Mandamus. The purpose of this proceeding is to compel the Kansas City Court of Appeals to set aside its affirmance of the judgment in the case of Samuel G. Pyle v. Kansas City Light & Power Company, the relator in this case. The Pyle Case had resulted in a judgment against relator, and an appeal had been taken to the Court of Appeals. When the case *535 came on for hearing the Court of Appeals assigned two reasons for affirming the judgment: First, that there was no showing that the bill of exceptions was signed, and that it appeared that the record proper disclosed no error; and (2) that appellant’s statement of the case was insufficient under the statute (Sec. 1511, R. S. 1919) and Rule 16 of the court. Tbimblb, J., dissented.
Relator contends the court was in error with' respect to both these matters to such an extent that mandamus can be employed in the manner in which it seeks to employ it. ' .
I. The abstract of the record proper before the Court of Appeals in the Pyle Case contained this: “The bill of exceptions was duly filed by the appellant in the office of the clerk of the court and allowed, signed, sealed
II. The second reason given by the Court of Appeals concerns the sufficiency of the statement. Interesting questions concerning the record, as printed here, and .the power of this court to compel a Court of Appeals to make up its mind that a statement in a case before it is sufficient when tested by the standard fixed by the statute and rule of court and concerning the power of this court to require a court of appeals to hold a statement insufficient in other circumstances, might arise if another question had not intervened. Section 1511, Revised Statutes 1919, does not prescribe any penalty for a failure of an appellant to file a sufficiént statement. The court relied upon the statute and its Rule 16. As precedents for its action in affirming the judgment because of the insufficiency of the statement, the court cited certain cases. In Wilkerson v. Knights & Ladies of Se
*537
curity,
The alternative writ is made peremptory.
