188 S.W.2d 427 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1945
Affirming.
This is a companion case to a like styled case this day decided.
In Watlington v. Kasey,
"* * * It is ordered and adjudged by the Court that the rule heretofore issued herein be and the same now is made absolute and that said plaintiffs, and each of them, are hereby and now adjudged in contempt of Court for failing and refusing to comply with the judgment and order of this Court herein, and they are given until the 3rd day of the May 1944 term of the Breckinridge Circuit Court to purge themselves of said contempt by complying with the judgment and order of the Court heretofore entered herein, as aforesaid."
On this appeal it is argued that the proof heard on the motion for the rule shows that the division line established by the judgment of May 29, 1941, is indefinite, *246
and the judgment should be clarified. This is on the theory that the line designated by the markers placed by the surveyors does not correspond to the line described in their survey and referred to in the judgment. The evidence heard on the motion for the rule is not properly before us, and cannot be considered. The judgment was entered at the February, 1944, term of the Breckinridge circuit court, and the respondents were given until the third day of the May term to file their bill of exceptions. On May 11, 1944, which was after the third day of the May term of court, they tendered and moved to file a bill of exceptions and transcript of the evidence. The circuit judge overruled the motion on the ground that the bill of exceptions had not been tendered in time. Appellants have filed in this court what purports to be a transcript of the evidence, but it is neither signed nor approved by the trial judge. His action in refusing to permit the tendered bill of exceptions to be filed was proper, since the bill must be tendered within the time allowed, and the court is without authority after the expiration of the time granted to extend the time or permit the bill to be filled. Ely's Adm'r. v. Louisville N. R. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.