-
Mr. Justice Wheeler delivered the opinion of the court.
We have felt some embarrassment respecting the disposition proper to be made of this cause, on account of the agreement of the parties, found by the special verdict. That is, in effect, that the judgment of this court shall be a final adjudication of the cause, only in the event that it shall be in favor of the defendant.
The value of the improvements upon the land in controversy was put in issue by the pleadings. And the jury find that it is agreed between the parties, that, if the judgment of the supreme court shall be for the plaintiff, the cause shall be remanded for the pui'pose of a future adjudication of that issue. The jury, then, did not find the issue, but an agreement of the parties, not in issue, by which it appears that the- matters in controversy were not to be determined in the court below until after this court should have decided the question of title in favor of the plaintiff. Was this a legal verdict, upon which the court could give final judgment? We are of opinion that
*399 it was not. No principle is better settled than that the verdict must find the issues; and a verdict not responsive to the issues is bad, and will not support a judgment.There was here an issue in respect to the value of the improvements, but none respecting any agreement of the parties. Yet the jury expressly decline to find the issue, and proceed to find that which was not in issue. Most manifestly this was not a legal finding, within the settled rules and principles of the law applicable to the verdicts of juries. But it has been acquiesced in by the parties, both in the district court and in this court. Gan this acquiescence and consent of parties cure the objection, and authorize us to proceed to the adjudication and disposition of the cause indicated by the agreement in question ? If so, it is difficult to perceive any reason why the parties may not, at any time during the progress of a cause, in this way, take the opinion of the court here upon any question upon which they may desire it, and then constitute this court their ministerial agent to remand the cause for sucli further litigation as may have been contemplated by their original understanding and agreement. It is evident that the substitution of the agreement, in the verdict, in the place of a finding of the jury themselves upon the issues, was a device resorted to by the parties to obtain the judgment of this court upon the single question of title, before a final adjudication upon the whole merits in the court below; and hence it Was an attempted evasion and violation of the law, which forbade an appeal until final judgment.
This is a proceeding which the law will not sanction; and' the court below erred in permitting its forms to be employed to consummate such a purpose. The verdict did not constitute a legal basis on which to rest the judgment of the court. No consent can cure the illegality, or give it validity here. To hold otherwise would be, in effect, to entertain original jurisdiction of the cause, by consent, and would be violative of the constitution of the appellate court. It would be to recognize the authority of the district court by a formal, final judgment, upon a verdict embracing a consent of parties to
*400 that effect, to refer to our decision any interlocutory judgment or legal proposition arising in the progress of a cause, before its final determination in that com’t. And were we to proceed to adjudicate and remand the cause upon the agreement of the parties, it is clear that our action would not be confined to the revising of a judgment of the district court, nor the giving of such judgment as that court ought to have given.The district court has been organized and constituted for the actual adjudication of causes within its jurisdiction; not to sit merely for the preparation of questions for decision here. And it is the province of this court to decide those causes only which were actually litigated and adjudicated in the district court.
It must have been apparent to the court below that the verdict in this case was designed and contrived by the parties improperly, to give jurisdiction to this court, and it ought to have been set aside and annulled.
Because, therefore, the court erred in proceeding to give judgment final upon the verdict rendered by the jury in this cause, we are of opinion that the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Document Info
Citation Numbers: 3 Tex. 397
Judges: Wheeler
Filed Date: 12/15/1848
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024