This was a suit brought by plaintiffs against defendants, partners doing business under the name of the Brunswick Flour Company, to recover $434.56 upon a bill of exchange drawn by plaintiffs on and accepted by the Brunswick Flour Company. The defendant Balch in his answer under oath denied that he was at any time a partner or member of the firm known as the Brunswick Flour Company. The abstract does not set forth all the evidence, but only such parts of it as tend to support the plaintiffs’ contention. It sets forth no part of the defendant’s evidence except so much of the testimony of defendant Balch as was elicited on cross-examination. The defendants had judgment and plaintiffs have appealed.
*418I. The first ground of the plaintiffs’ complaint is that the trial court erred in rejecting the plaintiffs’ offer to introduce in rebuttal the checks of Canine & Co. in favor of defendant Balch. These checks were all dated after the one sued upon. They at most prove no more than Balch testified to himself. He testified, in effect, what the checks were for and that they were paid. They were more corroborative than contradictory of Balch. They were not offered in chief, but only in rebuttal. It is not perceived that the action of the court in any way was prejudicial to plaintiffs. The admission of the checks could not have varied the result.
II. The plaintiffs complain further that the trial court erred in refusing to give a peremptory instruction to the' jury to find for them. If it is necessary that all the evidence be set out in the abstract in order to enable us to determine upon the propriety of the action of the •trial court in the giving of a peremptory instruction as we have decided (Christopher v. White, 42 Mo. App. 429), it follows that a like necessity exists when such an instruction has been refused. Such evidence is as essential in the one case as in the other. How can we tell whether the instruction should have been given or not unless we could see all the evidence? The plaintiff should have set out the evidence as required by rule 15 of this court. Goodson v. Railroad, 23 Mo. App. 76; State v. Pace, 33 Mo. App. 458. Besides this the abstract neither sets forth the instruction nor the ruling, of the court thereon.
• III. While it is improper for a trial judge, with or without the consent of counsel, to abdicate the bench and absent himself from the court-room during their argument before the jury, still the judgment cannot be impeached on that account unless such impropriety is made one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial, *419•which, does not appear to have been done in this case. R. S. 1889, ch. 33, sec. 2302, p. 290; Railroad v. Carlisle, 94 Mo. 166; Schultz v. Railroad, 32 Mo. App. 438; Bank v. Landis, 34 Mo. App. 433; Lemoine v. Cook, 36 Mo. App. 193.
IY. The remarks alleged to have been made to the jury by counsel for the defendant were in some respects improper and should not have been made, but since the plaintiff did not interpose an objection thereto before the temporary judge then presiding, there was nothing upon which to base an exception. We can only review the action of the triál court in those cases where an exception has been taken and preserved thereto. Sidekum v. Railroad, 93 Mo. 400; State v. Pagel, 92 Mo. 300; Leeser v. Boekhoff, 38 Mo. App. 445.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed. *'
All concur.