97 Tenn. 217 | Tenn. | 1896
William Gillespie sued E. W. Jenldns and M. A. Pratt before a Justice of the Peace, the warrant reciting that the action was based upon a promissory note. The Justice of the Peace rendered judgment against both of the defendants, and Pratt appealed to the Circuit Court. The presiding Judge of the latter tribunal tried the case without a jury, and pronounced a judgment against Pratt for $275.65 and costs. Pratt has appealed in error to this Court. He insists upon a reversal of the judgment below because, as he contends, “the note sued on is not signed nor indorsed by him, nor is there anything in the record to connect him with it in any way.”
If it be true that Pratt neither signed nor in
The case of Stadler v. Hertz, 13 Lea, 318, is not in conflict. The Court held in that case that a note made ' the basis of a bill in equity and “filed as evidence,” became a part of the record without a bill of exceptions, but that holding was expressly placed upon a rule of chancery practice which has no application in a Court of Law.
In the absence of a bill of exceptions, showing the evidence submitted in the Court below, this Court presumes, conclusively, that it was sufficient to justify the judgment of the trial Judge. Kincaid v. Bradshaw, 6 Bax., 102; Phillips v. Phillips, 5 Lea, 451; Scruggs v. Heiskell, 95 Tenn., 455.
Affirmed.