Court Opinion

ID: 7094178
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:09:07.885855+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:11.410588
License: Public Domain

Wright, J.
I. The ground of objection to the introduction of the certificate of discharge, is not disclosed. Indeed it does not appear that any was stated in the court below. Hence we cannot say that the ruling was erroneous. O’Hagan v. Clinesmith, present term; Rev. § 3107.
II. From the bill of exceptions (quoted from literally in the statement), three things are observable: First. “ the record, proceedings, and judgment, upon which the action is brought,” are not embodied in the bill, nor identified by it. Second, the same is true of the testimony of the witnesses named. Third, while it is said that this was all the evidence offered by defendant, it is nowhere, either expressly or by implication, stated, that all the evidence introduced is found in the record; and a fourth, and most material one, is, that, while it is said that plaintiff introduced the testimony of Wilbur and Lyman, no such testimony is found, either in whole or in part, in any part of the record; nor does the transcript contain the motion for a new trial.
It follows necessarily from these defects in the record that we cannot find error in this j udgment. For upon what testimony the court below found for defendant, is not disclosed, and we cannot know. Possibly the plea of payment or settlement may have been sustained. Authorities are not wanting, nor need they be cited, to sustain a proposition so familiar.
If it be said that the journal entry recites that the court found “the discharge to be a. bar,” the answer is that upon what testimony this finding was based does not appear, nor was there any exception to such finding. For aught that appears, the court could reasonably have found that plaintiff, or the party holding the judgments, and defendant, were both residents of New York at the time the discharge was granted; that the discharge was resisted by such party; and that there may have been a dividend, and acceptance of the.terms and conditions ■named in such discharge. In a word, as we do not know the facts, we cannot tell upon what the conclusion was based. It is not shown, even, what discharge was thus held a bar.
As the record stands, we have no alternative. We should overturn ■ numberless prior decisions, should we adjudge that error affirmatively appeared from this transcript. And yet it should thus appear, else the judgment must stand, as this one does —
Affirmed.