Court Opinion

ID: 4894193
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:54:45.014744+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:25.438633
License: Public Domain

Willie, Chief Justice.
A motion is made to dismiss this cause for want of a sufficient appeal bond. The objection taken to the bond is, in effect, that it does not describe the judgment from which the appeal is taken with sufficient certainty to identify it. Upon an examination of the bond we find that the name of the case is stated imperfectly, the names of the contracting parties being omitted. The number of the cause is not given, nor the date of the judgment, nor the name of the court in which it was rendered. We are not .informed who recovered the judgment, nor against whom it was rendered, nor is the nature of the recovery stated. Every appeal or writ of error bond should so describe the judgment sought to be revised that it can be identified. Hollis v. Border, 10 Tex., 277; Smith v. Cheatham, 12 Tex., 37; Herndon v. Bremond, 17 Tex., 432.
It is clear that the present bond does not so identify the judgment appealed from. Considered alone, we could not tell from reading it where to look for such judgment, nor anything concerning its nature. We are left to conjecture from the fact that it is contained in the transcript with a judgment rendered in the district court of Marion county, in a cause similar in name to the one which appears in the caption of the bond, that it belongs to that case. In fact the bond does not purport to give us any description whatever of the judgment complained of, much less one by which it could be certainly identified.
The motion is sustained and the appeal dismissed.
Dismissed.
[Opinion delivered October 18, 1883.]