47 Minn. 24 | Minn. | 1891
1. The 2d, 3d, 4th, and 5th assignments of error, as specified in appellant’s brief, refer solely to the sufficiency of the evidence to justify and sustain the verdict. As the certificate of the district judge who presided at the trial fails to state or show that all of the testimony produced on that occasion has been incorporated in the settled case, and as the fact has not been made to appear by the record in any other manner, each of these assignments must be disregarded. When counsel for the respondents called attention to this •feature of the case on the oral argument, appellant’s counsel requested that he might be allowed to have the certificate amended to correspond with what he claims was the fact in this regard, should this court be of the opinion on examination that it nowhere appeared in the record that all of the evidence produced upon the trial had been returned. It ought not to be necessary, but we take this occasion to say that we •cannot review a case upon a record differing in any essential from ■that brought' to the attention and passed upon by the lower court. Parties must stand on appeal on the record they have chosen to abide by when striving in the trial courts, to rectify errors alleged to have been eommited there. Again, it would prove a very rare practice indeed should we permit a case to' be amended or re-certified pending or subsequent to the arguments.
2. Assignments of error numbered 1 and 8 are referable to errors •said to have been made by the court in its charge to the jury. We fail to discover that any exceptions whatsoever were taken to the •charge.
4. The first assignment of error has been disposed of in a consideration of those following it.
Judgment and order affirmed.