161 P. 1165 | Cal. | 1916
This is an appeal from a judgment of dismissal upon the granting of defendant's motion for a nonsuit. The action is a revival of one to recover judgment upon a promissory note which was the subject of consideration by *51
this court in Neale v. Head,
The plaintiff appeals solely from the judgment, contending that the court erred, in several instances, in excluding certain evidence offered for the purpose of proving the testimony of material witnesses who had testified at the former trial, but who had since died. We cannot, however, consider any of these alleged errors, as there is no legal record upon which such errors can be reviewed. The only statement of the case contained in the record is one which the plaintiff attempted to prepare under section
Nor can a statement, prepared under such circumstances, have any legal efficacy as a duly authorized statement on appeal from the judgment. It is true that a statement settled in connection with a motion for a new trial may be used on such an appeal, and that the right to so use it does not depend upon the fact that it was actually used on a motion for a new trial, or that an appeal was taken from the order denying the motion for a new trial. (Wall v. Mines,
This leaves the case to stand upon the judgment-roll alone, and we can only notice errors appearing therein. The plaintiff insists that the judgment of nonsuit cannot be upheld, for the reason that "the complaint alleges the making of a promissory note, which is set out verbatim in the complaint, and the answer admits the delivery of said note and the nonpayment." But the complaint, after setting out the note and alleging its delivery and nonpayment, states in elaborate detail the history of the various transactions and proceedings, following the execution of the note by A.E. Head, the defendant's testator, as one of fifty guarantors of the California Mutual Life Insurance Company, including the unsuccessful efforts of the company to realize a profit on its insurance business, the involuntary insolvency in 1885, the final liquidation of its affairs, and the sale of the notes under execution. These facts are all enumerated in our former decisions in this action, and need not be repeated here. (See, also, Morrow v. SuperiorCourt,
The answer, admitting the making of the note under the circumstances alleged, sets up by way of defense the same matters considered and approved in Neale v. Head,
Judgment affirmed.
Sloss, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied. *55