Palo Alto County v. Harrison

26 N.W. 16, 68 Iowa 81
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 16 (Palo Alto County v. Harrison) 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.

Bluebook
Palo Alto County v. Harrison, 26 N.W. 16, 68 Iowa 81 (iowa 1885).

Opinion

Eeed, J.

l. practice courtP:raddistraéefiled after argilment closed, After appellee had filed his argument, appellant filed an amended abstract, in which some portion of the evidence was more fully set out than was done in the original abstract. Appellee then filed a motion to strike this abstract from the files, on . . the ground that it was not filed until after his argument was filed; also to strike out the evidence and affirm the judgment, for the reason that it appeared that [85]*85certain items of evidence offered in tlie district court liad not been certified by the trial judge, and were not included in the abstract; and that the certificate of tlie trial judge does not identify the evidence offered with sufficient certainty; and that all of the evidence offered in the case was not before this court. It was held by this court in Johnson v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R’y Co., 51 Iowa, 25; Rogers v. Carman, 54 Id., 715; and In re Will of Caywood, 56 Id., 301, that we would not consider the additional abstracts which had been filed without leave by the appellants after the cases had been fully argued by appellees. This ruling was based, however,’ in each case, on the particular facts of that case, and was not intended as the announcement of a rule of universal application. In each case the additional abstract was filed, either at the time or after the submission of the cause, or so near the time of the submission as to give the other side no opportunity to correct any errors or misstatements which might be contained in it. It is manifest that to permit a party to file an additional abstract under such circumstances would be to give him a great advantage over his adversary, and would lead to great abuses in practice. In the present case, however, the abstract objected to was served on appellee, and filed, some three months before the cause was submitted, lie lias had every opportunity to examine it and correct any misstatements or errors contained in it, and he has filed an additional argument based in part on the record as made by the additional abstract. The case, therefore, does not come within the reason of the holding of the cases cited. The additional abstract is essential to a fair presentation of the cause, and there is no valid reason for disregarding it. The rules of practice in courts of last resort ought to be framed and interpreted with a view, rather to the submission of causes upon their merits, than to their disposition on merely technical grounds.

[86]*862. practice: cause?oSer-y mentsin evidenee: liow done. [85]*85II. The certificate of the trial judge shows that defendant offered in evidence a certified copy'of the book of original [86]*86entries, so f&r sis tlie same sliows tli© swamp and overflowed lands in Palo Alto county; also a certified copy of tlie list of swamp-land selections in the county, showing the date of the selections, the agent by whom selected, date of the patent of such as had been patented, and tbe date of the rejection of such as had been rejected, — but neither of these documents is contained in the transcript, or set out in the abstract. This omission is one ground of the motion to strike out the evidence and affirm the judgment. The certificate states that the offer to introduce the copy of the book of original entries consisted merely of the bare statement of the offer, but that no certified copy of the book was. ever filed in the case, or produced on the trial. As the offer to introduce the copy was made by defendant, it was bis business to file it with the evidence in the case, or at least produce it on the trial, that it might be seen and considered by the court in determining the case. As he did neither, the presumption is that he abandoned the offer, or rather, it would be more accurate to say that, as he neither filed the document in the case nor produced it on the trial, he did not offer it in evidence; for his mere oral statement that he offered it, without more, did not amount to an offer to introduce it in evidence. The rule certainly is that all matters introduced in evidence on the trial, or actually offered in evidence in cases triable d& novo in this court, should be brought up on appeal to this court; and it lias frequently been held that we could not try tbe case anew unless we bad all of tbe evidence before us.

3. PRACTICE in supreme court: trial de novo: immaterial evidence omitted from record. If it should appear, however, from an inspection of tbe record, that some item of evidence which was irrelevant to any issue in tlie case, or entirely immaterial, was omitted from it, we would not, on account of such omission, refuse to try the case anew. To warrant ns, however, in so trying the cause, the irrelevancy or immateriality of the omitted testimony must be made clearly to appear by tbe record itself. [87]*87The substancé of what was shown by the list of swamp-land selections which was offered in evidence, but is omitted from the transcript and abstract, as shown by defendant’s statement at the time he made the offer, is set out in the certificate of the trial judge; and it is entirely clear from the statement, we think, that said list is neither relevant nor material. Counsel for appellee have not suggested wherein they claim it is material, nor have they advised us of any object they had in view when they offered it in evidence, or of any legitimate purpose which it serves in the case. They stand on what they claim is the rule in every such case, insisting, in effect, that, as the list was introduced in evidence, the case cannot be tried anew in this court, even though its irrelevancy and immateriality should be apparent. We think, however, that the rule should not be made to work such a result.

4. practice: ofeaocumon-n for purposes6 of appeal. III. The other ground of the motion is that the certificate does not identify the evidence with sufficient certainty to enable this court to determine whether we have ^ie same instruments of evidence before us which were introduced on the trial in the district court. The certificate is not attached to the evidence, but it identifies the different instruments of evidence with as much certainty, we think, as is possible under the circumstances. The depositions are identified by giving the names of the witnesses, and the name of the officer by whom they were taken, and by giving the date when they were filed in the case, and the different items of documentary and record evidence are all identified by letters and numbers, or by such references to their date and contents, or to the book and page where recorded, as would enable the clerk in making up the transcript to determine, with reasonable certainty, what was intended. The identification, we think, is as perfect as could reasonably be required in any case. The motion will, therefore, be overruled.

[88]*88„ „ oomUtSous o*£ oontraeuont: swamplands: ratification by electors procured by íraud: failure of consideration. [87]*87IV. The contract betweén Clark and the county was entered into on behalf of the county by the county judge, [88]*88who, under the laws then in force, was the fiscal agent Bie county. By the contract Clark undertook to build at the county seat, for the use and benefit of the county, one two-story brick ■, , , building, also a one-story brick school-house, and . _ .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Keokuk Waterworks Co. v. Keokuk
277 N.W. 291 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1938)
Johnson v. Incorporated Town of Remsen
247 N.W. 552 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1933)
Noecker v. Wallingford
111 N.W. 37 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
Doppelt v. Blum
118 Ill. App. 64 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1905)
Harrison v. Palo Alto County
73 N.W. 872 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1898)
Zundelowitz v. Webster
65 N.W. 835 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1896)
Doerr ex rel. Rowan v. Southwestern Mutual Life Ass'n
92 Iowa 39 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1894)
Croddy v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co.
60 N.W. 214 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1894)
Jamison v. Weaver
53 N.W. 1076 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1893)
University of Des Moines v. Polk County Homestead & Trust Co.
53 N.W. 1080 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1893)
Clark v. Maurer
42 N.W. 522 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1889)
Buck v. Holt
37 N.W. 377 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1888)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 16, 68 Iowa 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palo-alto-county-v-harrison-iowa-1885.