Ernst v. Schmitz

Mr. Chief. Justice Hand

delivered the opinion of the court:

The findings of the master and chancellor are challen ged on the ground that they find no support in the evidence. On looking into the record we find that all the evidence upon which the master and chancellor based their findings of fact has not been incorporated into the record, by certificate of evidence or otherwise. The findings of fact contained in the master’s report and the decree justified the court in entering the decree which it did, and all the evidence upon which such findings were based not being before this court, it will be presumed the evidence heard below was ample to sustain the finding's. Allen v. Henn, 197 Ill. 486.

The Appellate Court, when the case was there, filed an opinion, which, in part, is as follows:

“The principal ground of contention is, that the master adopted and the court approved a wrong method of accounting. * * It appears that both before and after A. C. Ernst joined the firm there were monthly settlements between the partners, and the net profits due to each on account of the business done during the preceding month was thén ascertained, whereupon the two Ernsts usually drew, in cash, what was coming to them, but Schmitz permitted his share of the net profits to remain in the business. The master, after giving credit to the two Ernsts for the amounts which the books showed the firm to be owing to each of them at the time of the dissolution, found that the balance of the assets of the concern should be credited to Schmitz, and stated the account upon that basis. Under the circumstances we think the master was right in so doing. It is also claimed, first, that an account was stated between the partners October 14, 1896, which was improperly disregarded- by the master; second, that there were undivided profits for which no credit was given to the defendants; and third, that the cross-bill of J. H. dDrnst should not have been dismissed. After a careful consideration of the record and the briefs of counsel we are of opinion that there is no error in either of these regards.”

The record in this case contains in the neighborhood of one thousand and the abstract one hundred .and forty pages. On the first page of the abstract is printed what purports upon its face to be a meager index of the record. The abstract, however, is not indexed. Rule 14 of this court provides: “The abstract shall contain a complete index, alphabetically arranged, giving" the page where each paper or exhibit may be found, with the names of the witnesses and the pages of the direct, cross and re-direct examination.” A compliance with this rule requires that the court be furnished with an abstract of the record, properly indexed.' To require this court to search back and forth through a pamphlet of one hundred and forty pages to find each paper or exhibit or the testimony of the various witnesses as it becomes necessary to examine the same while the case is being considered or the opinion prepared, is a useless waste of the court’s time, and it was held in Chadwick v. People, 206 Ill. 122, the court would refuse to consider a case upon its merits when thus presented. In the shape this appeal comes to us, it might well have been dismissed for a failure to comply with rule 14. We have, however, read the briefs and examined the abstract and record and have found no reversible error therein. The opinion of the Appellate Court, in our judgment, properly disposed of the case.

The judgment of the Appellate Court will therefore be affumed.

Judgment affirmed.