48 Iowa 96 | Iowa | 1878
I. No bill of exceptions was signed by the judge who tried the cause, showing the testimony introduced, or the rulings made upon the trial.
On the 26th day of November, 1877, the judge who tried the cause signed the following certificate: “I certify that the evidence referred to and enumerated in the foregoing certificate of W. S. Briggs, short-hand reporter for the District Court of the second judicial district, including the county of Monroe, was all the testimony in the ease of Gibbs, Administrator, etc., v. W. J. Buckingham et al., tried at the November Term of the District Court of Monroe county, 1876.” This certificate was made one year after the trial.' The plaintiff moved to strike out the bill of exceptions thus made up, for the reason that it was not signed within the time by law prescribed. In State v. Fay, 43 Iowa, 651, where the evidence was reduced to writing during the trial, showing the rulings of the court touching the admission and exclusion of evidence, and the judge certified that the writing contained all the evidence and the proceedings on the trial, we held that there had been a sufficient compliance with the statute re
II. Nothing remains in the record to be considered but the ruling of the court granting a change of venue. It is claimed that the court had no jurisdiction to grant a change of venue in this case.
Affirmed.