149 Ind. 424 | Ind. | 1898
Appellees brought this action, and obtained judgment against appellants. The errors assigned by appellants, and not waived, are: First, that the court erred in overruling appellants’ demurrer to each paragraph of the amended complaint; second, that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial.
The first assignment of error presents no question, for the reason that no amended complaint is set forth in the record. The presumption is that the ruling of the trial court was correct, and, unless both the amended complaint and the demurrer thereto are set forth in the record, the court cannot say that reversible error was committed. Aydelott v. Collings, 144 Ind. 602; Elliott’s App. Proc., section 720.
All the specifications for a new trial are waived by appellant’s failure to argue the same, except one. That specification is that the court erred in permitting two incompetent witnesses, appellees George Dunn and Alice Baldwin, to testify on behalf of appellees. The bill of exceptions shows that the objection stated to the trial court was: “First, That said witnesses were incompetent because the action was to reach and affect the title to real estate of which the said Sarah Dunn died seized, leaving the plaintiff George Dunn, said witness, and her husband,- surviving, and • said plaintiff, thé said witness Olive Baldwin, with the
The evidence given at the trial of said cause is not in the record, and no facts are stated in the bill of exceptions showihg that this action was “founded on a contract with, or a demand against, the ancestor to obtain title to or possesion of property, real or personal, of or in the right of such ancestor, or to affect the same in any manner.” Nor in the objection to the competency of said witnesses, set forth in the bill of exceptions, is it stated as a ground for said objection that the action was of the character mentioned in said section 507 (499), supra. The amended complaint is not in the record, and as all presumptions are in favor of the ruling of the trial court, and it not being otherwise shown that this action was of the character which rendered said witnesses incompetent, and that this was stated as one of the grounds of objections to the competency of said witnesses, error is not affirmatively disclosed by the record.
Finding no available error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.