298 S.W. 494 | Ark. | 1927
This is an appeal by Fred W. Martin and Ida H. Martin from a judgment rendered in the circuit court of Arkansas County on the 24th day of August, 1926, against them, J. H. Martin and Frank H. *1162 Martin and each of them, in favor of appellee for $1,123.33 with interest at the rate of six per cent. per annum from the date of the judgment. It was alleged in the amended and substituted complaint that said appellants were members of a partnership trading under the name of "The Martin Company," to whom appellee sold merchandise in the amount for which suit was brought. The original complaint referred to the partnership as J. H. Martin Company, and did not allege that Frank H. Martin was a partner.
Appellants filed an answer, denying that they or either of them were partners in the Martin Trading Company. On September 15, 1926, they filed a motion for a new trial on the ground that no proof was introduced in support of the issue raised, and that for such reason the judgment was without evidence to sustain it.
On December 6, 1926, appellee filed a verified motion to correct the judgment entered on August 24, 1926, so as to show that, before the rendition of said judgment, proof was introduced to establish that appellants were members of the partnership of "The Martin Company." After hearing testimony, the court corrected the judgment so as to embrace a recital that proof was introduced before the original judgment was entered to show that appellants were partners doing business as "The Martin Company." The court then overruled the motion for a new trial, over appellant's objection and exception.
Although appellants objected and excepted to the order of the court correcting the judgment, they did not preserve the objection and exception, either in a supplemental motion for a new trial or by amendment to their original motion for new trial. This court therefore cannot determine whether the evidence adduced by appellee on its motion to correct the judgment was sufficient to justify the correction. The rule is that this court will not consider alleged errors of the trial court unless embraced in a motion for a new trial. Van Hoozer v. Hendricks,
The recital in the judgment, by way of amendment. to the effect that the trial court heard evidence to show *1163 that appellants were members of the partnership doing business as "The Martin Company" must be accepted by this court as conclusive of that fact.
We do not think the variance between the names of "J. H. Martin Company" and "The Martin Company" in the two complaints is sufficient to characterize the latter suit as a separate and distinct suit. Both appellants were made defendants in the first suit as well as the second, and the same account was attached as an exhibit to both complaints, both accounts having been made out against "The Martin Company." The first suit was filed within the statutory period of limitations, and the account therefore was not barred.
No error appearing, the judgment is affirmed.