Lawrence v. Oliver Typewriter Co.
This text of 99 N.E. 809 (Lawrence v. Oliver Typewriter Co.) 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
— The record on file in this case recites that this cause was submitted to the court below for trial, and, pursuant to a request by defendant, the court made and filed its special findings of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon. The findings, the conclusions of law and the judgment of the court are set out in the record, but the pleadings are entirely omitted. Appellant assigns as error that the court erred in its conclusions of law.
In the case of Marsh v. Bower, supra, the Supreme Court said: “There is abundant authority for the proposition that upon the appellant rests the duty of presenting a record disclosing manifest error. Elliott, App. Proc. §186. It is well settled, also, that, in the absence of the complaint, no question is presented for decision. * * * The sufficiency of pleadings, the correctness of conclusions of law, and questions upon the motion for a new trial all relate back to the complaint, and, in its absence the record is not properly presented.”
The pleadings constitute the foundation on which the superstructure of the cause must rest, and without them there can be no cause. With the omission of the pleadings, we are unable to determine who were parties to the suit, and to what extent their interests were affected by allega[436]*436tion or admission. The case of Reid v. Reid (1898), 149 Ind. 274, 49 N. E. 2, was one in which no pleadings were made a part of the transcript on appeal. The court, in holding that no questions were presented by the assignments of errors, used the following language: The essential basis of a cause, the pleadings, not being before us, we are supplied with no ground upon which to consider the assignment of error. "We cannot know the character of the suit, the parties interested, or the correctness of. the conclusions reached without the pleadings, the foundation upon which the proceedings were constructed, the point of view from which every step must be scrutinized. It is no more possible for this court to consider the action of the trial court without thé pleadings in a cause than for the trial court to gather the scope of the issues between the parties, determine the relevancy of the evidence, and, by judgment, adjust the rights of the parties, without pleadings.”
This question has recently been passed on by this court in the ease of Mesker v. Fitzpatrick (1911), 48 Ind. App. 518, 94 N. E. 827.
On the authority of the cases heretofore cited, we are constrained to hold that the transcript in this case presents no question for our decision, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Note. — Reported in 99 N. E. 809. See, also, under (1) 2 Oyc. 1035; (2) 3 Cyc. 155.
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99 N.E. 809, 51 Ind. App. 434, 1912 Ind. App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-oliver-typewriter-co-indctapp-1912.