Schrader v. Meyer

Decision Date08 June 1911
Docket Number6,878
Citation95 N.E. 335,48 Ind.App. 36
PartiesSCHRADER ET AL. v. MEYER ET AL
CourtIndiana Appellate Court

From Superior Court of Tippecanoe County; Henry H. Vinton, Judge.

Action by Alice Meyer, individually, and as guardian of Edith Schrader and others, against John Schrader and others. From a judgment for the plaintiff, as guardian, defendants appeal.

Affirmed.

Wilson & Quinn, for appellants.

Edgar D. Randolph and Edgar G. Collins, for appellees.

OPINION

FELT, J.

This is an appeal from the Superior Court of Tippecanoe County from a judgment of $ 690 in favor of Alice Meyer, as guardian of Edith and Henry Schrader, minor heirs of William Schrader deceased.

The appellants in the preparation of their brief have failed to comply with rule twenty-two of this court in the following particulars: (1) The errors assigned are not set out or shown in any way; (2) the motion for a new trial relied upon is not set out or its grounds stated; (3) neither the complaint nor the substance thereof is shown; (4) the cause of the demurrer is not stated; (5) there is no condensed recital of the evidence in narrative form.

The rules require that "the errors relied upon for a reversal" be shown in appellant's brief; but here there is not only a failure to set out the errors assigned but there is not so much as a reference by page or line to the record where they may be found.

The assignment of errors in appellate procedure bears the same relation to the appeal that the complaint bears to the original suit, and when not shown in the brief, the errors, if any, are not available. The primary purpose of the rules is to expedite the business of the court, and the briefs, properly prepared, enable the judges, other than the one to whom the record has been distributed, to become familiar with the merits of the questions presented on appeal.

In the absence of briefs that comply with the rules, the questions cannot be decided, unless the judges do that which the rules require of the attorneys, and if this is done by them, it results in placing a hardship upon the litigants whose cases must wait while time is thus unnecessarily consumed.

These rules have been so long promulgated and so frequently passed upon by the courts that little excuse can be found for failing substantially to comply with them. In this case the failure is of such a character that to attempt to ascertain and decide the questions...

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