Hinds v. Doan
This text of 140 N.E. 64 (Hinds v. Doan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This was an action by the appellees, Ovid Doan and Antionette Doan, against the appellees, Abraham L. Coan and Madge Coan, wherein they sought to have certain described real estate, alleged to be owned by said Doan and said Abraham L. Coan as tenants in common, and which was alleged to be not divisible, sold. The appellant, upon his application in that behalf, was admitted as a party defendant. He filed an answer to the complaint, and also a cross-complaint, in each of which he alleged that he was the owner of the property in question; that the deed, by virtue of which the other parties were asserting and claiming title, was, in fact, only a mortgage. He asked for an accounting, and that he be allowed to redeem. A reply in denial, and an answer in denial closed the issues which were submitted to the court for trial, and resulted in a finding and judgment adverse to the appellant. His motion for a new trial, wherein he tried in divers ways to question the sufficiency of the evidence, and also upon the ground of alleged newly-discovered evidence, was overruled, as shown by the transcript, on May 12, 1922, and appellant duly excepted.
The record further discloses that three days later, (May 15, 1922), the appellant prayed an appeal to this court, and was granted thirty days time in which to file his appeal bond, and ninety days within which to file all bills of exceptions.
[227]*227The record further discloses that the appeal bond was duly filed, in term-time, and duly approved, but it also discloses that the bill of exceptions, containing the evidence, was not filed until August 5, 1922, in vacation of the Grant Circuit Court. The bill of exceptions is not, therefore, in the record, Tozer v. Estate of Hobbs (1923), 79 Ind. App. 258, 137 N. E. 715, and authorities there cited.
As the only questions which the appellant attempts to present in his brief herein relate to the sufficiency of the evidence, and as the evidence is not in the record, the judgment must be and is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
140 N.E. 64, 80 Ind. App. 225, 1923 Ind. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinds-v-doan-indctapp-1923.