1. Aw™ - de- ' nial of ab-sequences0011'
I.- The abstract of appellant was served on the eighth day of September, 1888. On the oí next month the appellees served a denial of the correctness of appellant’s abstract. Appellant objects to this denial on the ground that it was not served within ten days from the time when counsel for appellees received the abstract, as required by section 19 of the rules of practice of this court. It is not our practice to disregard an additional abstract filed after the time fixed by the rule, although a case might arise in which we would be justified in doing so. See Fowler v. Town of Strawberry Hill, 74 Iowa, 645. All the relief to which appellant is entitled in such cases can usually be given by taxing costs against appellee, or imposing other terms upon him. In this case the final submission in this court does not seem to have been retarded by the delay in serving the additional abstract, and it must be considered on its merits.
, 2.-: trial de novo: transíaaenoe mecí t°° II. The appellees deny that the evidence was made a part of the record, as required by law. It appears that the decree from which the appeal is . L x taken was rendered on the sixteenth dav of November, 1887, and that the evidence was certified by the trial judge on the fourteenth day of April, 1888. But it also appears that the translation of the short-hand reporter’s notes, to which the certificate of the judge was attached, was not filed nor deposited for filing in the office of the clerk of the district court until the second day of October, 1888. It was not, therefore, filed within the time required by law, and must be disregarded. Kavalier v. Machula, ante, p. 121. Since this is an equitable action, and no errors are assigned, we cannot review the judgment of the district court. It is therefore.
Affirmed.