58 Iowa 191 | Iowa | 1882
By section 2514 of the Code it is provided that an error of the plaintiff, as to the kind of proceedings adopted, shall not cause the abatement or dismissal of the action, but merely a change into the proper proceedings, and a transfer of the action to the proper docket.
Section' 2516 is as follows: “The defendant may have the correction made by motion, at or before- the filing of his answer, when it appears, by the provisions of this Code, the wrong proceedings have been adopted.”
The objection to the form 'of the action is waived by going to trial without making the objection. Hatch v. Judd, 29 Iowa, 95; Taylor v. Adair, 22 Id., 279; Byers v. Rodalaugh, 17 Id., 53. But it is claimed that the motion in this case could not have been made before the trial, because the amendment to the petition was filed pending the trial. The ready answer to this position is, that the amendment in no manner changed the issue. As the petition, answer and reply, stood at the commencement of the trial, the plaintiff sought to recover for fraudulently seizing the goods and selling them under the provisions of the chattel mortgage. It may further be said that the motion to strike out was properly overruled, on the ground that the amendment was permissible, and if it changed the issue to an equitable one, the motion should have been to transfer the cause to the equity side of the court. What has been said above applies with equal force to the motion made to take the cause from the
II. Some objection is made to the instructions given by the court to the jury, but no specific instruction is pointed out in argument as erroneous. Our examination of them leads us to the conclusion that there is no error in- them.
III. It is urged that the court erred in its rulings upon the admission, and upon the exclusion of evidence. The assignments of error in no manner point out the errors complained of in this regard. An examination of the errors claimed in argument, shows that, even if error had been specifically assigned, the assignments would not be well taken.
Affirmed.