1. PMADnra: count. I. The plaintiff claims, in his petition, to recover $621.55 upon an account for $996.50. The account sets out certain payments or credits, leaving a balance, however, to the amount for which judgment is claimed, which is not stated to be a balance, but to be the amount due plaintiff for work, etc., as shown in the account. Because the amount claimed is not alleged to be a balance on the account, defendant insists that the allegations of the petition were not sustained by the proof, which showed that the sum claimed was in fact a balance of an account. It is true, that the petition, in terms, does not claim for a balconee, but no other meaning can be placed upon its language. The defendant could not have failed to understand that, plaintiff was seeking, in the action, to recover for a balance due upon the account; the cause of action, set out in the petition, was sufficiently maintained by proof of a balance due on the account. The evidence is conflicting, but we are unable to say it does not support the verdict, as is claimed by defendant.
2. new trial: , |ence.se'neg 1 II. Defendant insists that the verdict should be set aside, because he was taken by surprise at the trial. The record fails to furnish any support to' this ground of objection to the judgment. Defendant may have been illy prepared for trial, but it *323was the. result of his own negligence or want of attention to the suit.
3é_cumula-iive evidence. III. The newly discovered evidence set out in defendant’s affidavit in support of his motion, is cumulative in character, and, therefore, not a sufficient ground for granting a new trial.
i. practice: intification. IT. Defendant claims that certain witnesses, without his fault, were not present at the trial until the close of the arguments of counsel. He then offered their testimony, which was material in his behalf. The court refused to receive their evidence. This action of the court is one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial. The bill of exceptions does not show such state of facts; they are' only stated in defendant’s affidavit for a new trial. The court having omitted to embody these alleged facts in the bill of exceptions, it cannot be considered that they are established by the record, but, on the contrary, we must rather consider that, as the motion and affidavit brought the matter to the attention of the court, the absence of any mention of the alleged facts in the bill of exceptions is conclusive evidence that the court found that they did not in truth exist. We are of the opinion that the motion for a new trial was rightly overruled.