Court Opinion

ID: 3918855
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:46:13.4693+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:50.238955
License: Public Domain

The only question presented in this appeal is that of whether or not the appellant is entitled to recover the costs of suit of both the justice and the county courts The appellee brought the suit against the appellant in the justice court "upon sworn account for $149.50." The defendant filed a cross-demand. Judgment was rendered in the justice court "that the plaintiff, H. Brown, recover nothing in this suit, and that the defendant, Wallace Bassett, do recover of and from the said plaintiff the sum of $6.65 and all costs of suit." The plaintiff, H. Brown, appealed to the county court, and there, on the verdict of a jury, judgment was entered in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff, H. Brown, in the sum of $10.79 *Page 222 
and costs of suit in the justice court, but adjudging that the plaintiff, H. Brown, recover the costs in the county court.
Article 2046, Rev. Stat., expressly provides that "the adverse party shall recover the costs of both courts" if "the judgment" of the county court against the appellant from a justice court be "for the same or a greater amount than in the court below." Costs cannot otherwise be adjudged in cases where the statute itself has determined how the costs shall be awarded. Lumpkin v. Williams, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 160, 119 S.W. 917. The appellee seems to rely upon the proposition that, since the jury in the county court made a certain finding of fact in his favor which in the justice court was found against him, therefore he actually recovered a greater judgment in the county court than in the justice court, and was entitled to a judgment for costs in the county court under the above article. The term "judgment," as used in the article, means the judicial act of the court finally adjudicating the matter in controversy, as where a money judgment is entered, and fixing the final amount of the recovery. A finding of facts by the judge or a jury upon the matters submitted does not constitute a "judgment." It is not such an adjudication as is contemplated by that term.
The judgment is modified, so far as it pertains to the adjudication of costs of the county court in favor of appellee, H. Brown, so as to allow the appellant, Wallace Bassett, to recover the cost of both justice and county courts, and, as so modified, the judgment will then be in all things affirmed, the appellee to pay costs of this appeal.
Modified and affirmed.