Court Opinion

ID: 6466425
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-26 14:04:10.062662+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:53:40.580541
License: Public Domain

Paeks, Associate Justice: In this case the plaintiff in error, Wagner, admits the execution of a note to the defendants in error for $125, but denies that the note as executed by him was to draw interest. The interest found by the jury was $16.67. The errors assigned are nine in number. Before the plaintiff in error can consistently ask us to examine so many errors for so small an amount, he should furnish us with a correct bill of exceptions. There is no certificate to this bill of exceptions that it contains all the evidence in the case. On the contrary, we are referred in the bill itself to the transcript for a very important affidavit which was used on the trial as evidence, and is not incorporated in the bill of exceptions. The supreme court of Illinois in McPherson v. Nelson, 44 Freeman, say that they have “ uniformly held that when the bill of exceptions fails to show that it contains all of the evidence, they will not examine the evidence on a motion for a new trial. The presumption is, until the contrary is shown, that the finding is correct and that there was evidence which may not be in the record that warranted the finding.” The same court in Garrity v. Losano et al., 83 Ill., 597, say: “ Copies of instruments sued on, copies of accounts and affidavits filed in an action at law, are not parts of the record unless so made by being embodied in the bill of exceptions.” This court has so recently expressed its concurrence with this statement of the law and practice, that it is rather remarkable that attorneys in preparing bills of exception, do not conform to it. To facilitate the drawing of bills of exception and to secure the rights of parties against errors in the evidence, each district court should have a competent reporter to take the testimony in all important trials, and any want of authority there may be in existing laws to appoint and pay such officers, should be supplied by appropriate legislation. In Rosenthal v. Chisum, 1 Gildersleeve, which involved about $2,400, the court expressed its regret that owing to the defects in the bill of exceptions, it could not decide the case upon its merits. In the present case, there is not much occasion for regret. If this court had the prerogative to set aside a practice so long and so firmly established and try the case upon its merits regardless of the errors in the bill of exceptions, it would probably decline to do so. We are not disposed to encourage appeals to this court in cases where so little is involved. The judgment of the district court is affirmed. All concur.