72 So. 394 | Ala. | 1916
The decree recites that the testimony was taken upon interrogatories by depositions as in chancery cases; and so it was.— Code, § 5225. The record shows that this was done after legal service had been perfected on all the defendants. Appellant filed a formal answer. The other defendants allowed the proceeding to go by default. Appellant objected, and the objection is here renewed, that the cause was not ripe for the taking of depositions, citing chancery court rule 49, which provides that: “Testimony cannot be taken by either party until the cause is at issue by sufficient answer, or decree pro confesso, as to all the defendants."
It was considered and decreed in the court below that the lands in controversy could not be equitably divided among the parties to the cause without a sale. The evidence has been examined, and we have found no reason for doubting the correctness of the decree, nor any why the objections to the interrogatories propounded to elicit the facts should have been sustained.
There is no error in the record.
Affirmed.