Judges: Hodges
Filed Date: 7/14/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
As supporting the proposition announced in the original opinion, that W. W. Wallace by the deed from B.R. and Rebecca Wallace acquired only a naked legal title and no beneficial interest in the property conveyed, we refer to the case of Smith v. Brown,
Those assignments are as follows:
"The court erred in limiting the recovery on the warranty against E. A. Blount to two-sevenths of said 757 acres, and refusing interest on the amount allowed, except from date of judgment."
"The court erred in refusing special charge asked by the defendant Southern Pine Lumber Company as to the measure of the said E. A. Blount's liability on his warranty."
The two are grouped and followed by three propositions, each purporting to relate to both assignments. The first asserts that Blount and J. L. Stephenson "were each liable for one-half of any loss of title that might accrue to the land thereby conveyed." The second claims that the warranty clause contained in the deed from those parties created a contractual liability on the part of each for one-half of such loss. The third charges that interest should have been allowed against Blount and J. L. Stephenson from the date of their deed.
From this it is clear that the two assignments contained at least two distinct legal propositions, and should not have been grouped. G., H.
S. A. Ry. Co. v. Worcester,
Not only do the appellants fail to set out the special charge referred to in assignment No. 15, but they do not in the statement refer to any portion of the record where it may be found. That such a statement is insufficient is well established by the decisons of the courts of this state. Railway Co. v. Laws, 61 S.W. 498; Railway Co. v. Robinson,
The motion for rehearing is overruled.