69 Ind. App. 137 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1918
The bill of exceptions containing the evidence consists of 285 pages. It includes the testimony of the twenty-three witnesses, the several official bonds executed by the trustee, official reports made by him, the report of a field examiner of the department of inspection and supervision of public offices, various records of the township advisory board, and other documents. The report of the field examiner is a detailed statement of the trustee’s financial transactions during a period of his stewardship. The determination of the separate liability, if any, of each set of bondsmen, would necessitate a careful examination of the evidence with reference to the time covered by each bond; and this matter is involved in some of the instructions concerning which we are asked to review the action of the trial court. The instructions involve also the application to the facts
5. With respect to the alleged errors in admitting the three items of evidence, it appears that appellant has wholly failed to set out in its brief under the heading “A concise statement of so much of the record as fully presents every error and exception relied on, referring to the pages and lines of the transcript,” nor at any other place in the brief, the ground of objection, the ruling of the court, the exception taken, or any reference to the places where they may be found in the transcript. Under the well-established rules of appellate procedure, a ruling on the admissibility of evidence cannot be reviewed where the attempt to present it is as imperfect as the attempt in the case at bar. ’ American Fidelity Co. v. Indianapolis, etc., Fuel Co. (1912), 178 Ind. 133, 98 N. E. 709.
No cause for reversal having ^ been presented, the judgment is affirmed.