Zidell v. NHP Real Estate Co.

GAMMAGE, Justice,

concurring.

In the face of Smith v. Harris County-Houston Ship Channel Navigation District, 160 Tex. 292, 329 S.W.2d 845 (1959); Suarez v. Brown, 414 S.W.2d 537 (Tex.Civ.App.1967, writ ref’d), and Grajeda v. Charm Homes, Inc., 614 S.W.2d 176 (Tex.Civ.App.1981, no writ), I dutifully but reluctantly concur in the majority opinion.

The arbitrary application of Rule 4, Tex. R.Civ.P., as heretofore construed, can and does have harsh, inequitable and unreasonable results.

Appellant here filed his cost bond on the first day it was possible for him to do so following the Fourth of July — that is, July 6, the first day the courthouse was open for business following the “legal” holiday. Because the courthouse was closed on July 5, and it was impossible for appellant to file timely, there is a good possibility that his motion for extension of time would have been granted if filed any time within the next 15 days following the Fourth of July, up to and including July 19.

*201Appellant’s error was in relying upon the fifth of July as being a “legal” holiday because the courthouse was closed on the lawful authority of the commissioners court, in filing his cost bond as soon thereafter as possible, and in trusting that a motion for extension of time was unnecessary. His substantive compliance with Rule 4 did not meet the rigid requirements of form.

The arbitrary and rigid application of rules in a manner which ignores logic can only serve to confirm in the minds of both laymen and lawyers what is already believed, or at best strongly suspected, by many — that the law bears little relationship to reason or reality. Such practices in an earlier day motivated Charles Dickens (and could well motivate others in our time) to comment through a frustrated Mr. Bumble: “If the law supposes that, . .. the law is a ass — a idiot.... [A]nd the worst I wish the law is, that his eye may be opened by experience — by experience.” Dickens, Oliver Twist, in Three Novels (Hamlyn 1977), at 356.

A holiday declared by a lawfully empowered local governing body is certainly not an “illegal” or “non-legal” holiday, even though not declared in statutory form by the legislature. The existence of 254 counties creates the possibility of 254 separate practices regarding “legal” State holidays which fall on weekends.

Some local governing bodies grant holidays on the normal workdays before the weekend, some on the normal workday following, some on both and some on neither. It should also be noted that, as a matter of practice, some local governing bodies occasionally announce such holidays only days, or even hours, before the given date.

To how much diligence is counsel to be put to determine whether the courthouse which is closed on a normal workday is in fact closed for a “legal” holiday?

The pertinent part of Rule 4 reads as follows:

The last day of the period so computed is to be included, unless it is a Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday, in which event the period runs until the end of the next day which is neither a Saturday, Sunday nor a legal holiday, (emphasis added)

Nowhere in Rule 4 does one find a definition of the term “legal holiday.” Instead, one must search the cases and rely upon dictum in Blackman v. Housing Authority of City of Dallas, 152 Tex. 21, 254 S.W.2d 103, 105 (1953), which states:

Nor do we think the rule meant to include those days, which the Commissioner’s Court of the County ... might choose to designate as a holiday.

See also Suarez, supra, which follows this statement in Blackman.

Assuming that a rule should be written so that its clear meaning is readily apparent to a layman, it is respectfully suggested that the Supreme Court reexamine the language of Blackman and its successor cases, and that Rule 4 be amended to include on its face a definition of the term “legal holiday,” which either clearly includes1 or clearly excludes2 holidays declared by local governing bodies.

As stated by Chief Justice Preslar in his dissent in Grajeda, supra:

Closed is closed, whether by action of the legislature or the commissioners court. To these Appellants, it makes no difference who ordered it closed, and no distinction should be made as to who closed it. The test is not who closed it, but that it was closed.

614 S.W.2d at 178.

It makes little sense to have, as current construction requires, a courthouse that is de facto closed and de jure open.

. For example: “The term ‘legal holiday’ as used herein means those holidays declared by the Legislature in Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4591 and, in any particular county of this State, those holidays lawfully declared by the county’s commissioners court.”

. For example: “The term ‘legal holiday’ as used herein means only those holidays declared by the Legislature in Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4591.”