Court Opinion

ID: 9829324
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 19:12:33.607888+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:59.949423
License: Public Domain

On Rehearing.
Appellants have filed motion for rehearing, attaching thereto a stipulation signed- by counsel, dated March 18, 1911, in which it was agreed that the statement of facts in the cause might be filed in the appellate court at any time before the final submission of the cause, and the court is requested to now give effect to this agreement and consider the statement of facts. The transcript of the record was originally filed in the Ft. Worth Court of Civil Appeals on June 12, 1911, and upon transfer to this court was here filed on August 3, 1911, and the statement of facts, in duplicate, was sent to the clerk of this court and by him received on April 22, 1912. Until the filing of the motion for rehearing, with above-mentioned stipulation attached, this court was not advised of the agreement; and the statement of facts was therefore not filed or considered.
[2, 3] Under the. law, the original copy of the statement of facts may properly be considered a part of the transcript of the record on appeal; and our Supreme Court has held that an agreement between the parties, extending the time of filing the transcript beyond the 90 days required by the statute, was in effect good cause shown why the transcript was not filed within the time required by law, and that such an agreement could be given the effect intended by the parties.
[4] In Stokes v. Wilmeth, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 497, 120 S. W. 948, it was held, however, that this would not authorize the parties to indefinitely delay filing the transcript; and in the instant case we think that the statement of facts was tendered too late, and that, had this court been advised of the stipulation at the time the statement of facts was tendered, we should have refused to give effect thereto. Certainly, however, it is too late to give effect to such an agreement after the case has been submitted and opinion rendered. Aside from these considerations, however, there is a further insuperable objection to the consideration of the statement of facts in this cause. The original statement, which is to be sent up to this court as a part of the record upon appeal, was never filed in the lower court, as it bears no file mark whatever ; and we are therefore unable to consid*347er the statement of facts, for the reason that it was not filed in the lower court, as by law required.
Motion for rehearing overruled.