Court Opinion

ID: 7094930
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:09:52.735491+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:12.904032
License: Public Domain

Beck, J.—
The assignment of errors presents objections to rulings upon certain instructions given and refused and upon the admission of certain evidence. These objections all involve and are based upon the alleged fact of the adjudication of the issues of the case which the answer avers was had in a former suit. The abridgment of the record upon which the case is presented fails to set out this judgment and the proceedings wherein it was rendered, neither does it contain any evidence tending to establish the averment of the pleadings in regard to them. It does not appear that an attempt was made to establish by evidence the adjudication pleaded. We therefore cannot consider the objections which are based upon the prior adjudication. The rulings complained of are entirely unobjectionable so far as any thing appears in the abstract of the record.
It is claimed that the verdict is not supported by the evidence. This objection is without foundation. The finding well accords with the evidence before us.
The assignment of errors raises other objections which are not presented in the argument of defendants’ counsel. We do not consider objections that are not relied upon in the argument, but will regard them as waived, Shaw v. Brown, 13 Iowa, 508.
*601It is not the hahit of this court, neither are we required so to do, to enter into the examination of objections in which counsel have not sufficient confidence to justify an attempt to sustain them by arguments. In this case they appear to be without merit and demand no further notice.
Affirmed.