132 Va. 475 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error instituted his action against M. W.
The defendants moved to dismiss the writ of error as improvidently awarded upon several grounds. One of these grounds is that no proper bill of exceptions has been signed.
It appears that the defendants made no motion to set aside the verdict, while the plaintiff moved to set aside so much of the verdict as fixed the amount of the damages, and to award him a new trial upon the sole issue of the quantum of his damages. This motion was overruled by the court, and thereupon the defendant presented a bill of exceptions which does not certify all of the evidence adduced by the parties upon the issues raised by the pleadings, but only certifies the evidence relating to the quantum of damages.
The statute, Code 1919, section 6339, provides that, with the petition for a writ of error, “there shall be a transcript of the record of so much of the case wherein the judgment, decree, or order, is as will enable the court, or judge thereof in vacation, to whom the petition is to be presented, properly to decide on such petition, and enable the court, if the petition be granted, properly to decide the questions that may arise before it.” So that the motion to dismiss the writ must be sustained if this statute has not been complied with, and it has not been complied with unless enough of the evidence is certified to enable this court properly to decide the questions arising.
We do not think it necessary to discuss the other interesting questions referred to in the briefs. Our conclusion is that the record does not disclose all of the evidence upon which the jury and the trial court acted, and hence that the writ was improvidently awarded because from the facts which do appear the verdict must be construed to be in favor of the defendant.
Writ dismissed as improvidently awarded.