Shaw v. Garrison
Shaw v. Garrison
Opinion of the Court
Appellee recovered judgment in the justice court in precinct No. 7 of Dallas county against appellant for $175, as brokers’ commissions for services rendered in the sale of real estate for appellant. On appeal to the county court of Dallas county, at Jaw, and on jury trial, verdict in same amount was returned for appellee, followed by judgment, from which this appeal is taken.
hence in no respect controlled by the technical and particular provisions of the amendments and their construction referred to. “Such a request is neither a charge given nor a requested charge refused, and it stands upon a very different footing.” G., H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Cody, 92 Tex, 632, 51 S. W. 329; Texarkana & Ft. Smith Ry. Co. v. Casey, 172 S. W. 729. The objection in the one case is to the law as applied by the trial judge arising upon the facts, while in the other case the objection is to the method and manner of directing the jury what facts they shall determine from the evidence. It is, however, also true “that a request for a submission upon special issues should be made before main charge is given to the jury.” G., H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Cody, supra. The question for determination then is, Does the bill of exception show that the request to submit the case upon special issues of fact was made before the charge submitting the case generally was read to the jury? The manner and form of taking bills of exception to any ruling or action of the court are controlled by articles 2058-2060, 2062-2067, R. S. 1911, the provisions of which are unchanged by the recent amendments of the Practice Acts, save in reference to giving and refusing charges upon the law of the ease. The substance of these provisions is that the bill, when taken, shall not necessarily be couched in particular or formal words, but only that the ruling of the court which is complained of shall be shown with certainty and definiteness, and that in cases like the instant one, as ruled by the Supreme Court, it shall appear that the request for submission upon special issues was made before the case was submitted to the jury upon a general charge. The bill in this case contains all the necessary formalities, and recites that the request to submit the case upon special issues was made “upon the completion of the evidence, and before the argument of counsel was begun, and in due time,” which was refused by the court, and which “in each instance” was excepted to by appellant. We may, in inverse order, discard the recitation in the bill that the exception was taken in due time as a conclusion of its author and as not showing what actually occurred, and in like manner discard the recitation in the bill that the request was made “before the argument of counsel was begun,” as insufficient for the reason that when this case was tried argument followed the charge (article 1954, Vernon’s Sayles’ Stats. 1914), and yet and nevertheless the bill is, in our opinion, sufficient, since it affirmatively shows that the request was made “upon the completion of the evidence,” which is the exact time to make such request; in fact a request before the conclusion of the evidence would be before either party could determine either the necessity of such submission or whether the issues were determinable by that method. Any other construction would be strained and technical *944 and at variance witli the plain import of the unambiguous statement in the hill that the request was made on “completion” of the evidence. Statutory rules, such as the Practice Rules, invoked by appellee, where mandatory, and where the exact and * precise things to be done are prescribed, must be exactly complied with, since such was the obvious intention, or rather plain direction, of the Legislature. On the point at issue here, however, there are no such provisions, in fact none even that the charge shall be presented before the reading of the general charge, but as ruled in G., H. & S. A. Ry. Oo. v. Cody, supra, that fact, for palpable reasons, must appear in order to constitute reversible error. In the absence, then, of mandatory directions, reasonable certainty and definiteness is the rule, and that rule, in our opinion, has been met in this case by making the request upon completion of the evidence.
But it is further urged by appellee that if it be conceded that substantially the bill is sufficient, yet the error is immaterial or harmless, since the sole issue in the case was, Was appellee the “efficient procuring” cause of the sale of the property of appellant, and that the court in substance submitted that issue? The proposition asserted may or may not be correct, depending upon the point of view, but the rule of harmless or immaterial error is not the rule adopted in this jurisdiction in such cases. G., H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 92 Tex. 638, 50 S. W. 1012, 51 S. W. 330; Gordon Jones Cons. Co. v. Lopez, 172 S. W. 987.
For the reasons indicated the judgment of the court below is reversed and the cause remanded for another trial not inconsistent with the views here expressed.
Reversed and remanded.
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