47 Fla. 132 | Fla. | 1904
— We are of the opinion that no error is made to appear by the record herein in respect to any as
In the ordinary bill there is no statement of facts whatever following the affirmative charge, upon which error is sought to be predicated, but an evidentiary bill, containing more than two hundred and fifty pages of the stenographer’s notes of the evidence, is presented that purports “to have been made up and settled at the instance of the plaintiff in error in support of an assignment of error predicated on the refusal of the court to grant a new trial on the ground that the verdict was contrary to the evidence and not supported thereby; and in support of an assignment of error that the court erred in taking the case from the jury and instructing a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of three thousand, seven hundred, four and 66-100 dollars,” and we are invited by counsel to consider this mass of evidence in determining the propriety of the charge. The invitation must be declined.
An evidentiary bill, “entirely separate and distinct from” the ordinary bill, is permitted under the rule for but two purposes, vis: when the plaintiff in error wishes to have reviewed a ruling upon a motion- for a new trial in which is questioned the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, and when the defendant in error demands that the whole evidence be brought up in order to show that the errors are harmless. There can be no contention that express provision has been made in the rule for an evidentiary bill that contains all the evidence in support of an assignment alleging error in the giving or refusing to give an affirmative charge; nor do we see anything in the spirit of the rule to force so violent a construction. If an affirmative charge has been given for the plaintiff, and it be true that some evidence has been introduced sufficient to require that the case be submitted to the jury for their
The language used by this court in Florida Cent. & P. R. Co. v. Seymour, 44 Fla. 557, 33 South. Rep. 424, as to what must be stated under the affirmative charge in order to have the action of the court thereon reviewed
We are of the opinion that neither the letter nor the spirit of the rule will admit of the practice, and the judgment is affirmed.
Hocker, Shackleford, Whitfield and Carter, JJ., concur.
Taylor, C. J., absent on account of sickness.