19 Or. 535 | Or. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the court.
There being no bill of exceptions in this case, the appellant relies upon the certificate of the official reporter. On February 25, 1889, an act entitled “An act authorizing the
These are the main features of the act on the subject presented by appellant’s counsel, and we fail to discover anything in it that gives the reporter’s notes the effect or makes it perform the office of a bill of exceptions. No doubt the object of the act was to enable the parties to put in available form the proceedings at the trial to enable them to make an accurate bill of exceptions, but it was never designed to thus make a substitute for that part of the record. If said notes could be so used, the transcript before us would be unavailable for another reason. It only purports to contain the plaintiff’s cross-examination, — not all of his evidence, — and it does not purport to contain all the evidence given upon the trial.
We may add that if the question which counsel for appellant seeks to make were before us, we could not, in the absence of controlling authority, give to the evidence of a party when on the stand as a witness the effect of an estoppel by record. He occupies in a civil case the same situation of any witness affected by like motives and interest. The effect of his evidence and his credibility
We find no error in tbe record and tbe judgment appealed from must be affirmed.