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856 CARR V. MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY. [183 CARR V. MARYLAND CASUALTY COMPANY. Opinion delivered June 1, 1931. APPEAL AND ERRORFAILURE TO FILE ABSTRACT.—Failure of the appellant to file an abridgment of the transcript as required by rule 9 calls for an affirmance of the case. Appeal from Desha Chancery Court; E. G. Hammock, Chancellor; affirmed. P. S. Seamans, for appellant. Cockrill Armistead and Harry T. Wooldridge, for appellee. HUMPHREYS, J. This is an appeal from a purported decree rendered in the chancery court of Desha County dismissing appellant's complaint for the want of equity. Under rule 9 of this court adopted in aid of the dispatch of business, an appellant is required to file an abridgment of the transcript, setting forth the material parts of the pleadings, proceedings, facts, and documents upon which he relies, together with such other statements from the record as are necessary to a full understanding of all questions presented to this court for decision. The abstract should contain full reference to the pages of the transcript. No effort has been made by appellant to comply with this rule ; so, in order to understand the questions presented by the ap p eal, it would -be necessary to explore the transcript. This court has consistently refused to explore transcripts to determine issues involved
ARK.] 857 on appeals because to do so would greatly retard the dispatch of business. Rule 9 is of long standing, reasonable, and wholesome, and, for that reason, has been rigidly enforced by this court. Grimes v. McKee, 162 Ark. 197, 258 S. W. 134. Should we depart from the rule, it would result in a congested condition of the docket in a very sbort time. The motion to affirm the decree for failure to comply with rule 9 must therefore be sustained. Decree affirmed.
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