Elrod v. Simmons
This text of 40 Ala. 274 (Elrod v. Simmons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
A. J. WALKER, C. J.
A matter of litigation in the chancery court was determined by a decree on the award of arbitrators. The submission and award, together with the minutes of the proceedings before the arbitrators, are copied into the transcript. A motion is made to strike those matters from the record, upon the allegation' that they do not belong to the record. If this motion were granted, the appellant who makes it would not be profited; [280]*280because tbe minutes of the court show that the award was read to the court, and that the decree was rendered on it. This being the state of the record, we would be bound to affirm. We must presume, in favor of the decree of the court below, that the submission, proceedings before the arbitrators, and award, were such as to authorize the decree. The point is so decided in Mobile Bay Road v. Yeind, 29 Ala. 325.
The decree is affirmed.
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