1. Where a bill of exceptions contains assignments of error on orders relating to pleadings as well as on a final judgment dismissing a motion for new trial, the writ of error will not be dismissed on motion but, if no error of law appears, the judgment of the trial court dismissing the motion for new trial will be affirmed.
Whitner v. Whitner,
2. “Where a suit was brought on a promissory note, and a plea was filed which was insufficient, as, in substance, it was nothing more than a plea of the general issue, but no attack was made upon the plea by demurrer or motion to strike at the appearance term, and the court entered upon the docket, ‘May 14, 1909, Ans.,’ the court should not at the next term have refused to allow the filing of a plea which was offered as an amendment to that previously filed, and to which no other objection was raised except that ‘there was nothing to amend by.’ ”
Simmons Furniture &c. Co. v. Reynolds,
3. The affidavit of the defendant attached to the amendment that the facts contained “are offered in good faith and not for purposes of delay; and that said facts were not omitted from the original answer for purposes of delay” complies with
Code
§ 81-1310.
Parrott v. Dyer,
4. A motion to strike the defendant’s answer and grant plaintiff a default judgment was made under Code § 38-2111 (2) (d) on the ground that certain interrogatories propounded by the plaintiff were not answered by the defendant within the 15 day period stipulated by Code Ann. § 38-2108 for answering interrogatories. It appears that answers to the interrogatories had been filed at the time the motion for default judgment was made. The interrogatories do not appear in this record, were presumably not introduced in evidence, and their relevancy to the case is not shown. The court has a discretion under Code Ann. § 38-2111 as to the consequences to be imposed for failure to comply with the provisions of Code Ch. 38-21, and no abuse of discretion is shown here.
5. Error is assigned on the order of the trial judge dismissing the motion for a new trial on the ground that “no written notice was given to [defendant’s counsel] setting a time and place for the approval of the brief of evidence as provided by rule 8 of the rules of this court.” Rule 8 is nowhere set out in this record, and is not a matter of which this court can take judicial notice. Cf.
Code
§ 38-112;
Moore v. Town of Jonesboro,
Judgment affirmed.
