4 Utah 64 | Utah | 1885
Plaintiff had judgment in the court below, and defendants appealed from this judgment. There is no statement on appeal, nor any bill of exceptions settled at the trial, so as to become a part of the judgment roll. The appellant has brought together, and had printed, a number of- orders, made by the court during the progress of the case, and among them orders striking out portions of the answer, and refusing to strike out portions of the complaint, and which' he alleges as errors, for which this court will reverse the judgment.
We cannot review these orders, because they are not made a part of the judgment roll by a statement or any bill of exceptions.
The appellant claims, however, that because the clerk has certified that these various orders appear among the files, or on the minutes of the court, that they are part of the record, and are properly here, and can be reviewed by this court, and that he was not bound to furnish a statement in order to bring them into the judgment roll, or make them a part of the record to be reviewed by this court.
Section 334 of the Practice Act, as it stood at the time this appeal was taken, provided that “a copy of the statement shall be annexed to a copy of the 3udgment roll, if the appeal be from a judgment; if the appeal be from an order, to a copy of such order,” and section 338 of the same act provided that “on an appeal from a final judgment, the appellant shall furnish the court with a transcript of the notice of appeal, and the statement, if there be one,” etc.
Unless this last section be interpreted to mean that the
The errors complained of could only be brought into the judgment roll, by a statement, as the office of that instrument is to bring into the roll matters like those complained of in this case, which otherwise would not appear there.
From the history of the case, it appears that the suit was commenced by John W. Lowell and Jonathan M. Williamson, as partners, under the firm name of John W. Lowell & Co., and during its pendency the firm was dissolved, and the acceptances upon which it was brought, were assigned to John W. Lowell. A supplemental complaint setting up this fact, was filed and served upon the defendant, who seemed to have taken no notice of it. No order appears to have been made, changing the name of the parties, and yet the judgment entered was one in favor of John W. Lowell. If the order of substitution had been made, it should have appeared in the ordinary judgment roll: Sec. 203, Practice Act.
The fact that the plaintiffs had assigned the acceptances, after the complaint was filed, is not such a material fact as rendered necessary or proper, the filing of a supplemental complaint. Section 16 of the Practice' Act provided, among other things, that “in case of the death, or disability of a party, the court, on motion, may allow the action to be continued by, or against his representative or successor in interest. In the case of any other transfer of interest, the action may be continued in the name of the original party, or the court may allow the person to whom the transfer is made, to be substituted in the action.” This case could have been continued in the name of the original party, notwithstanding the assignment, or a substitution could have been had upon motion. It was a matter left to
As there appears to bave been no order of tbe court substituting- tbe person in whose favor judgment was finally rendered, for tbe original plaintiffs, there is in effect no judgment in the .case. •
Judgment reversed, and a new trial ordered.