Respondent has filed motion to affirm the judgment, and it is manifest the same should be sustained. The abstract of the record proper does not show anything but the amended petition and an answer. It does not show the filing of a motion for new trial or in arrest, or that a bill of exceptions was signed or filed. [Poshek v. Marceline Coal and Mining Co., 231 S.W. 70.] Nor does it show the judgment appealed from, nor any order allowing appeal. Such record is fatally defective. [Orr v. Russell, 240 S.W. 1096; Potts-Turnbull Adv. Co. v. Gatchell, 236 S.W. 1078.] The short form transcript of the clerk may possibly cure some of these defects, notably as to the judgment and the fact that a motion for new trial of some kind was filed. [State ex rel. v. Little River Drainage District,
