103 Ind. 243 | Ind. | 1885
Upon the petition by appellee, a drain was located and established under E. S. 1881, section 2473, et seq.. From the final judgment establishing it, appellants have appealed} and assigned errors upon which they ask a reversal of the judgment.
The rule is well settled that the questions for decision here are such, and only such, as are presented by the assignment of errors, and that the record must so present the rulings be-Sow that this court may determine as to the correctness of them. Stockwell v. State, ex rel., 101 Ind. 1. We must therefore confine our examination to the alleged errors assigned, and pass upon the rulings below so far, and only so far, as the record .so presents them, that we may intelligently determine whether they are correct or erroneous. '
The first error assigned is as follows: “ That the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion to dismiss appellee’s petition for drainage and the report of the commissioners of drainage.”
The argument in behalf of appellants, under this assignment, is that the commissioners of drainage should not have examined lands other than those described in the petition. If there is, or could be, any substance in this objection and argument, it would go to the report of the commissioners, and not to the petition. In no event could the action of the commissioners be a reason for dismissing the petition. The report of the commissioners may be objected to, and for a sufficient cause set aside, but that would not carry the petition. In this case, however, ’we can not disregard the contention of appellee, that the record presents nothing for decision under this first assignment of errors. The clerk below recites in the transcript, that appellants severally moved to dismiss the petition, “ for the reasons stated in each of said objections.” If there was a written motion, or written objections, filed below, counsel do not inform us where it may be found in the record. After a thorough search we have failed to find such a motion in the record. Without the motion, we can not know upon what reasons it was based, and hence can not decide as to whether or not the court ruled correctly or incorrectly in overruling it.
The second and eighth assigned errors may be considered together. They are as follows: “Second. That the court qrred
The circuit court, without doubt, had authority under the statute then in force to grant leave, and to allow an amendment of the petition after the filing of the report of the drainage commissioners. The statute provided in express terms, that the petition might be objected to after the filing of such report, and that the court might allow an amendment of it. E. S. 1881, section 4276. What amendment was proposed is not shown by the record entry at the time, nor by anything else in the record; nor is it shown that appellants asked that the nature of the proposed amendment should be then stated or shown. From the record before us, we cars not know what objections were urged to the petition, nor the nature of the amendment proposed. To save any question for review and decision here upon this branch of the case, appellants should have, in a proper manner, required the nature of the proposed amendment to be stated and shown at the time the leave to amend was asked qnd granted. This they did not do. Without a knowledge of the amendment proposed, we. can not say th&t the court below erred in granting the leave to amend. We can not assume nor presume that in granting such leave the court below transcended its authority ; we should rather presume in favor oi the correctness of the court’s ruling. It may be possible, as contended by counsel, that the rulings of the court below in refusing to dismiss the petition, and afterwards granting leave to amend it, are not entirely consistent with each other, but there is •nothing in the record from which we 'can determine or presume the existence of such an inconsistency. Presumably* the rulings are entirely consistent, as they well might be.
Under the eighth assigned error, it is argued at great length* that the petition, filed as an amended petition, is not an amended, but a substituted petition; that the filing of an
The third and fourth assigned error’s are as follows: “Third. That the court erred in overruling appellants’ objections to the granting of leave, and permitting appellee to testify that he had been sworn. to the affidavit of posting notices. Fourth. That the coxxx’t erred ixx ordering the clerk to affix his jurat to the prepared affidavit of appellee, as of its date.”
On the 14th day of April, 1882, appellee presented his petition to the court, accompanied with an affidavit of the post
Going further than we need go in this case, it was held in the case of Watts v. Womack, 44 Ala. 605, that it is not es
The question was made in the case of Kruse v. Wilson, 79 111. 233, that an affidavit required and filed in the case was. void, because the name of the officer before whom the oath was taken was not affixed to the affidavit. Testimony was heard to prove that the affidavit was in fact sworn to. It was-said: “ If an oath was administered, and by the proper officer, as it assuredly was, the law was satisfied, and the mere omission of the clerk to put his name to an act which was done-through him as the instrument, should not prejudice an innocent party, who has done all he was required to do. The clerk’s omission to write his name, where it should have been written, was not the fault or neglect of the affiant. He signed and sAvore to the affidavit.”
In the case of Cook v. Jenkins, 30 Iowa, 452, there Avas an attempt to overthrow a judgment in attachment, on the ground that the jurat to the affidavit was not signed by the officer. It was said: “The jurat to the affidavit for the attachment is not signed by the officer administering the oath, but it is. sufficiently shoAvn that it Avas, in fact, sworn to.”
In the case before us, the court had authority to ascertain Avhether or not the affidavit had in fact been sworn to, and,, having ascertained that fact, it had authority to order the clerk
This clearly was not a greater exercise of authority than to make an order allowing' a sheriff to amend his return to an execution after the expiration of his term of office; to make an order allowing the clerk to attach his seal to a writ after the sale of property upon it; or to hear evidence, and make an order allowing a clerk to affix- his- seal to a writ, nunc pro tuna, after judgment and the expiration of the term. Dwiggins v. Cook, 71 Ind. 579; Hunter v. Burnsville T. P. Co., 56 Ind. 213; State v. Davis, 73 Ind. 359.
Our holding in this case is not in conflict with the holding in the case of Scott v. Brackett, 89 Ind. 413. There the affidavit was held to be insufficient in substance; here no question of that kind is made. Our conclusion is that the court below was not in error in hearing the evidence and ordering the jurat to be affixed to the affidavit.. Field v. Malone, 102 Ind. 251. >
The fifth and sixth assigned errors are as follows: “Fifth. That the court erred in granting leave to appellee to amend his amended petition. Sixth. That the court erred in granting leave to, and permitting, appellee to alter and change the report of the commissioners of drainage.”
Appellants did not embody the rulings here complained of in a bill of exceptions. When we turn to the record as made by the clerk, we find the statement that leave was granted toappellee to change the description of one tract of land as the same was found in the amended petition and in the report of the commissioners, but there is nothing to show that such a change was ever made. Unless it was made, the simple granting of leave could in no way injuriously affect appellants. There is, therefore, nothing available for appellants in the fifth and sixth assigned errors.
The last assigned error relied upon by appellants is the overruling of their motion for a new trial. This involves the single question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain
After a careful examination of all the questions presented for decision by the assignment of errors and the record, as it comes before us, we are constrained to hold that there is nothing upon which this court would be justified in reversing the judgment. The judgment is, therefore, affirmed, at the costs of appellants.