Court Opinion

ID: 4996292
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-30 14:25:30.373089+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:16:56.187754
License: Public Domain

DIBRELD, J.
The court has given the motion for rehearing and argument of learned counsel in this case a careful reading and consideration, but conclude that no sufficient reason has been shown why the disposition made of the case at a former day of this court should not be adhered to. It is urged with great insistence that this court in affirming the judgment of the trial court acted without jurisdiction, inasmuch as there must have been a finding of fact by this court in reaching its conclusion.
[1] It has been repeatedly held by the Supreme Court that it has no power to determine facts, but while it has been thus repeatedly held it has been as often held that the question as to whether there is sufficient evidence or whether there is any evidence to establish a cause of action is a question of law of which this court has cognizance.
[2] When the Court of Civil Appeals reverses and renders a cause on account of the insufficiency of the evidence in law to justify a recovery, the Supreme Court, reversing such ruling because in its opinion the evidence is sufficient to support the recovery below, will remand the cause for a new trial. Pollock v. H. & T. 0. Ry. Co., 103 Tex. 70, 123 S. W. 408. This must necessarily be the rule, for in such cases there is undetermined an issue of fact.
[3] But when, as in the case at bar, the Court of Civil Appeals in effect and in fact finds all the allegations and evidence of plaintiff as true and undisputed and upon such finding reverses and renders the judgment, the question is one purely of law, and when this court is of the opinion that the evidence thus found by the Court of Civil Appeals to be undisputed is sufficient to sustain the judgment of the trial court, it is our duty to reverse and render the judgment. We do not find the facts or any fact in such case, but simply determine the law upon the undisputed facts as found by the Court of Civil Appeals.
The motion for rehearing is therefore overruled.