81 Ind. 151 | Ind. | 1881
This was a suit by the appellee’s relator against the appellants, upon a guardian’s bond. The cause was put at issue and tried by the court; and a finding was made for the relator, assessing his damages in the sum of $314.41. The appellants’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, and their exception saved to such ruling, the court rendered judgment against them in the relator’s favor, for the damages assessed and costs.
The overruling of their motion for a new trial is the only error assigned by the appellants in this court. Under this supposed error the appellants’ counsel has devoted the principal portion of his elaborate brief of this cause to the discussion of the alleged insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of the trial court. If the evidence were properly in the record, we could not determine this point in favor of the appellants; for there is evidence contained in the bill of exceptions tending to sustain the finding of the court on every material point. In such a case this court will not weigh the evidence, nor attempt to determine its preponderance in favor of either party. For this purpose, the learned judge who tried the cause had opportunities and facilities which we, as an appellate court, can not have; and it is for-this reason that it has been so often decided that this court would not disturb the finding of the trial court or the verdict of a jury upon the weight of the evidence. Hayden v. Cretcher, 75 Ind. 108.
Besides, although the bill of exceptions, in this case, concludes with the usual formula, “this was all the evidence given in the cause,” yet it affirmatively appears on the face of the bill, that it does not contain all the evidence given in the cause. In such a case this court has uniformly held that it would not decide any question which depended for its proper decision-upon the evidence in the cause. Railsback v. Greve, 58 Ind. 72; Brownlee v. Hare, 64 Ind. 311; Hammon v. Sexton, 69 Ind. 37; Fouty v. Morrison, 73 Ind. 333.
In their motion for a new trial, the appellants assigned as
We are of the opinion, that these reports were competent evidence for the limited purpose for which the court admitted them; and it can not be supposed that these reports were used, or had any possible effect for any other purpose than the one for which they were admitted.
As the evidence appears in the record, wc can not say that the court erred in assessing the relator’s damages; nor could
We have found no available error, in the record of this cause, for the reversal of the judgment below.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.