Court Opinion

ID: 3955840
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:17:07.682469+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:49:18.005137
License: Public Domain

1 Since submission of the cause it is found that the application for writ of error fails to comply with Rule No. 1 for the Supreme Court, which provides that the application shall state that the particular decision or ruling sought to be reviewed was assigned as error in the motion for rehearing in the Court of Civil Appeals. The application for writ of error does not state that any of the decisions or rulings sought to be reviewed was assigned as error in a motion for rehearing in the Court of Civil Appeals and does not state that a motion for rehearing was filed. The application therefore was improvidently granted and it becomes necessary, in accordance with the settled practice, to dismiss it. Leonard Bros. v. Newton, 129 Tex. 1, *Page 363 101 S.W.2d 223; Glenn, Receiver, v. McCarty, 130 Tex. 641,  107 S.W.2d 363, decided July 7, 1937.
2 The application was granted on an assignment of error complaining of the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals that the evidence did not show approval by the Industrial Accident Board of a compromise agreement. Upon exactly the same state of facts it was held in Petroleum Casualty Co. v. Lewis,  63 S.W.2d 1066, decided by the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, that there was not a final approval of a compromise agreement by the Industrial Accident Board; and this Court's refusal of the application for writ of error signified its approval of such decision of that Court of Civil Appeals. For this additional reason the application for writ of error filed herein was improvidently granted.
The order granting the application for writ of error is set aside and the application is dismissed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court July 28, 1937.
Rehearing overruled December 8, 1937.