This is an application for a writ of error and we are of the opinion that it should be refused.
The case is of long standing and has frequently been before this and other appellate courts of this state. A judgment was rendered in the case in the year 1891, from which an appeal was taken to the Court of *Page 381 Civil Appeals at Dallas. That court in the year 1894 affirmed the judgment in part, but reversed and remanded the cause as to Aspley. It would seem, from the record before us, that no mandate was ever issued on that judgment, but in the view we take of the case that is unimportant.
Notwithstanding no mandate appears to have been issued, the case was again called for trial in the District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District of Dallas County at a term which ended on the 30th day of August, 1903. When the case was called, two motions to dismiss were filed — one upon the ground that no mandate had issued upon the judgment remanding the cause, and the other upon other grounds not necessary to be mentioned. The court expressly overruled the former ground, but sustained the latter, and dismissed the case. From that judgment Aspley, an intervening plaintiff and the present applicant for the writ of error to this court, sued out a writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth District. The cause having been transferred to the Appellate Court of the Third District, that court held that for the reason that no mandate had ever issued, the cause was properly dismissed and affirmed the judgment without passing upon any other question.
The first specification of error in the petition for the writ of error assigned is that the "Court of Civil Appeals erred in affirming the judgment of the court below upon the ground that the mandate of the Court of Civil Appeals had not been taken out within twelve months after the judgment of said court was rendered, because, etc." Each of the other assignments is the same, except that under each a different reason is given in support of the assignment. Hence the assignments are the same as if there had been but one, supported by five different propositions.
Now if the Court of Civil Appeals has made a right disposition of the case, it is no ground for reversal that they have given a wrong reason for their ruling. So that if the trial court correctly dismissed the case upon the other ground set up in the motions to dismiss, it is immaterial; that the Court of Civil Appeals sustained their ruling for a different reason. It is not assigned in the petition for the writ of error that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in not reversing the judgment for the reason that it was error to dismiss the case, but merely in effect that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that it was properly dismissed because no mandate had issued upon the judgment which remanded the cause for a new trial. Hence conceding for the sake of the argument, that the proposition announced by the Court of Civil Appeals is erroneous (a point we do not determine), the question then was, did the trial judge err in dismissing the case? That question is not presented by the specifications of error in this court and therefore the application for the writ of error is refused.
Writ of error refused. *Page 382