Morris v. Steele
This text of 17 N.W. 490 (Morris v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
I. Tlie plaintiff, upon, tbe submission of the case and in tlie printed argument, presented a motion to
The affidavit of counsel for appellant sets forth that he prepared a bill of exceptions, and that at that time the judge who tried the ease had become mentally and physically unable to sign the same, and that thereupon counsel for appellee agreed that the signature of the judge should be waived, and agreed that the bill of exceptions should be regarded as signed by the judge, and that the said bill of exceptions and written agreement were handed to the clerk to be filed.
We think the motion to strike out the evidence must be sustained. It is not in terms claimed in the abstract that it is an abstract of the evidence as shown by a bill of exceptions. If it had been so stated, it would have been the right of ap-pellee to file an additional abstract denying that there was any bill of exceptions, and calling upon the appellant for a transcript. Of course, a transcript would not have shown that there was a bill of exceptions, because there is none on file, and there is nothing in the clerk’s office to show that any ever was on file.
A motion to strike the evidence from the abstract, because not preserved by a bill of exceptions, properly raises the [230]*230question whether there was a bill of exceyffions or not.
II. The motion being sustained, we have nothing left of the case excepting the pleadings. It appears from the pleadings
The appellant claims in argument that the district court had no jurisdiction of the action, and that, before any suit can be maintained on the guardian’s bond, the guardian’s accounts should be settled in the circuit court, and the amount found to be due should be ascertained. If it were not for the cause of action founded upon the promissory note payable to the plaintiff, we might consider the question [231]*231presented by counsel. But every reasonable presumption must be indulged in favor of tlie correctness of tlie judgment of tlie court below, and we cannot say without the evidence that the court was not warranted in finding the defendant liable in the sum of $300 on the cause of action founded on the note.
Affirmed.
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17 N.W. 490, 62 Iowa 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-steele-iowa-1883.