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Bird v. Matthew A. Welch Son, Inc.

District of Columbia Court of Appeals
Jul 21, 1965
212 A.2d 128 (D.C. 1965)

Summary

In Bird v. Welch, 91 So. 568, the court construed the act in question as not authorizing deputy sheriffs to seize oxen, although infested with cattle fever ticks, which were then yoked together as a team in charge of a driver, and engaged in hauling logs on a public highway.

Summary of this case from Cooper v. Martin

Opinion

No. 3685.

Argued May 3, 1965.

Decided July 21, 1965.

APPEAL FROM DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF GENERAL SESSIONS, DeWITT S. HYDE, J.

Herbert P. Leeman, Washington, D.C., for appellants.

Pierre E. Dostert, Washington, D.C., for appellee.

Before HOOD, Chief Judge, and QUINN and MYERS, Associate Judges.


In Matthew A. Welch Son, Inc. v. Bird, D.C.App., 193 A.2d 736 (1963), we reversed a judgment in favor of the Birds on their claim against Welch and ordered a new trial. The new trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Welch, and the Birds have appealed.

The record brought here contains the testimony presented on behalf of the Birds but no testimony on behalf of Welch. We are thus asked to review a case on a one-sided record. This we cannot do.

The Birds' brief contains numerous references to testimony on their behalf described as "uncontroverted," or "without contradiction," but we cannot accept those conclusions in the absence of the testimony for Welch. Error is claimed in the admission of "testimony and records on behalf of defendant," but the record does not contain such testimony and records.

Error is claimed with respect to the trial court's instructions to the jury. The record contains the court's instructions, and discloses that at the conclusion of the instructions the court asked counsel whether there were objections to the charge "other than the objections already made for the record." Neither counsel made other objections, and the record before us does not show what objections had been previously "made for the record."

One claim of error relates to the trial court's refusal to admit in evidence testimony concerning the inspection and approval, or lack thereof, by the Plumbing Inspection Section of the District of Columbia. If on this incomplete record we are able to pass upon this claim of error, we agree with the trial court that there was no showing that the lack of official inspection and approval in any way damaged the Birds.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Bird v. Matthew A. Welch Son, Inc.

District of Columbia Court of Appeals
Jul 21, 1965
212 A.2d 128 (D.C. 1965)

In Bird v. Welch, 91 So. 568, the court construed the act in question as not authorizing deputy sheriffs to seize oxen, although infested with cattle fever ticks, which were then yoked together as a team in charge of a driver, and engaged in hauling logs on a public highway.

Summary of this case from Cooper v. Martin

In Bird v. Welch, Sheriff, 91 So. 568, this court held that a seizure, without writ, of undipped, tick-infested oxen was unauthorized where they had been running at large upon the common range, but were not running at large upon the commons or unfenced lands when seized by the officers.

Summary of this case from Cooper v. Martin
Case details for

Bird v. Matthew A. Welch Son, Inc.

Case Details

Full title:James F. BIRD and Mildred J. Bird, Appellants, v. MATTHEW A. WELCH SON…

Court:District of Columbia Court of Appeals

Date published: Jul 21, 1965

Citations

212 A.2d 128 (D.C. 1965)

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