163 Ind. 266 | Ind. | 1904
Appellant petitions for a transfer of this canse from the first division of the Appellate Court, under the provisions of the second subdivision of §1337j Burns 1901. The general grounds assigned in the petition are (1) that the opinion of the Appellate, Court contravenes a ruling precedent of the Supreme Court; (2) that a new question of law is involved, which has been erroneously decided by the Appellate Court. The specific reasons stated in the petition in support of the general grounds relate to the holding of the Appellate Court in sustaining the trial court in refusing to give to the jury, over the appellant’s request, certain special instructions.
An inspection of the court’s opinion in this ease discloses that no question for our decision is presented upon the specific reasons or points assigned in the petition, because none of the instructions given or refused is set out in the opinion at length or in substance. The only mention in the opinion in respect to instructions is the following: “It is claimed that the court erred in some of its instructions to the jury, and in rejecting a number of instructions proposed by the appellant. Upon comparing the instructions given with each other, and considering these instructions as a whole, we find that the court fairly presented the case to the jury, and in its instructions sufficiently covered the pertinent and correct instructions which were rejected.” See City of Huntington v. Lusch (1904), 33 Ind. App. 476, for the opinion in full. Under this mere statement in regard to the instructions it is evident that we are not in a position to determine the questions which the petitioner herein seeks to present. The rule is fSeittled that in. am .application to transfer a cause decided !by the Appéllate -.Court ¡to the ¡Supreme ‘Court under the provisions -of ,the dbove statute we -are ¡ndt .authorized to ¡examine -'the record in -order to decide Whether the reasons assigned for the transfer are sustained, but we look to and examine only the opinion o-f the court in the determination
The object or purpose of the law providing for transfer of cases decided by the Appellate Court to the Supreme Court is to enable the latter to control the statements or declarations of legal principles as contained in the opinion in the particular case. Klein v. Nugent Gravel Co. (1904), 162 Ind. 509; Barnett v. Bryce Furnace Co., supra.
By denying a petition to transfer under the statute in question such ruling of this court can not in effect be held as approving or affirming generally all legal principles as the same are/ stated or declared in the opinion of the Appellate Court, Tut the effect is to deny that such opinion is wrong in respect to the specific reasons assigned in the petition for transfer. *
Eor the reasons stated the petition herein is denied.