Court Opinion

ID: 4896336
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:58:15.213581+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:45.578339
License: Public Domain

GAINES, Associate Justice.
This suit was brought in the court below by defendants in error against plaintiffs in error upon an open ac*150count for goods sold and delivered. The defendants after pleading withdrew their answer and there was a judgment nil dicit.
It is here claimed, that the judgment is for a greater sum than is warranted by the petition. The petition alleges that the goods were sold on the 4fch day of August, 1888, and refers for particulars to an itemized account attached to and made a part of the petition as an exhibit. In the account items amounting to $1304.62 are dated August 4, 1888, and others-, amounting to $43.31 are dated August 11, 1888, and it is insisted that because of this discrepancy between the allegation of the date of sale in the-petition and the dates shown in the exhibit that the verdict is excessive for the latter amount. The assignment of error in this particular is not-well taken. The plaintiffs in establishing their case wdre not confined to the proof of the time alleged in their petition. If the defendants had made defense and had urged the variance as an objection to the evidence-on the trial it would have been unavailing.
It also insisted that the judgment allows too much interest by the sum of $16.66. This is conceded by defendants in error. They filed a remittitur of the amount in the court below, but this was done after the writ of error had been sued out. If the remittitur had been entered before the proceedings to bring the case to this court were instituted, the judgment would have been affirmed.
This court having acquired jurisdiction of the case by the acceptance of service of the citation in error before the excess was remitted, we-think the judgment should be reversed and reformed here, and that defendants in error should pay the costs of the proceedings instituted for the revision. The excess being evidently the result of an error in calculation, the judgment might have been amended upon motion in the court below. Rev. Stats., arts. 1354, 1355. For this reason we have had some-difficulty in coming to the conclusion that defendants in error ought to-pay the costs. The practice in this court in such eases has not been-quite uniform—the matter of costs especially being considered subject-in the discretion of the court. But the general rule seems to be to allow the plaintiff in error his costs when the judgment has been by default and the remittitur is not entered before the writ of error is sued out. Westall v. Marshall, 16 Texas, 182; McKairy v. Castleberry, 6 Texas,. 286; Chrisman v. Davenport, 21 Texas, 483; Arnold v. Williams, 21 Texas, 413; Howe v. Merrill, 36 Texas, 319; McDonald v. Gray, 29 Texas, 80; Reed v. Herring, 37 Texas, 160; Cornelius v. Thompson, 27 Texas, 31.
When the judgment is by default or nil dicit the defendant virtually admits the correctness of the demand made in the petition, and when the amount is a matter of calculation only he has the right to rely upon the presumption the court will do its duty and see that the judgment is for the proper amount. If, therefore, the plaintiff willfully causes or negligently permits an excessive judgment to be entered, it would seem but-*151just that he should pay the costs of its correction in any tribunal which has the power to reform it. When a case has been contested below and there is a small error as to the amount of the judgment, and the appellant fails to ask its correction in the court below, a different rule ought usually to prevail.
The judgment is reversed, and here rendered for the amount adjudged by the court below, less the remittitur. The defendants in error will be adjudged to pay the costs.
Reversed and rendered.
Delivered November 19, 1889.