24 Ind. 323 | Ind. | 1865
A motion is made in this court, by the appellee, to strike a bill of exceptions from the record, upon the ground that the same does not correctly state the evidence, and that the signature of the judge thereto was obtained by fraudulent representations, and that it was not filed in time.
We cannot enter upon such an inquiry. The transcript before us is properly certified, and we cannot undertake its correction, unless it has been changed since it was transmitted here, which is not pretended. We cannot make a record for any of the lower courts; that is their province, and all applications for its correction must be made to them. The bill appears by the transcript to have been filed in time, and we must so regard it. If an imperfect
Two questions only are presented for our consideration by the appellant.
1. A properly certified copy of an affidavit filed by the appellant in this court, as the basis of a motion in relation to a cause here, was permitted to go in evidence over his objection. This is claimed to be error, for the reason that it was irrelevant, and also because it was but a fragment, instead of the whole of a record. It was, as it turned out, wholly irrelevant, because it was in no manner connected with this case by any other evidence. It is impossible to perceive, therefore, how its admission in evidence could have injured the appellant. Other evidence might have existed which would have rendered it important, and we must suppose that the court admitted it for that reason, and we think that was proper. But inasmuch as it was not followed by that other evidence, it could, per se, have no proper influence upon the case, and we must presume that it had none. The other reason alleged against its admission, to-wit, that it was part of a record, and that the whole record ought to have been offered, is not a good one. It appears from the affidavit itself, that an appeal by Thom to this court had been dismissed, and that he wished it reinstated, but whether any motion to that end was ever made here does not appear. If not, then it was an isolated paper filed in this court. In that case, it did not belong to the case dismissed, for that was no longer in fieri, and it was no proper part of any record whatever.
This suit was by Thom and wife against Wilson, as executor, not upon a contract made with the executor. If the plaintiff had succeeded, the judgment would have been against the testator’s estate. The executor offered himself as a witness to testify to conversations had by Thom
Tbe judgment is reversed, with costs, and tbe cause remanded for a new trial.