31 Iowa 475 | Iowa | 1871
— The abstract in this case fails to show that the appellant took any exception or made any objection to the judgment rendered by the court on his answer as garnishee. The statute defines an exception to be an objection taken to a decision of a court or referee on matter of law, made in the course of a tidal, and provides that the party objecting to the decision must do so at the time the decision is made. Rev., § 3106. And the cases are numerous in which this court has held, that, unless the party excepts to
In Robison v. Saunders, Kibben & Co., 14 Iowa, 539, it is held that this court will not review a judgment against a garnishee in favor of the judgment plaintiff, when the appellant has taken no exceptions to any ruling of the court, nor submitted any motion asking the court to set aside the judgment, citing in support of the holding, Pigman v. Denney, 12 Iowa, 396 ; McKinley v. Bechtel, id. 561; Downing v. Harmon, 13 id. 535; Perkins v. Whittam, 14 id. 596 ; Thomas v. East & McBee, id. 596.
By the act of the general assembly of March 24, 1866 (ch. 49, laws of 1866), it is enacted that it shall not be necessary now, in order to authorize the appellate court to review and reverse on appeal, a judgment of the court below on the ground of errors of law committed by the judge thereof on the trial, that a motion for a new trial, on these grounds, be made in the court below. This statutory enactment, however, does not dispense with the necessity of excepting to the decision that is sought to be reviewed in this court. This rule of practice is prescribed by the statute, and has received the sanction of this court in every case where the question has arisen. It is the policy of the statute that whatever errors of law the nisi jprvus courts may commit in the decision of causes before them, unless such decisions be objected to at the time, they shall not be the subject of fiirther litigation on appéal.
The judgment of the court below is
Affirmed.