The main question in the case is, Did the proof authorize the finding of the jury that the appellee Wood-son had paid the taxes on the land, claimed by him in this suit, for the year 1874?
„ This court has, on more than one occasion, in passing upon the question of the payment of taxes, as presented under the statute of limitation of five years, held that' this fact is one necessary to be proved in order to sustain the plea; but the decisions are that it can be proved like any other fact, by direct or legitimate circumstantial evidence. The law, it is said, prescribes no more stringent rule requiring proof of this fact by more certain or conclusive evidence than is necessary to establish any other fact in the case. Watson v. Hopkins, 27 Tex., 642-3.
*653In the case above cited, it seems the only proof that was offered, of the payment of taxes by the party pleading limitation was the introduction in evidence of a contract by which he obligated and bound himself to pay taxes on the land in suit. Yet the court said it was competent evidence for the purpose of showing, along with other facts, the payment of taxes, and was sufficient alsb for that purpose, if the jury from it believed that he, in fact, had paid the taxes.
This case is cited with approval on this point in Ochoa v. Miller, 59 Tex., 462, 463, decided at the last Austin term of this court. In the case last named, other authorities are also cited.
The question as to whether the land in suit had in fact been rendered and assessed for the year 1874, the question as to whether the taxes had been actually paid or not, were all issues of fact to be submitted to the jury for their determination.
Without going further into the consideration of the subject, we may remark that the evidence in the record does not fully and satisfactorily establish the fact that the land in question was not assessed even in precinct No. 1, for the year 1874, or that the taxes for that year were not, in fact, paid by the appellee Woodson. His receipt for this year may have been lost. The assessment of the property may have been in this case, as it frequently is in others, on several rolls, instead of one; there may have been an additional assessment roll, or possibly a supplemental tax roll; in short, the evidence by no means conclusively shows that there was not in fact an assessment of this property for the year 1874, and a payment of the taxes for that year. One of the witnesses, and a person competent, too, to judge, detailed in the presence of the jury the fact that the assessor, whose duty it was to place the land on the tax roll for 1874, was an incompetent person, and that many complaints of his mistakes were heard.
Appellant’s view of the case has been very strongly and ingeniously pressed upon our consideration. We are of opinion, however, that on questions of fact of this nature, where the question has been fairly submitted to a jury, and they have rendered a verdict, and the presiding judge, in whose presence arid under whose guidance and direction the case was tried, has heard a motion for a new trial and refused it, thus indorsing to that extent the correctness of the verdict, that we ought not, under such circumstances, to set a verdict aside, unless we believed it to be most manifestly wrong and unjust, and contrary to the evidence.
In regard to the sixth assignment of error, as to the action of the *654court in giving judgment for all the costs in the case against the appellant, we do not think that the matter is properly brought before us for revision by being merely assigned- as error.
The attention of the district court does not seem to have been called, in any manner, to the subject. It was not named in the motion for new trial. Flo action of any kind was had there, with a view to its correction here, if the final judgment, in that respect, was wrong. The proper and more correct practice, in reference to such matters, is for the party aggrieved to call in some manner the attention of the court to it and demand of the clerk, after the judgment is entered, a bill of costs, duly itemized, and taxed by him as the law authorizes.
On the receipt of this the party can move in the district court to have the costs retaxed, setting out in his motion the proper items of cost, as was done in Morgan v. Haldeman, 20 Tex., 58, 59, or he can move, as was done in Stewart v. Crosby, 15 Tex., 513, to strike from the bill of costs the objectionable items. Unless this is done in some manner, as was in effect decided in the case of Castro v. Illies, 11 Tex., 39, 40, this court will not notice the matter.
As was said by Judge Lipscomb in the case last cited: “We have nothing to-do with the retaxation of costs, until action has been taken and a decision on the proceeding to retax costs in the court below.” See, also, to the same effect, Jones v. Ford, Tyler term, 1883 (ante, p. 125).
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered January 29, 1884.]