177 Ind. 366 | Ind. | 1912
Appellant filed a complaint for partition of real estate, to which there were answers by appellees alleging indivisibility.
The court on the trial found the land not susceptible of division without damage to the owners, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted on the sole ground of the insufficiency of the evidence.
Counsel for appellant have evidently proceeded under §§1689, 1690 Burns 1908, Acts 1899 p. 384, but they have overlooked the fact that §1690, supra, has been declared unconstitutional '(Adams v. State [1901], 156 Ind. 596, 59 N. E. 24); but they have not even complied with that section.
The object of the rule is that each member of the court may know from the statement in the brief what the evidence was, without resort to the record.
Rule twenty-two of the Supreme Court.
Note.—Reported in 9S N. E. 113. See, also, under (1) 3 Cyc. 24, 27; (2) 2 Cyc. 1038; (3) 2 Cyc. 1013.