Court Opinion

ID: 3973978
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:32:09.787013+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:56.386385
License: Public Domain

8224 Writ of error denied by Supreme Court.
A. M. Jackson, R. C. Crane. S. A. Cole, and J. B. Cloyes prosecuted this writ of error from a judgment rendered against them in favor of H. E. and Emily Phillip upon a promissory note. Jackson filed an answer to defendants in error's petition in the trial court; but the judgment against all the other plaintiffs in error was by default.
By the first and second assignments of error, the contention is made that the sheriff's return upon the citation to Cole and Crane showed service in the year "11," an impossible date, and does not, by any indorsement thereon, appear to have been filed by the clerk of the court as a part of the record after it was served. The sheriff's return upon the citation contains the following, "Came to hand on the 18 day of March, A.D. 1911," and further shows service on Crane and Cole on the following dates, "year 11, month 3, day 30"; those dates being tabulated, and the respective figures given being placed under the respective words preceding them. In view of the common usage *Page 550 
to express the year of a given date by using the last two figures only, and in view of the other portion of the officer's return, recited above, it clearly appears that the citation was served March 30, 1911. Schneider v. Dorsey, 96 Tex. 544, 74 S.W. 526; O'Donnell v. Kirkes, 147 S.W. 1167 (cause No. 7,399), opinion by this court April 20, 1912, and not yet published.
We know of no statute which specifically requires the clerk to indorse his file mark upon a citation after its return to him by the officer charged with the duty of serving it. Furthermore, when returned to the custody of the clerk, it is then filed as a matter of law, even though no file mark be placed upon it to evidence such filing. Lessing v. Gilbert,8 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 27 S.W. 751, and decisions there cited. The citation and service indorsed thereon appear in the transcript to this court, and are duly certified by the clerk of the district court as a part of the proceedings in the case; and, as the judgment contains a recital of service upon appellants, it sufficiently appears that the citation and the officer's return thereon were before the trial judge at the time the judgment was rendered, and that the judgment by default was predicated thereon.
As plaintiff in error J. B. Cloyes has been dismissed from the suit by order of this court, upon motion of defendant in error, the assignments relating to the judgment against him will not be discussed.
The assignment addressed to the judgment against Jackson is overruled, because it is predicated upon the assumption that, by reason of the objections discussed already, the judgment against the other plaintiffs in error was erroneous, which assumption is incorrect.
The judgment is affirmed.