Irving v. Fort Worth State Bank

BISHOP, J.

C. A. Irving, plaintiff in error, recovered judgment against Fort Worth State Bank, defendant in error, in the Seventeenth district court of Tarrant county. The bank perfected its appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Second Supreme Judicial District, and the ease having been transferred to the Court ■ of Civil Appeals of. the Sixth Supreme Judicial District, the judgment of the trial court was reversed, and the cause remanded. The plaintiff in error filed his application for writ of error, which was granted by the Supreme Court, and on December 20, 1923, this court affirmed the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reversing and remanding the ease. Motion for rehearing was overruled on January 23, 1924. On January 20, 1925, the mandate was issued and delivered by the clerk of the Supreme Court, and was filed in the trial court on January 21, 1925, and defendant in error notified that it had been issued and filed.

On September 2, 1925, the defendant in error filed this motion to recall the mandate, alleging that same was issued by the clerk of the Supreme Court without authority of law and in violation of article 1556, R. O. S. 1911, which provides that—

“The clerk of the Supreme Court shall not deliver the mandate of said court until all costs of said court and of the Court of Civil Appeals shall have been paid.”

It is admitted that all such costs were paid except the costs of the stenographic report of the evidence provided for in section 5, c. 119, General Laws of the 32d Legislature (Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. Statutes 1914, art. 1924). An order was granted staying trial of the case in the Seventeenth district court of Tarrant county pending consideration of this motion.

The affidavits filed in support of the motion show that the deputy official shorthand reporter transcribed “the testimony and court proceedings recorded by him in said case in the form of questions and answers,” certifying thereto, and filed same with the clerk of the trial court as contemplated in section 5; that he was paid therefor the sum of $290 by defendant in error; and that from this stenographic report in question and answer form the statement of facts filed in this case was prepared by the attorney of the defendant in error in narrative form. The record in this case shows that the clerk of the district court, in preparing the transcript on appeal, included therein a bill of costs showing an item “Sta. of Facts (Pd. by Def.) $290.” This bill of costs contains no item which would indicate that costs had accrued by reason of the preparation and filing of a stenographic report by the court reporter in question and answer form as is contemplated in section 5. The certified bill of costs from the Court of Civil Appeals appearing in this record shows no item taxed for stenographic report of the evidence, nor does it appear from this bill of. costs that costs in that court was taxed for a statement of facts.

There is a difference in a statement of facts filed on appeal and a stenographic report of the evidence. They are not the same. Compensation paid for the preparation of a statement of facts is not an item *900taxable as costs In a case. By section 5 above it is provided that the amount paid for tbe preparation of a stenographic report in question and answer form is taxable as costs in tbe case. By an act passed by tbe Third Called Session of tbe 36th Legislature, c. 47, p. 88 (Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, Supp. 1922, art. 1925), a stenographer’s report of tbe evidence in narrative form may be substituted for one in question and answer form. When so substituted, tbe amount paid for tbe narrative form report is taxable as costs.

In tbe case of Pullman Co. v. Hays, 271 S. W. 1108, we held that the compensation paid tbe court stenographer for preparing and filing tbe report, whether in question and answer or in narrative form, is part of “tbe costs accruing in tbe case in tbe Court of Civil Appeals,” under tbe terms of article 1634, R. C. S. 1911. In that case tbe certified bill of costs'in tbe transcript embraced an item for the stenographic report, and tbe clerk of tbe Court of Civil Appeals refused to issue tbe mandate until tbe amount of this item was paid, and we held that, in taxing tbe costs in tbe Court of Civil Appeals, tbe item as to tbe stenographic report certified by tbe clerk of tbe trial court in the transcript may be relied upon when there is nothing to show that this item is not taxable.

Tbe clerk of tbe Court of Civil Appeals in this case did not tax the amount paid for tbe stenographic report. There was no item embraced in the transcript showing that any amount bad been paid for such report, and there was nothing in tbe entire record to show that such report was ever prepared and filed by tbe court stenographer. The clerk of tbe Court of Civil Appeals, as far as is disclosed by this record, was never apprised of tbe fact that such an item was taxable in this ease. It was tbe duty of tbe defendant in error, if it desired that tbe amount paid by it for tbe stenographic report be taxed by tbe clerk of tbe Court of Civil Appeals, to in some way call bis attention to this item. No motion was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals seeking to have this item taxed as part of tbe costs in that court. Tbe clerk of that court is not at fault in failing to tax this item. Tbe item was not embraced in tbe bill of costs certified by tbe clerk of tbe Court of Civil Appeals to the Supreme Court, and tbe clerk of this court did not deliver tbe mandate without authority of law and in violation of article 1556 as is alleged by tbe plaintiff in error in its motion.

The item “Sta. of Facts (Pd. by Def.) $290,” embraced in tbe bill of costs in tbe transcript from tbe district court, was not a proper item of costs. It is true that often the stenograhphie report of tbe evidence in narrative form, when agreed to by the parties to the suit and approved by tbe trial court, is filed in tbe case on appeal as a statement of facts. When this is done, tbe amount paid for same is taxable as costs because it is a stenographic report and not because it is filed as a statement of facts. In this case, tbe stenographic report was in question and answer form, and tbe statement of facts filed was prepared by the attorney for defendant in error and agreed to by tbe parties to the suit. Therefore this item appearing in the bill of costs only indicated that an improper item of costs was embraced in tbe bill.

Tbe defendant in error, having neglected to have the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals tax as costs of appeal in that court the amount paid by it for tbe stenographic report, is not entitled, on motion, to have tbe mandate recalled, and we-recommend that the order staying trial in tbe district court be dissolved, and tbe motion overruled.