164 S.W. 1041 | Tex. App. | 1914
Appellant, Earl Journeay Salliway, sued appellee to recover the amount of $2,000, alleged to be due him upon a benefit certificate issued by appellee to H. B. Salliway. Ella B. Salliway filed a petition of intervention claiming the $2.000. In view of the disposition necessarily made of this appeal, it will be unnecessary to state the issues made by the pleadings. The trial before the court resulted in a judgment that plaintiff and intervener take nothing. Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and the appeal was taken by him.
Appellant presents six assignments of error. The first, second, and sixth, refer to and are based upon paragraph 5 of the motion for new trial, while the third, fourth, and fifth refer to and are based upon paragraph 6 of said motion. Said paragraphs read as follows:
"(5) Because, on the face of the pleadings and the undisputed testimony, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, and should have had judgment for amount sued for.
"(6) Because the court erred in finding that the facts and evidence in the case were not such as to estop the defendant to deny the amount claimed under his policy of insurance."
These paragraphs of the motion for new trial are too general to support assignments of error based thereon. Connor v. Saunders,
Assignments in the brief, which are not copies of those contained in the record, have often been condemned by our courts. Rules 29 and 30 for Courts of Civil Appeals (142 S.W. xii, xiii); Tabb v. Smart (Sup.) 12 S.W. 977; Horseman v. Coleman County, 57 S.W. 304; Tucker Produce Co. v. Stringer, 146 S.W. 1002; Bray v. Bank, 145 S.W. 290; Mt. Franklin Lime Co. v. May, 150 S.W. 756; Biggs v. Lee, 147 S.W. 709; Dignowity v. Sullivan,
The amendments to rules 24 and 25, made by the Supreme Court, effective January 1, 1912 (142 S.W. xii), were for the purpose of confining the appellant in the Court of Civil Appeals to the submission of only such grounds of error as were brought to the attention of the trial court in the motion for new trial. See Railway v. Pemberton (Sup.)
While the said amended article 1612 indicates a legislative intent to require a more liberal construction of assignments than had been indulged prior to its amendment, yet it shows plainly an intent to require all errors to be called to the attention of the trial court in the motion for new trial. The paragraphs of the motion for new trial upon which the assignments in this case are attempted to be based do not indicate to the court wherein his ruling conflicts with the evidence, and the matters so fully set out in the assignments in the brief were not called to the attention of the trial court in the motion for new trial. This court held in the case of City of San Antonio v. Bodeman, 163 S.W. 1043, not yet officially reported, that where a motion for new trial was filed, and afterwards formal assignments of error, an assignment embraced therein, to the effect that the judgment was unsupported by evidence in a particular not pointed out in the motion for new trial, could not be considered. We conclude that, in justice to appellee, the objections urged by it, to the consideration of the assignments of error contained in the brief, must be *1043 sustained. We therefore decline to consider the assignments of error, and, as we find no fundamental error in the record, it becomes our duty to affirm the case.
Judgment affirmed.