Western Union Telegraph Co. v. White
Western Union Telegraph Co. v. White
Opinion of the Court
This case is before us on a motion filed herein by defendant in error to dismiss the cause from the docket *959 of tins court; the motion being based on the following grounds:
First. “Because, at the time the petition and bond for writ of error herein were filed with the clerk of the district court on September 23, 1911, a valid appeal of this case, and of the same cause of action and matters in controversy in which the enforcement of the judgment was suspended and superseded, was pending in this court and had not been abandoned, and was not disposed of until October 3, 1911, so that the filing of said petition and bond was improper and unauthorized, and this proceeding is improperly before this court.” Under which the following proposition is submitted: “A writ of error cannot be legally sued out during the pendency of a valid appeal in the same cause of action, where the judgment has been superseded.”
Second. “Because this court is without jurisdiction to hear and determine this cause, for this: The judgment of the district court herein was rendered on September 24, 1910. A valid appeal was taken from said judgment upon a supersedeas bond. Said appeal was pending before this court on September 23, 1911, being cause No. 10, when the petition and bond for writ of error were filed with the district clerk. Said appeal was set down for submission in this court for October 2, 1911. On September 27, 1911, plaintiff in error filed briefs in this court in said appeal, and on October 2, 1911, filed therein a contest of the motion by defendant in error to dismiss said appeal, and appeared before this court by its counsel, Joe Barwise, Esq., of the firm of Spoonts, Thompson & Barwise, and John W. Veale, Esq., and argued and urged said appeal, and contested the motion by defendant in error to dismiss said appeal, and protested against this court sustaining said motion. Plaintiff in error, through its counsel, directed' that no citation be issued on the filing of the petition and bond for a writ of error until a later date, and not before September 30,1911, and no citation was issued until October 4, 1911, and no action taken in prosecution of the writ of error until an adverse decision of this court in said appeal. Wherefore the acts, conduct, and proceedings of plaintiff in error and its counsel in said appeal, after filing the petition and bond for writ of error herein was a waiver and abandonment of said writ of error until October 4, 1911, at which time 12 months had elapsed, and the right of plaintiff in error to appellate proceedings had elapsed and become barred and forfeited.” Under which the following propositions are submitted: (1) “A writ of error must be sued out within 12 months from the date of the judgment, rather than from the date of the overruling the motion for a new trial.” (2) “The filing of a petition and bond for writ of error, without bona fide intention of having citation issued thereon until a later date, did not interrupt the • time provided by statute for suing out a writ of error.” (3) “The right to procure a writ of error herein by plaintiff in error, after the abandonment of such right until after the lapse of 12 months, cannot thereafter be revived and reinstated to give the proceedings the effect from the date of filing.” (4) “An appeal may be abandoned and a writ of error prosecuted within the proper time; but in this instance it appears conclusively that there was no abandonment of the appeal until after the expiration of 12 months within which a writ of error could be sued out.”
The right to have the cause dismissed by the defendant in error on the grounds urged or under the record, considered as a whole, is vigorously assailed by plaintiff in error in its reply to said motion to dismiss.
To the end that what we say in disposing of the motion may be the more clearly understood, in the light of the record in this case, we think it advisable to make the following statement of the facts found by us to be fully borne out by the record, and on which we base the conclusions we announce herein:
Judgment was rendered in the district court of Potter county in this case, in favor of defendant in error against plaintiff in error, on September 24, 1910, and within the time allowed by law an appeal was prosecuted by filing and procuring to be approved in the trial court a proper superse-deas appeal bond, and a proper transcript and statement of facts were also filed within due time in the proper Court of Civil Appeals, and through a proper order, made by the Supreme Court, said cause was duly transferred to and filed in this court. Appellant, in that appeal, not having filed its briefs in the appellate court within proper time, and having failed, in the judgment of this court, to make a proper showing for having so failed, in response to a motion filed in this court in that cause, this eomjt, on October 3, 1911, dismissed said appeal. 140 S. W. 125. Plaintiff in error herein appeared through counsel in that appeal, both by written reply and in person, and resisted the motion to dismiss that appeal on October 2, 1911, being the date on which the motion was submitted. On September 23, 1911, while the appeal above mentioned was still pending in this court, and after appel-lee therein had filed her motion to dismiss said appeal, which was then pending and undisposed of in this court, filed through an agent its petition and bond, being a superse-deas bond for writ of error, with the clerk of the district court of Potter county, and at the same time procured said clerk to approve said bond, and also at the same time notified said clerk not to issue the citation in error until its counsel could see said clerk the following Monday (September 25, 1911); the purpose of plaintiff in error’s counsel in requesting said clerk not to issue citation in error until September 25, 1911, being that *960 he could see at that time the clerk, and discuss with him matters that should be contained in the citation in error, to the end that it .would surely be regular and legal when issued. On Monday, September 25, 3911, said counsel, who resided in Ft. Worth, Tex., did see said clerk and discuss said matters with him at that time, and was informed by said clerk that because of other official duties it would not be possible to issue the process for several days; that said citation was not issued until October 4, 1911, when same was with due diligence served, and within less than 90 days after the service of the citation in error, plaintiff in error caused to be filed in this court a proper transcript and statement of facts, together with its briefs, all of which were filed in this court in this cause on December 26, 1911. The motion to dismiss this proceeding was filed in this court on January 2, 1912, by defendant in error, and plaintiff in error filed its reply thereto on January 12, 3912.
Before proceeding to a discussion of the questions presented by defendant in error, we call attention to the fact that the right •of appeal is one guaranteed by our Constitution, and should never be denied, except under very reasonable and liberal rules and regulations which may become necessary, looking to the rights of litigants and the ends of substantial justice. Shelton v. Wade, 4 Tex. 147, 148, 51 Am. Dec. 722; Eppstein & Co. v. Holmes & Clain, 64 Tex. 560. That the right of appeal contemplates that the cause should be disposed of on its merits in the appellate court we think there can be no doubt, except in cases where the party be deprived of that right as a result of some reasonable, ,necessary, and positive provision of law or rule of court.
Defendant in error herein elected to exercise the rights guaranteed to her under said rule 39, and this court in that proceeding awarded her her full rights under that rule. Had defendant in error in this proceeding resorted to the rights guaranteed her under said rule 42, no delay in a final disposition of this litigation could have resulted; but this she did not do. Having elected to insist upon her rights on that appeal, as conferred under said rule 39, and acquired them, the fact that that has resulted in plaintiff in error in this proceeding being able, under its legal rights, to insist upon this proceeding being heard in this court on its merits furnishes no just or legal cause for complaint on the part of the defendant in error, as was held, in effect, by our Supreme Court, in the case of Thompson v. Anderson, 82 Tex. 238, 18 S. W. 153.
For the reasons above stated, we think defendant in error will be deprived of no legal right as a result of the delay incident to this proceeding being heard and considered by this court on its merits; and it follows from what we have said that the motion of defendant in error to dismiss this proceeding should be, in all things, overruled, and it is so ordered.
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