40 So. 142 | Ala. | 1905
After the bill had been amended the second time the respondent demurred to it, assigning 13 grounds or causes of demurrer. The chancellor sustained the demurrer, and it is from this decree that the appeal is taken by the respondent.
Notwithstanding the decree recites that the demurrer is sustained on specified grounds and overruled as to all others, it is a decree sustaining a demurrer to the bill, and nothing more or less. As was said by this court in the case of Watson v. Jones Brothers, 121 Ala. 579, 25 South. 720: “The chancellor’s reference to the assignments upon which he rested the decree is the mere giving of his reason for the decree, and his reference to the other assignments is to he taken as a mere expression of his opinion that the hill is not had for the reasons stated in them.” The decree recites that the complainant in open court amended the bill to conform to the ruling of the court on the demurrer, and the respondent was allowed 30 days in which to answer- the bill. The respondent, desiring to present for review the questions raised by the grounds of demurrer that were overruled, should, after the amendment was made, have demurred to the bill as amended upon those grounds. And, if the court had then overruled the demurrer to the bill as amended, an appeal from the decree overruling the demurrer would have been proper. Bufas the record stands the decree ap-. pealed from is favorable to the respondent, and she cannot complained of it. It follows that the appeal must be
Appeal dismissed.