51 Minn. 326 | Minn. | 1892
After a trial of this action judgment was rendered against the plaintiff. He afterwards moved in the district court, where the judgment was rendered, for an order vacating the same. This was refused, and from the order refusing to grant the motion this appeal was taken.
Being thus called upon to review the decision of the court in this matter we encounter an obstacle in the fact that we are not fully informed by the return to this court as to the nature of the case upon which the order appealed from was based. The notice of the motion stated that the same would be made “on the pleadings, papers, and records of the court” in this action as well as in another specified action in the same court, and upon affidavits, copies of which were annexed to the notice. The return on this appeal contains none of the papers and records referred to, excepting copies of the affidavits, and there is nothing to show that the motion was heard and decided upon such affidavits alone. There is no certificate or statement of the court indicating upon what proofs, records, or papers the motion was presented and decided. It may well be presumed, in support of the ruling of the court, that the records of the cause were brought to the attention of the court as a part of the case upon which the motion was decided. What there may have been, if anything, in such record of the ease, which may have influenced the decision on the motion, does not appear. In the affidavit returned, which seems to have been made in opposition to the mo
While, for the reason above stated, it is unnecessary to say more, we will add that, if the matter were to be decided merely upon the affidavits before us, it seems to us that the order should be affirmed. Conceding that the plaintiff’s attorney may have been in fault for not having taken steps to secure the attendance of witnesses before the day set for. the trial, and before the plaintiff went to Duluth to attend the trial, still the plaintiff may well be deemed to have voluntarily taken the risk of going to trial in the absence of such witnesses. When the plaintiff came to Duluth on the morning of the
Order affirmed.
{Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 649.)