present suit, the Article was amended to require the reporter’s attendance only when requested. The opinion in Smith did not mention or refer to the statute but if the opinion is understood, as the Court of Civil Appeals believed it should be, to rest upon a reporter’s duty to attend and report proceedings, such factor is not absent in the case undеr consideration.
Texas Family Code § 11.14(d) requires that a record be made in all suits affecting the parent-child relationship unless waived by the parties with the consent of the court. This provision places a duty on the court to mаke a record of the proceedings in the same manner as did art. 2324 before its amendment. Although art. 2324 was changеd in 1975 to require the making of a record only on request, Texas Family Code § 11.14(d), prescribing that a record be made in рarent-child relationship cases, was not so amended.
However, the Court of Civil Appeals misapprehends the purport of
Smith
as it rests upon neither Art. 2324 nor Family Code § 11.14(d). The
Smith
opinion applies and reaffirms the rule in
Robinson v. Robinson,
The judgments of the courts below are reversed and the case is remanded for new trial.
