
    No. 7760.
    Dennerline et al. v. Gable et al.
    
      Instructions. — Practice.—Record.—Supreme Court. — Instructions given by the court of its own motion must be signed by the judge or embodied in a bill of exceptions, to form a part of the record on appeal to the Supreme Court.
    
      Same. — Evidence.—Presumption.—Where an instruction asserts a correct proposition of law, the Supreme Court, in the absence of the evidence, will presume such instruction to have been properly given.
    From the Dearborn Circuit Court.
    
      H. D. McMullen and D. T. Downey, for appellants.
    
      J. A. Parks and W. /S'. Holman, for appellees.
   Elliott, J.

— The appellants ask a reversal upon the .ground that the trial court gave the jury an erroneous instruction. The only ruling discussed in counsel’s brief is that based upon the third instruction, which counsel say was given by the court upon its own motion.

What in form appear to be instructions are copied into the record, but they are not incorporated in a bill of exceptions, nor are they signed by the judge. Appellees insist that the instructions are not properly in the record. The appellees are right. It is settled that instructions given by the court upon its own motion must be signed by the judge, ■or brought into the record by a bill of exceptions. Etter v. Armstrong, 46 Ind. 197; The Jeffersonville, etc., R. R. Co. v. Cox, 37 Ind. 325 ; Sibbitt v. Stryker, 62 Ind. 41.

If the instructions were in the record, we could not con-aider the question argued by counsel, for the reason that the •evidence is not before us. In the absence of the evidence, we must presume the instruction to have been properly given, for it asserts a proposition of law which is not in itself erroneous, but which, upon a proper- state of facts, might be ■entirely relevant and proper.

Judgment affirmed.  