Strauber v. Waller
Strauber v. Waller
Opinion of the Court
Opinion.— The exception, however, is not signed, either by the defendant or by counsel, nor do the matters contained in it throw any intelligible light upon the grounds stated in the plaintiffs’ petition. It does not appear when the suit was filed; it is to be inferred, from the defendants’
The assignment of errors is not signed by the appellant, nor by any counsel for him. If, however, we might deem such a paper an assignment of errors, filed “ by the plaintiff in error,” we could only say, in response to the complaint which it makes against the action of the court in dissolving the injunction, that the record fails to make the supposed error apparent, for want of the necessary information afforded by it as to what were the merits of the petition for injunction, or any of the grounds on which the appellant insists that he was entitled to maintain his suit.
It was the duty of the appellant to supply the deficiency of the record.
Whilst this would have been, -apparently, impracticable, in the ordinary method, by application for a certiorari, yet the law provides a mode for substituting lost records and papers; and if he has not seen proper to avail himself of its benefits, and the transcript here is submitted to us for decision as it stands, he must content himself with the neeessary consequences of his inaction,
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.