Plaintiff-appellant sought to enjoin Bernalillo County from interfering with its establishment and use of a private garbage dump ia which to deposit the waste and garbage of its customers. The county filed a counterclaim for an order restraining the plaintiff from the operation of such private dump and for money claimed to be due for use of the county dump. The trial court granted the relief requested by Bernalillo County, and the plaintiff has appealed from the injunction and money award.
The judgment is challenged upon the ground that it is not supported by any evidence. The record before us does not ■contain a bill of exceptions and is entirely devoid of any testimony or evidence whatsoever. Plaintiff argues not only that no evidence or testimony was offered by the parties or received by the court, but that in fact no trial of the issues was ever had.
We might be faced with a perplexing problem were it not for the fact that the trial court recited in the judgment itself that a trial was had and that the court had heard evidence. The court’s recital is well nigh conclusive on the question. Other pleadings in the record proper appear to substantiate the recital of the judgment. Plaintiff’s tendered statement of facts contains the following recital:' ......—
“Plaintiff submits the following as a" fair statement of the facts and circumstances to be deduced from the evidence presented at the hearing upon Order to. Show Cause
It, therefore, is additionally made to appear that a hearing was actually held at which evidence was taken. Sometimes evidence is heard by a trial court without a record thereof being taken. That there was a hearing at which evidence was taken is further borne out by the fact that the record discloses extensive requested findings óf fact and conclusions of law by both parties, and that findings and conclusions were made by the court.
An attack upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the judgment requires a statement in the brief'of the substance of all the evidence, bearing upon the question with references thereto in the transcript. Supreme Court Rule 15(6) (§ 21-2-1(15)(6), N.M.S.A.1953); Koran v. White,
Furthermore, it is the duty of an appellant desiring a review to see to it that a proper record is made. Supreme Court Rule 14; Buchanan v. Carpenter,
The argument that the Bernalillo County ordinance does not authorize the assessment of a charge against appellant and that its use of its private land fill cannot be prohibited depends primarily upon the terms of an ordinance which does not appear to have been offered or received into evidence. An appellate court, which is not trying the case de novo on appeal from a municipal court, may not take judicial notice of county or municipal .ordinances, but they are matters of fact which must be pleaded and proved the same as any other fact. Nesbitt v. Flaccus,
The judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
