69 Ala. 75 | Ala. | 1881
We can see no error in the decree of the chancellor, in this case, overruling the exceptions taken to the report of the register. These exceptions have reference to conclusions of fact drawn from the evidence, and the Rule of Chancery Practice requires, in such cases, that the party taking the exception should note the evidence, or parts of evidence, he relies on in support of such exception, “with such designation and marks of reference, as to direct the attention of the court to the same.” — Rule 93 of Chancery Practice, p. 174, Code, 1876. The purpose of this rule is to relieve the court of the necessity of “wandering at large into the evidence, in order to ascertain whether by possibility the master was wrong in his conclusion or not.” — Per Story, J., in Donnell v. Ins. Co. 2 Sum. 371; Mahone v. Williams, 39 Ala. 202. The appellant having failed to conform to the requirements of this rule, the chancellor did not err in refusing to sustain the exceptions, even had they been well taken.
There was no error in the decree of the chancellor ordering the mortgaged premises to be sold for the payment of the mortgage debt, without a cross-HU being filed by the defendant. The appellant, as mortgagor, had sought by her bill to enjoin a sale of the lands, under a power in the mortgage, on the grounds
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.