152 S.W. 852 | Tex. App. | 1913
This is a suit instituted by appellee against Fred Mauritz to recover the value of certain hay on 400 acres of land, which it was alleged appellee had sold to Mauritz. The latter answered that he had bought the hay for appellants, of which firm he was a member, and he asked that the firm be made a party, and that he be dismissed from the suit. Appellants appeared and answered. The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee against appellants for the sum of $362.72, of which amount appellee remitted $137.66.
Appellants, under the law, had 30 days in which to prepare and file a statement of facts (Gen. Laws of 1911, pp. 264-268), although the county judge seemed to proceed on the theory that they had only 20 days. That part of the old statute which provided for the 20 days in which to make up a statement being in conflict with the act of 1911, it is repealed thereby. There are, however, portions of chapter 18, Revised Statutes of 1895, which have been carried into the Revised Statutes of 1911, which do not conflict with the acts of 1911, and consequently are binding, among the number being article 1380, Rev.Stats. of 1895, and 2069, Rev.Stats. of 1911. In that article it is provided: "If the parties do not agree upon such statement of facts, or if the judge does not approve or sign it, the parties may submit their respective statements to the judge, who shall, from his own knowledge, with the aid of such statements, make out and sign and *853 file with the clerk a correct statement of the facts proven on the trial; and such statement shall constitute a part of the record."
The parties to this action failed to agree to a statement of facts, and each side submitted a statement to the county judge of the purported facts which he certifies "were contradictory on important issues." He further certifies that "I, with the aid of these statements, was not able, of my own knowledge, to determine all the facts proved, and since the trial I have asked members of the jury who tried the case what their recollections of the facts were on certain of said important issues and upon the information thus gained in part, I have made up and now file this as a correct statement of all the facts proved on the trial of this cause." It is clear from the certificate that the statement of facts was not made out by the county judge "from his own knowledge and with the aid of such statements," as required by statute. The effect of holding conferences with jurymen who had placed a construction upon the evidence adverse to appellants was to allow them to make out a statement to sustain the verdict they had rendered. That action might be proper if the law permitted it, but after they have rendered a verdict the powers and duties of jurymen cease, and the judge is made the sole arbiter. The trial judge is given authority to make out a statement of facts in case of disagreement between the parties, but the law provides the sources of knowledge from which he must draw his facts and does not authorize a statement made up from the memory of jurors, or any one else, except that of the judge. It follows that no statutory statement of facts is before this court, and it is the claim of the appellants that the statement is incorrect and does them great injury. Appellants have been deprived of a substantial right given them by law, and through no fault of theirs, and it would be perpetrating a wrong on them to have their case decided in this court upon a statement of facts not prepared according to law. Hilburn v. Preston, 32 S.W. 702. There is conflict between the case cited and the case of Anderson v. Walker,
The only question that can arise in this case is whether or not appellants should have applied to this court for a mandamus to compel the county judge to prepare a statement of facts. Appellee admits that the statement prepared by the county judge is not a legal statement of facts, but insists that appellants cannot be heard to complain because they should have applied for a mandamus from this court. The following cases are relied on to sustain the contention: Middlehurst v. Collins,
The remedy by mandamus being futile and vain, appellants must be deprived of their right to a full, fair hearing in this court unless they can obtain relief here, and the only means given this court to afford relief to appellants is to reverse this cause and give them another trial in the lower court. They have done all they could to have this cause properly before this court, and should not forfeit their rights on account of the treacherous memory of a trial judge. They will not be allowed by this court to suffer therefrom.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.