Opinion. — The petitioner, Schintz, in the District Court of Travis County, sued J.L. Hume and W.H. Tobin in damages for libel, slander, false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The petitioner in that cause states and sets out the facts charging the defendants jointly with the libel, slander, false imprisonment and malicious prosecution, and in the prayer asks for actual damages in one sum and exemplary damages in another stated amount, for all of the alleged wrongs. There is no separate claim for damages for the libel, slander, malicious prosecution or false imprisonment. Upon the trial of the case in the District Court the issues of slander and libel were practically eliminated and, we understand, were in effect abandoned by the plaintiffs, therefore we regard those issues as not before us. The issues of malicious prosecution and false imprisonment were submitted to a jury under the directions and charges of the court, and they returned into court the following verdict: "We the jury find for plaintiff on the charge of false imprisonment and assess the damages at four thousand dollars actual damages and one thousand dollars exemplary damages, against defendants W.H. Tobin and J.L. Hume. We acquit the defendants on the charge of malicious prosecution." This verdict was received by the court, and a final judgment rendered upon that part of it found in favor of the plaintiff; but there was no judgment rendered upon that part of the verdict that was in favor of the defendants on the issue of malicious prosecution, nor was there a judgment rendered against the plaintiff upon that issue; in fact, the judgment is silent as to this phase of the case. During the term in which the trial occurred and the judgment was rendered the defendants, Hume and Tobin, made their motion for a new trial, which was granted by the court. The court, in granting the motion, set aside the verdict and judgment that was against the defendants on the issue of false imprisonment, but refused to disturb and set aside that part of the verdict which found in favor of the defendants on the issue of malicious prosecution, whereupon the plaintiff protested against this course and made a motion to the court that, inasmuch as it had granted a new trial to defendants upon that issue that *Page 584 was in favor of plaintiff and had set aside the verdict and judgment thereon, the entire verdict should be set aside, so that the plaintiff again, upon another trial, could litigate and try both issues of false imprisonment and malicious prosecution. The court upon this motion entered an order to the effect that it adhered to its ruling granting the motion for new trial as to the issue of false imprisonment, and refused and declined to set aside the verdict that was in favor of the defendants on the issue of malicious prosecution, and stated, "That a new trial of the cause of action pleaded by plaintiff for false imprisonment alone be and the same is hereby granted," and ordered, "That plaintiffs' motion for new trial on the other issues be and the same is hereby overruled, and that so much of the verdict and rulings of the court prior to the verdict as pertains to the cause of action alleged and tried for malicious prosecution * * * be retained and remain as passed upon by the court and jury, without permitting a new trial on said issues, and without any judgment being now rendered or left in force on said alleged cause of action, to the end that, when the alleged cause of action for false imprisonment shall be tried and determined, one final judgment may be rendered on such determination on the part of the issues heretofore passed on by the court and jury, and which have not been set aside, so that the determination of each and all of the causes of action set up, including those heretofore passed upon and those hereafter to be passed upon as above indicated, may be made the basis of one final judgment in the case."
After the adjournment of the term in which the above proceedings were had and at the present term of the District Court the plaintiff renewed his application and request to the court to permit him to again try the issue of malicious prosecution along with the issue of false imprisonment, which request was refused, and the court adhered to its order as previously made and entered another order in effect the same as the one quoted. At this point in the progress of the case the plaintiff applied to this court for its writ of mandamus to compel the District Judge of the trial court to permit a trial of the issue of malicious prosecution when the case was again tried upon the issue of false imprisonment.
The jurisdiction of this court is invoked by virtue of section 9 of the Acts of the Legislature at the called session of 1892, organizing the Courts of Civil Appeals. It provides, "The said courts, or any judge thereof in vacation, may issue the writ of mandamus to compel a judge of the District Court to proceed to trial and judgment in a cause agreeably to the principles and usages of law, returnable on or before the first day of the next term, or during the session of the same, or before any judge of said court, as the nature of the case may require." A part of section six, article five, of the present Constitution as relates to the creation and jurisdiction of the Courts of Civil Appeals provides that "Said courts shall have such other jurisdiction, original and appellate, as may be prescribed by law." In placing the Constitution into the present work which is styled the "Revised Statutes of Texas", in keeping with *Page 585 errors which are generally found in works of that character, those who are responsible for the error failed to state this provision of the Constitution. It is possible, by reason of the authority of Kleiber v. McManus, 66 Tex. 50, that this court would have appellate jurisdiction by mandamus to revise, in some instances, the judicial conduct of a trial court. But, however, this we need not decide, as we are agreed that this court, by reason of the law and Constitution quoted, has original jurisdiction by mandamus to compel a judge of the District Court to proceed to trial and judgment. And it is by virtue of that jurisdiction that we propose to act in the premises.
The questions to be determined are, has the trial judge refused to try a case rightfully pending and undetermined in the District Court, and if so may this court by mandamus control his conduct in this respect, or should the writ be denied upon the ground that the conduct complained of is a matter of judicial discretion which mandamus will not reach, or should it be refused because of other existing remedies by which the error, if any, may be corrected?
The first questions naturally in order are, what is the effect of the orders of the court granting a partial new trial and setting aside the only final judgment rendered upon the verdict and holding over a part of the verdict for judgment to be rendered upon it at some subsequent term. The plaintiff in his petition, in his action against Hume and Tobin, did not, in terms, by separate counts, divide his actions of false imprisonment and malicious prosecution, but he set up the facts upon which he relied as showing that the defendants were guilty of both accusations, and it appears that they are connected by the same state of facts, although those facts upon which is based the malicious prosecution occurred after the term of the alleged false imprisonment. He did not ask damages separately upon each of these causes but, after stating the facts showing the right of action in those two respects, asked for damages in one sum upon this combination of facts showing the several wrongs. The court, in stating the case to the jury in its charge, presented the issues of false imprisonment and malicious prosecution in a way that would authorize the jury to make separate findings upon these issues, and, as observed, the jury found separately upon them. The authority of the court, in view of the case made by the petition, in presenting the issues to the jury so that they may find separately as to the two accusations in the case, and the verdict of the jury in response thereto, and the right of the plaintiff to seek a recovery in one suit upon these two issues in one general claim for damages, or the right to join in one suit these two grounds of recovery, are questions which, in the proceedings before us, we can not pass upon, and about which we intimate no opinion, but we will treat the case as treated by the trial court, as one authorizing the jury to find under proper instructions differently as to the two issues.
There is no express statute in this State that defines the extent a trial court may go in granting a new trial, but we think the question is definitely *Page 586 settled by the decisions of the courts of this State which have passed upon the question, and also those of some other States. The Supreme Court of Alabama, in Dale v. Moseley, 4 Stewart Porter, 371, in an opinion by Judge Lipscomb, subsequently of the Supreme Court of this State, held, that after issue and verdict in a case of the right of trial of property in two salves, the trial court had no authority to sever the plaintiff's case and grant a new trial as to one slave and refuse it as to the other, and concludes that the new trial should have been entire or not at all.
In Converse Harding Co. v. Bloom, Kahn Co., 20 La., Ann., 555, it is held that when a judge has made an order in general terms granting a new trial he cannot afterwards and before trial enter the judgment as to one of the parties.
In State ex rel. Downard v. Templin, 122 Ind. 235, it was held that a new trial as to a part of verdict has the effect of setting aside the entire verdict. To same effect is Johnson v. McCulloch, 89 Ind. 270.
In San Antonio v. Dickman, 34 Tex. 650, it is said, that granting a new trial has the effect to reinstate the cause on the docket as though there had been no trial, and that a court has no authority at a subsequent term to set aside an order of a previous term granting a motion for new trial.
In Wootters v. Kauffman, 67 Tex. 497, it is said that a new trial as to one party is a new trial as to all, citing Long v. Garnett, 45 Tex. 400, for this ruling, and saying that continuing the case as to one defendant is a continuance as to the others although the court may attempt to render final judgment against the latter, citing on this point Martin v. Crow,28 Tex. 614. The case reported in 45 Tex. 401 [45 Tex. 401], decides that the order of the court granting a new trial as to some of the defendants has the effect of vacating the entire judgment and that it would not support an execution.
Hamilton Co. v. Prescott, 73 Tex. 566, holds that the general rule is, that where the trial court sets aside a judgment as to one party it is set aside as to all, whether the order be so expressed or not.
In Railway v. James, 73 Tex. 18, the appellant pleaded a former judgment rendered in the case, in bar of plaintiff's action. A demurrer was sustained to the plea, and the court in passing upon it said: "At a previous trial a verdict had been rendered in favor of the plaintiff against defendant Snyder, and finding appellant and defendant Spillman not guilty. Upon that verdict judgment was entered in their favor that plaintiff take nothing by his suit, and they were discharged with their costs. The judgment was set aside and a new trial granted upon motion of the defendant Snyder alone. Upon this trial it was pleaded in bar of plaintiff's right to recover from appellant. The effect of the order granting a new trial on the motion of defendant Snyder, who was with appellant and Spillman jointly and severally sued, was to vacate the former judgment, and it operated as a new trial as to all the defendants. *Page 587 Long v. Garnett, 45 Tex. 401; Wootters v. Kauffman, 67 Tex. 488 [67 Tex. 488]."
In Parker v. Adams, 2 Texas Civ. App. 357[2 Tex. Civ. App. 357] (23 S.W. Rep., 902), a tract of land was sued for and verdict was in favor of plaintiff as to some of the defendants and against plaintiff as to other defendants, upon which verdict judgment was accordingly rendered, a motion for new trial filed by plaintiff was overruled as to some of the defendants who recovered against the plaintiff and sustained and granted as to the rest of the defendants. It was held that this had the effect of granting a new trial as to all of the defendants, and that the case stood on the docket as if there had been no trial.
In Linn v. Arambould, 55 Tex. 615, the trial court granted a motion for new trial as to an issue which was a part of the case and overruled the motion as to the remaining issues in the case, and as to these issues entered an order to the effect that they would be held over and retained by the court for the purpose of entering final judgment thereon when the issue that was covered by the order granting new trial was finally disposed of. The court held that this was no final judgment or disposition of the case and expressed the opinion that such a procedure was unauthorized and that a new trial should be had of the entire case.
The effect of these decisions is that a new trial as to a part of a case by operation of law opens up the entire case, and it then stands upon the docket as if no trial was had. The order of the court setting aside the only judgment that was rendered upon the verdict had the effect of destroying the life of the verdict for all purposes.
We know of no law or practice in this State except in judgments by default, and then a statute regulates the matter, that authorizes a trial court to hold over and retain a part of a verdict upon which no judgment has been rendered in order to render a final judgment upon it after the term at some indefinite time in the future. The fact that this part of the verdict was upon a branch of the case which may have been prosecuted by the plaintiff in a suit separate from that phase of the case upon which a judgment was rendered and set aside does not militate against the force of the cases cited and the rule we state. If the plaintiff had the right to combine in one suit these two causes of action against the defendants — a question which we do not now decide — he had the right to have them disposed of in one trial. This is the theory of our practice upon this subject, and parties ought not to be lightly deprived of this right. There is much wisdom in this rule, for otherwise cases may arise in which the rights of the parties as originating in one suit may be scattered by interlocutory orders of the trial court retaining a part of a verdict through many terms of the court, thereby creating much uncertainty and expense. Suppose a case in which a plaintiff may join in one suit against the defendant many claims which under the law may all be placed into one suit, or which at the election of the plaintiff may have been separately sued upon, such for instance as many promissory notes for different sums executed by the defendant, or other claims of the same *Page 588 nature, if the rule adopted by the trial court in this case was the law he could cut the verdict up into as many parcels as there were claims and could grant a new trial as to all claims but one, holding that over for judgment to be rendered at some subsequent term, and could continue this process of holding out one claim as often as there was a trial until he finally had them all disposed of to his satisfaction, and after many terms terminate the process by the grand finale of a judgment.
Among other reasons which may be advanced why the trial court should dispose of the issues in one trial, and not hold out a part of the case to be determined in other trials, is that the law contemplates that the judgment should be rendered at the term in which the case is tried. March v. Huyter, 50 Tex. 250, and Camoron v. Thurmond, 56 Tex. 26. In this latter case it is held that the rules upon this subject were made to be observed, and the error in rendering judgment at a term other than the trial was the ground upon which the case was reversed. The present rules are similar to those passed upon in that case. If the court parcels out the issues or claims set up by the plaintiff and tries each at different times and holds over the verdict thereon in order to be entered finally into a general judgment, the effect would be one judgment upon many trials, and the benefits of the rule that requires the judgment to be rendered at the term in which the trial occurred would be practically denied. We can illustrate this by reference to the law that grants the right of appeal and regulates the procedure in such cases. The law requires that the party desiring to appeal may only do so from a final judgment after notice of appeal, and that he shall prepare his record looking to that purpose during the term in which the trial occurred, with the privilege of making up a statement of facts within ten days after the term of trial; upon each separate claim of the plaintiff which the court would try at different terms and upon which no judgment at that term was rendered, from which an appeal could be taken, the unsuccessful party who desired to appeal would be required to make up his record for that term, and finally, when the case reached this court from the judgment that was finally rendered, the novel spectacle would be presented of an appeal from one judgment based upon as many different statements of facts and separate records as there were separate trials.
Further, the law contemplates that motions for new trials should be made and acted upon during the term in which the case was tried, and in order to raise many questions in appeal they have to be predicated upon a previous motion made in the trial court seeking a correction of the error there; some of the errors sought to be revised, and which should be corrected may not arise until the court carries them into a judgment which, according to the course pursued in this case, would not probably occur until some subsequent term of the court. The query is suggested — would the matters that occurred in the previous trial, maybe many terms back, upon an issue which the court retained and did *Page 589 not subsequently try, be raised after this lapse of time and terms of court?
These observations are sufficient probably to show the importance of the rule that requires judgments to be rendered at the term in which the trial occurs, and they probably illustrate some of the difficulties and complications that might occur in the trial and which might arise upon an appeal of the case if the trial court was permitted to grant a new trial as to one issue and retain the verdict upon another upon which judgment would be rendered at some uncertain time and term in the future. Such a practice has nothing to commend it, and much to condemn it, and in the light of the authorities upon the subject is unauthorized. The reasons for the rule that permits in some instances the Supreme Court and Courts of Civil Appeals to reverse a case in part and affirm in part, or to remand on certain issues, are not altogether applicable to trial courts (Hamilton v. Prescott,73 Tex. 566), except possibly in rare instances, such as was the case in Boone v. Hulsey, 71 Tex. 183, which was in the main put upon the ground that when different defendants claimed separate parcels of land separate judgments may be rendered against each. But, it is apprehended, if issues embraced in the plaintiff's petition could in that case have been held based upon separable controversies, in the sense of setting up causes of action which may have been prosecuted in separate suits but which may be combined in one action, for all of which all of the defendants may have been liable, that the Supreme Court would have held differently. And such a case would have more nearly approximated the one we have before us than did the case considered in Boone v. Hulsey. But the rule announced in Boone v. Hulsey (which the court in Hamilton v. Prescott, supra, states is an exception to the general rule) and other similar cases, which hold that, as to separable controversies set up by the plaintiff as to different parties, separate judgments which were rendered thereon were valid, has no application to the question we are considering, because here the court has never rendered a judgment upon the issue it withholds from trial, and it has nothing to support it but the verdict of the jury, with a promise to, some time in the future, render judgment upon it. With this view of the question we need not decide whether a judgment which was not set aside, rendered upon the issue of malicious prosecution, would have been valid although the court set aside the verdict and judgment on the other branch of the case, for, as shown, this was not done, as no such judgment was ever rendered; and holding, as we do, that the court, without judgment, had no authority to hold over a part of the verdict after granting a new trial as to another part, relieves us of the necessity of deciding this question.
The argument may be made, that, as the order of the court in retaining a part of the verdict shows that it intends to render judgment thereon when the issue upon which the new trial was granted is finally disposed of, such judgment when then rendered will be a trial and disposition of this issue as well as the entire case, and therefore the court, *Page 590 in law, has not refused a trial and is proceeding with the case, and the statute that authorizes this court by mandamus to require the District Court to try a case does not apply. This argument is plausible but is not sound. The statute under which we are proceeding in express terms authorizes this court to compel a judge of the District Court to proceed to trial and judgment. A trial in the general sense and meaning of the law in which that term is used embraces not only the rendition of judgment, but includes a hearing of some sort "agreeable to the principles and usages of law."
A law that provides for trials under the Constitution and laws of the land is for the benefit of all citizens, and by the law of the land is meant the general law, a law which hears before it condemns, which proceeds upon inquiry and renders judgment only after trial. This embraces presenting the issues by pleading and a hearing in a forum with jurisdiction. These are steps to be taken in a trial and if denied are as much the deprivation of a right which the statute under which we are operating declares we may require at the hands of the trial court as would be the case if the trial court arbitrarily after the trial refused to render judgment. The cause, in some manner known to legal procedure, must be put in issue, and the judgments to be rendered must be based upon pleadings and the actions so in issue. 1 Black, Judgments, secs. 183-184. If we are correct in our ruling that the effect of the order granting the motion for new trial as to a part of the case and setting aside the judgment upon that branch of the case was to open up the entire case and leave it upon the docket as if never tried, it logically follows that the court must retry the entire case, and, from what has been said, simply the entry of a judgment is not a trial within the meaning of the law that authorizes this court to compel the lower court to try. In this connection it is proper to consider the contention of the respondent to the effect that, while the orders entered show that the court then determined that it would not again try the issue of malicious prosecution, it may change its purpose when the case is called for trial, and set aside its order as to this branch of the case and try it along with the other branch of the case, and that for this reason mandamus should not issue. In reply it may be said that the respondent, in his answer, does not evince a purpose to pursue this course, but steadily contends that the orders entered are proper and correct, and adheres to a view of the law which he urges in justification of the course he has pursued. In ascertaining the purpose of a court when exercising judicial functions and in giving effect to its conduct we must necessarily look to the orders which it has officially entered and the rulings which it has made in the course of the judicial inquiry. If the orders of the court in this instance mean anything they, in no uncertain terms, express a purpose not to again try this issue. When the court in an official way has so expressed its purpose we may presume that it will do what it has solemnly decreed its purpose to do, and may act upon the present state of the case as made by the record (State v. Rotwitt, 37 Pac. Rep., 845), *Page 591 and will not assume that the court will fluctuate in its opinions and play at shuttlecock with its decisions.
Therefore the only fair conclusion is that the trial court will not again try the issue of malicious prosecution unless persuaded thereto by the mandate of this court.
The next question in order is, how far this court, in a proceeding of this character, may go in inquiry into and controlling the judicial conduct of a trial judge. There can be no question as to the want of power in this court, in a proceeding of this character, to revise the judicial discretion of the trial court as to the time and character of trial and the judgment it may render, but the power of this court to determine what is a trial and what is a judgment and if the trial court has by reason of judicial construction denied either, is not wanting. The statute that authorizes this court to issue its mandamus to compel a trial and judgment, by necessary implication confers the power upon the court to determine what is a trial and what is a judgment and what amounts to a refusal of either. The assertion that, as the trial court has the power to try and render judgment, this confers upon it the judicial discretion to determine what is a trial and what is a judgment, which cannot be controlled by mandamus, is a doctrine which if admitted would defeat the plain purpose of the statute, which confers jurisdiction upon this court to require district courts to try and proceed to judgment, and would in effect deny the right by mandamus to control the act of courts in any matter, as all courts which are vested with the authority to try and hear a cause are confessedly acting in the exercise of judicial functions which they ascertain by some process of construction of the laws under which they claim to act. But, as is apparent from the number of instances shown in the following authorities, the courts which exercise jurisdiction over the inferior tribunals have never felt themselves lacking in power to determine if the trial court has exceeded its authority or has declined to act when it should act, although such courts have judicially determined the questions contrary to the views expressed by the courts that issue their mandatory writs.
But independent of this view, if the ruling that the new trial opened up the entire case and had the effect of setting aside the entire verdict is correct, then the duty of the trial court becomes certain and plain and the right to another trial in some form cannot be denied, and the court can exercise no judicial discretion in the matter of allowing a trial, as his duty to do so is purely ministerial. If there was only one issue in this case and the court had granted a new trial as to it and afterwards without authority of law refused to again try it, there could be no question about the duty of the trial court in such a case and about the power of this court to require it to proceed to trial. The same principle applies in the case before us. The case stands with two issues in it which under the law the court has granted a new trial of. The effect of this new trial is to leave both issues undisposed of and remaining in the case, and so long as they so remain the court would have as much *Page 592 authority under the law to refuse again to try either as it would both. It is the refusal to try that gives this court jurisdiction, and when we have ascertained that the court has so refused we should not hesitate to compel it to perform the plain duty about which there is little room for the exercise of judicial discretion.
The time and the manner of trial and character of judgment to be rendered are matters confided to the judicial discretion of the trial court, which we will not in this character of proceeding control. But the refusal to act, the refusal to try, are the facts under the statute that call into life the authority of this court to compel the lower court to act, and in order to ascertain if such court has refused to try we must necessarily be clothed with the authority to judicially determine what is and what is not a trial and what amounts to a refusal to try, otherwise the jurisdiction conferred upon these courts in these instances would be a naked power, not clothed with the authority to ascertain when it should be exercised. Consequently we repeat that, under the statute, the moment we ascertain that granting the new trial left the case as before trial, together with the refusal of the court to again try it all, we necessarily determine that an instance arose that called for the mandatory order of this court, and this result is reached by the plain letter of the statute that makes it the ministerial duty of the court to try.
The remaining question is, has the petitioner a remedy by appeal or error and is there an adequate remedy other than the mandatory process of this court. What has been previously said as to the effect of the new trial, when considered with the terms of the statute that authorizes this court to require the District Court to proceed to trial, virtually disposes of this question. Considering the case in this aspect it stands as if pending for trial in the court below with a refusal of the judge to try. If the judge refuses to try, the statute authorizes this court to compel him to try, and we need look no further for a remedy or consider whether another may exist, because by the express letter of the law the Legislature in the exercise of its authority has selected and provided a remedy for just such an emergency. And whatever may be the general rule that denies a resort to this remedy if another exists that is applicable to a different state of affairs in other instances, it ought not to govern in a case like this, especially in view of the law that expressly authorizes this remedy.
Mr. High in his work on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, second edition, sec. 150, says: "While, as we shall see, the authorities hold almost without exception that in all matters resting within the jurisdiction of an inferior court and upon which it has acted in a judicial capacity mandamus will not lie to review its proceedings or to revise its rulings, yet if the matters in question are clearly within the powers of the inferior court, but it refuses to exercise its jurisdiction or to entertain the proceedings, the writ will lie to compel the court to act." And again in section 151 he says: "A distinction is recognized between cases where it is sought by mandamus to control the decision of an inferior court *Page 593 upon the merits of a cause and cases where it has refused to go into the merits of the action upon an erroneous construction of some question of law or practice preliminary to the whole case, and while, as we shall see, the decision of such court upon the merits of the controversy will not be controlled by mandamus, yet if it has erroneously decided some question of law or practice presented as a preliminary objection, and upon such erroneous construction has refused to go into the merits of the case, mandamus will compel it to proceed." And again in section 152 the author states that mandamus is the appropriate remedy to set the machinery of the court in motion, and that it is the peculiar province of the writ as a corrective of judicial inaction. These views are supported by the cases cited by the author and especially is the case of People v. Judge of Wayne Co., 1 Mich. 361, in point, where it is held that mandamus will go to compel a court to act, and this irrespective of the question whether the party has, or not, another remedy.
It is possible, if the court at some indefinite term in the future should render the final judgment it has promised to render upon that branch of the case which it withholds from further trial, that the action of the court may be reversed on appeal or writ of error. But the right of trial and the purposes to be accomplished by a trial will, as we have shown, be denied the plaintiff, and his appeal will not afford an adequate remedy which will give him the present relief of a trial of a cause now pending, which he is now at the present time entitled to. There is no appeal from the orders of the court as now existing. If any relief exists by appeal it is remote and is dependent upon a judgment which the court may render at some indefinite time in the future, which judgment in so far as it may affect the issues not again tried will, in accord with the principle stated in Linn v. Arambould, 55 Tex. 611, and similar cases, be unavailing. If such remote relief exists it is not adequate in the present emergency. Mr. High, in section 180 of his work previously quoted, says upon this subject: "In the application of the rule the sole test seems to be whether the order of the subordinate court which it is sought to correct is of such a nature as to be the subject of an appeal or other corrective remedy."
Upon the views just expressed as well as those previously discussed we cite the following cases: "While recourse is never had to this writ to control judicial action, it is the usual and generally the only adequate process to compel the discharge of judicial functions. Its mandate is that the judge before whom a cause is pending shall proceed to hear and determine the same, but its use is not warranted to direct what particular judgment shall be rendered." The above is stated in a case in which the Supreme Court of Alabama granted a mandamus to compel a judge to try a case who had declined to do so on the ground that he was disqualified, and it is there held that, if no appeal would lie from the act complained of, a remedy that would force the party to await the rendition of a final judgment and then appeal would be inadequate and *Page 594 would not meet the emergency. Ex parte Alabama State Bar Association, 12 Law Rep. Ann., 134 (s.c. 8 So. Rep., 769).
In Collard v. Young (Fla.), 19 Law Rep. Ann., 637, a judge held that he was disqualified to hear a case and for this reason refused to try same and entered an order to that effect; it was held that as he was not disqualified mandamus was the proper remedy to require him to proceed to trial, and the opinion the court in reviewing other cases lays down the doctrine that the conclusion of the trial court that it did not have jurisdiction may be revised, and it be required to proceed.
In Ex parte Parker, 120 U.S. 737, mandamus was granted to compel a lower court to reinstate a case that it dismissed and to hear and determine the appeal, the court through Justice Matthews remarking that the "Writ properly lies in cases where the inferior court refuses to take jurisdiction where by law it ought to do so, or where having obtained jurisdiction in a cause it refuses to proceed in the due exercise thereof."
Bayha v. Kansas City Court of Appeals, 97 Mo., 331-2, Law Rep. Ann., 476 (s.c. 10, S.W. Rep., 855), is a well considered case where many authorities are reviewed, which holds that mandamus will go to reinstate a case which has been dismissed contrary to law, and will require the court to dispose of it.
In Hudson v. Parker, 156 U.S. 281, a Judge of the Supreme Court, as a Justice of the Circuit, allowed a writ of error upon the complainant executing a supersedeas bond to be approved by the District Judge. The District Judge refused to approve the bond solely because in his judicial opinion the order of the Justice of the Supreme Court was made without authority of law. It was held that mandamus would lie to compel the judge to obey the order.
In Brown v. Mining Co., 63 N.W. Rep., 1001, it is held that where appeal does not lie from the action complained of and it results in a refusal of the trial court to act, mandamus will go to compel the court to act.
In Wheeling Bridge Co. v. Paull, 19 S.E. Rep., 551, it is held that where a court has jurisdiction and refuses to try, mandamus is the proper remedy to compel it to act.
In Re Hohorst, 150 U.S. 663, the Circuit Court, which had dismissed a suit as to one party, was compelled by mandamus to take jurisdiction as to the party dismissed, and it is intimated that while the question may have been finally passed upon in an appeal of the case, it was not reviewable on appeal at this stage of the case, therefore mandamus would lie.
In Re Pennsylvania Co., 137. U.S., 451, was a case which was removed from a State court to a Circuit Court of the United States. A motion was made in the Circuit Court to remand the case back to the State court. The court granted the order and refused to take jurisdiction of the case and try it. The Supreme Court of the United States said that mandamus would lie in such a case to compel the Circuit Court, *Page 595 if it had jurisdiction, to try the case, and would be granted upon such refusal to try, and that while the question might be finally revised on appeal, as there was no appeal from the order dismissing, mandamus was the proper remedy.
In Harrington v. Hollow, 111 U.S. 796, it is held that a dismissal of a writ of error was the refusal to hear and decide the cause, and that in such a case mandamus was the remedy to compel the court to hear and proceed to its determination.
In Railway v. Wisnell, 23 Wall., 507, the court dismissed a case and refused to try; it was held that, as no appeal or error was allowed from that order, mandamus was the remedy to compel the court to try.
In Ex parte Schollenberger, 96 U.S. 374, the Circuit Court refused to entertain jurisdiction and try a case, upon a construction of the law which it ruled did not give it jurisdiction. The Supreme Court ruled otherwise and granted a mandamus to compel the court to try the case.
In Ex parte Bradstreet, 7 Peters, 647, the District Judge upon motion dismissed a case for want of jurisdiction because the complaint did not state the amount in controversy. The Supreme Court of the United States, upon passing upon mandamus to compel the judge to hear and try the case, held, that according to the practice in this kind of cases it was not necessary to the jurisdiction of the court for the complainant to state the amount, that upon trial it could be proven without being pleaded, and that the court wrongfully dismissed the case, and awarded mandamus to compel it to try.
In Beguhl v. Swan, 39 Cal. 411, it is held that when a court refused to try a case, the question whether it rightfully or not refused may be considered, and mandamus may issue to compel it to try.
In State v. Laughlin, 75 Mo., 359, where a court refused to try a case because it was of the opinion it had no jurisdiction, it was held by the Supreme Court of Missouri that whether jurisdiction existed was a question they would examine into, and if it existed mandamus would issue to compel trial — in other words that mandamus will go to compel a court to exercise its judicial functions.
In Water Co. v. Rives, 14 Nev. 433, it is held that when a court upon a mistaken view of the law refuses to try a case on the ground that it has no jurisdiction, mandamus may issue to compel it to try.
In State ex rel Huey v. Cape Girardeau Court of Common Pleas, 73 Mo., 560, mandamus was issued to compel the lower court to try and proceed with the determination of a case which "was dropped from the docket."
In Castello v. St. Louis Circuit Court, 28 Mo., 259, it is held that where an inferior tribunal declines to hear a cause upon what is termed a preliminary objection — as where in a statutory proceeding instituted to contest the election of a sheriff the court refuses to try the case upon the merits but dismisses same and quashes proceedings, on the ground that the contestant had not given the notice required by statute — a mandamus will go from the Supreme Court commanding the inferior court *Page 596 to reinstate the cause upon its docket and proceed to try same, as such court misconstrued the law in such preliminary matter.
In Ex parte Lowe, 20 Ala. 330, it was held that if an inferior court makes an order which is in plain violation of the legal rights of one of the parties and by virtue of such order refuses to proceed further in the case, mandamus will go to compel it to act.
In Schonhoff v. O'Bryan, 14 S.W. Rep., 933, where a case was stricken from the docket and dismissed without authority of law, it was held that mandamus would lie to compel that it be reinstated on the docket, and the fact that the lower court has acted is no obstacle to the issuance of the writ, and the court says: "Nor would an appeal or writ of error afford any substantial or effectual remedy in a case of this sort. Were an appeal taken in an instance like the present there would be nothing to pass upon, no errors to correct, for no trial had occurred. It is not the intention of the law to permit a cause to be bandied about like a shuttlecock from court to court, without affording a more effective remedy and prompt relief than would be afforded on appeal or writ of error." And in a separate opinion by Barclay, Judge, it seems writ of error or appeal would lie, and the mandamus is put upon the ground that appeal would delay the remedy, consequently not adequate.
In Reagan v. Copeland, 14 S.W. Rep., 1032, the court was asked to reverse a case because the trial judge refused to file a statement of facts. The court seems to admit that the question could be reviewed on appeal, but as there was no assignment of errors raising it refused to decide the question and stated that in such a case mandamus would go to compel the judge to file statement of facts.
In Meinhard v. Stratton, 19 S.W. Rep., 803, the trial judge, by reason of a construction that he placed upon a provision of law relating to the death of a party after judgment, refused to hear and determine a motion for new trial. It was held that mandamus would go to compel him to hear the motion.
In Wells v. Littlefield, 62 Tex. 30, the Supreme Court disposed of a case on appeal by instructing the trial court to render judgment in favor of appellant against appellee, but left open a question to be passed upon by the trial court. The trial court proceeded, upon the return of the case to it, to open up the entire case and to hear it upon another trial. Mandamus was applied for and granted requiring the court to render judgment as instructed by the Supreme Court. It was held that the attempt of the court to exercise a discretion when none was left to it was unauthorized, and that because the matter and action of the court may be reviewed on another appeal did not prevent the Supreme Court in the exercise of its jurisdiction to issue mandamus to compel the trial court to obey its decree.
Terrell v. Greene, 31 S.W. Rep., 632, a recent case by the Supreme Court of this State, was where mandamus was applied for and granted requiring the District Judge to allow the County Attorney to appear and prosecute a civil action pending in his court in which the county of *Page 597 Tarrant was interested. By reason of certain constructions placed upon the law by the judge in the performance of judicial functions the trial court held that the County Attorney was not entitled to appear as attorney for the county in the trial of the case. In effect, the Supreme Court held that if the action of the trial court complained of was subject to be reviewed on appeal the remedy would under the circumstances not be adequate and meet the emergency, and that the legal remedy which existed in favor of the applicant to recover his fees and commissions to which he would be entitled as the attorney for the county would not be a full and complete remedy; and on the point that the granting the writ would control the exercise of the judicial discretion that rested in the trial court to determine the authority of the County Attorney to appear in the case, the Supreme Court in effect held that if there was no authority in the trial court to exercise a discretion in the way ruled, and there was no dispute about the facts, the Supreme Court, in exercising its original jurisdiction, would correct the ruling of the trial court by mandamus; and said: "In the decision of any question of law the judge must exercise his judgment and that the exercise of such judgment is a judicial discretion which cannot be reviewed upon mandamus; therefore the decision of a judge upon the law cannot be reviewed by this writ." This the court said was the contention of the respondent and in concluding that it was erroneous said: "If this be correct then no wrong which may be done by a district judge in the determination of any legal question can be reviewed." The court in this case impliedly refused to follow what was said by the Supreme Court on this question in Ewing v. Cohen, 63 Tex. 482.
In Schultze v. McLeary, 73 Tex. 92, where a special judge declined to try a case because he was in doubt as to whether he was legally appointed, a mandamus issued to compel him to try, the Supreme Court holding that his appointment was legal.
In Kleiber v. McManus, 66 Tex. 48, the case was removed to the Circuit Court of the United States and was by that court returned to the State court, which court refused to try the case because it held that it had lost jurisdiction by the removal to the Federal court. The Supreme Court differed with the lower court in its construction of the law, and granted mandamus compelling it to try.
In Arberry v. Beavers, 6 Tex. 457, it is said that when the law defines with precision what shall be done mandamus will lie to compel it, or that when the act of an officer is an abuse of his discretion it may be considered as a refusal to perform the duty required, and in these instances he may be compelled to act.
In Lloyd v. Brink, 35 Tex. 6, the District Judge on his own motion set aside, for some reason satisfactory to the judge, a verdict, and granted a new trial and refused to render judgment upon that verdict. A mandamus was applied for and granted, commanding the trial court to render judgment. Objections were urged to the proceeding by mandamus upon the grounds that the case was still pending in the District *Page 598 Court, and that a remedy existed by appeal or error, and that the action of the court in granting the new trial was a matter of judicial discretion and could not be raised by mandamus. The Supreme Court held that the District Judge had no authority to set aside the verdict upon which judgment was rendered and grant a new trial on his own motion, and that the judicial powers of the court to act in this respect could be only called into exercise by a party to the judgment. The court admitted that the question might be finally preserved and raised in an appeal from a judgment that might be rendered in another trial, but that such a remedy may fail to do complete justice between the parties and may be inadequate. And on this branch of the case the court said "In the cause at bar we have no reason to reflect upon the motives or intentions of the court in setting aside the verdict of the jury and believe that the action of the judge was prompted by a desire to administer strict and impartial justice, but we are unable to measure the damages which may arise before another trial could be had. And if we adopt the proposition that the District Court has ex-officio unlimited control over every verdict of the jury then we must admit the possibility that on the next trial the verdict of the jury and the ruling of the court will be the same as before, and might continue thus to the total denial of justice. We are therefore forced to the conclusion that an appeal on a final judgment in the case (if such judgment ever be reached) would not be an adequate legal remedy, and that therefore the party had a right to resort to another and more complete remedy."
The court in this case, in construing a statute similar to the one under which this court is now acting, to the effect that a mandamus may issue to compel a judge of the District Court to proceed to trial and judgment, said: "The remedy sought by the relator in this cause is mandamus, to compel the District Judge to enter up judgment on the verdict of the jury, found on the trial of his cause in that court. And we are of opinion that he is entitled to that remedy. That a writ of mandamus will issue to an inferior court to compel the performance of a certain and positive duty, made mandatory by law, or where the duty is simply ministerial and involves no judicial discretion, has been decided and settled in nearly every State of the Union, and in the Supreme Court of the United States, as well as the courts of England. Tappan on Mandamus, 154; 7 Cranch, 589; New York Insurance Company v. Wilson, 8 Pet., 291; State of Ohio v. Todd, 4 Ham. (Ohio), 351, 2 Johns. Cas., 118; 5 Wend., 132; Commonwealth v. Justice of the Sessions, 9 Mass. 387;5 Mass. 434; 6 Tex. 465. But this right is expressly given by the Constitution of our State (art. 5, secs. 3 and 10) and fully provided for by our statutes (Pas. Dig., 1579), which enacts: The said court, or any judge thereof, in vacation, may issue writs of habeas corpus, mandamus and such other writs as may be necessary to enforce the jurisdiction of said court, and also to compel a judge of the District Court to proceed to trial and judgment in a case. This statute, we think, settles the question as to the legality of the writ." *Page 599
In this last case we are not prepared to agree with the court that a trial judge may not in some instances upon his own motion grant a new trial, but we approve the observations of the court upon the general power to issue mandamus to compel the trial court to proceed to act where it refuses to do so by reason of an unwarranted construction of the law under which it is acting or an unwarranted application thereof in a way that brings about the result of a refusal to act when it was clearly its duty to do so. And we further agree with the court in that case in its views upon the inadequacy of the remedy by appeal.
From the views expressed it follows that the mandamus will issue as prayed for to the extent of instructing the trial court to vacate its orders refusing to again try and determine the issue of malicious prosecution and that, when the original case is called for trial, the court will try and dispose of said issue of malicious prosecution along with the other issues in the case, agreeably to the principles and usages of law. As so ordered the writ of mandamus will issue from this court to respondent, F.G. Morris, Judge of the District Court of the 53rd District of Texas. The costs of this proceeding are taxed against the respondent.