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Ross v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 179 S. 188 (Ky.) In an action for injuries to an W. 353.

(C) Interest, Costs, and Expenses of Litigation.

69 (Tex.Civ.App.) In an action in tort, interest is a part of the damages.-San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Schaeffer, 179 S. W. 540.

IV. LIQUIDATED DAMAGES AND

PENALTIES.

78 (Tex.Civ.App.) A provision of a building contract that $5 should be forfeited for each day's delay, held to be a stipulation for liquidated damages rather than for a penalty.-Gillespie v. Williams, 179 S. W. 1101.

VI. MEASURE OF DAMAGES.

(B) Injuries to Property. 108 (Ark.) The measure of damages for injury to the pool supplying plaintiff's cotton gin with water held the cost of restoration and the value of the lost use, not the depreciation in market value.-Ross & Ross v. St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co., 179 S. W. 353.

113 (Ky.) In an action for injuries to an automobile, an instruction that the measure of damages was the difference in value before and after the injury held erroneous as not being based on the market value.-Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co. v. Sweeney, 179 S. W. 214.

VII. INADEQUATE AND EXCESSIVE

DAMAGES.

130 (Mo.App.) In a truck driver's action against a city for personal injuries, verdict for $2.000 held not excessive.-Morrill v. Kansas City, 179 S. W. 759.

automobile at a railroad crossing, it was not error to fix the maximum amount which might be recovered at the greatest, which any evidence conduced to show was the difference between the market value of the machine immediately before and immediately after the injury.-Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co. v. Sweeney, 179 S. W. 214.

(C) Proceedings for Assessment.

208 (Tex.) In an action by a city fireman against a railway company for injuries due to an explosion, the issue of damages for lost time held properly submitted to the jury under conflicting evidence.-Houston Belt & Terminal Ry. Co. v. Johansen, 179 S. W. 853.

DEATH.

See Courts, 7; Executors and Administrators, 11; Limitation of Actions, 124; Statutes, 231; Trial, 256; Wills, 775.

I. EVIDENCE OF DEATH AND OF SURVIVORSHIP.

5 (Tex.Civ.App.) Where a husband and wife, making mutual wills, were frozen to death in the same snowstorm, with no evidence as to which died first, there was no presumption as to survivorship or simultaneous death.-Fitzgerald v. Ayres, 179 S. W. 289.

II. ACTIONS FOR CAUSING DEATH. (A) Right of Action and Defenses. 8 (Tenn.) A right of action for wrongful death is governed by the laws of the state where the injury occurred.-Sharp v. Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co., 179 S. W. 375.

131 (Ky.) An award of $2,000 in favor of an employé in a coal mine held excessive for in-10 (Tenn.) The right of action for wrongful juries caused by shock of a low-voltage wire. death given by Shannon's Code, § 4025 et seq., Imperial Jellico Coal Co. v. Neff, 179 S. W. and the recovery is in right of the deceased.is that which the deceased would have had, Sharp v. Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co., 179 S. W. 375.

829.

132 (Ky.) Verdict of $10,000 for injuries to boy between two and three years old crippling him and totally destroying and disfiguring one hand and arm held not excessive. Gnau v. Ackerman, 179 S. W. 217.

132 (Ky.) Personal injuries held to warrant verdict of $7,250.-Beall v. Louisville Home Telephone Co., 179 S. W. 251.

132 (Ky.) An award of $9,500 in favor of a brakeman 22 years of age, who earned $105 per month, for injuries destroying use of his leg, held not excessive.-Cincinnati, N. O. & T. P. Ry. Co. v. Nolan, 179 S. W. 1046.

VIII. PLEADING, EVIDENCE, AND

ASSESSMENT.

(A) Pleading.

159 (Mo.App.) Under petition in action for personal injury, alleging loss from inability to perform duties of his "employment," plaintiff could show the receipts from his practice of dentistry.-Clark v. Dunham, 179 S. W. 795.

(B) Evidence.

175 (Mo.App.) In action for damages for breach of contract concerning the assets and management of a corporation, entitling plaintiff to purchase defendant's share, evidence as to the probability of finding a purchaser, etc., held admissible on the question of damages.-Powell v. Batchelor, 179 S. W. 751.

31 (Ky.) Under Ky. St. § 4, giving widow and minor child of person killed by malicious use of firearms, etc., an action for damages, the fect her right of recovery, or that of the chilwidow's remarriage pending the suit did not afdren.-Archer v. Bowling, 179 S. W. 15.

(C) Parties and Process.

43 (Ky.) Under Const. § 241, and Ky. St. § 6, an action may be brought jointly against both the employer and his servant whose negligence caused the death of deceased servant.Carter Coal Co. v. Prichard's Adm'r, 179 S. W. 1038.

44 (Ky.) Under Ky. St. § 4, infant children of one killed by malicious use of firearms, etc., held entitled to join as parties plaintiff in a suit originally brought by the widow alone.Archer v. Bowling, 179 S. W. 15.

(E) Damages, Forfeiture, or Fine.

91 (Ky.) Under civil action for damages for malicious killing brought under Ky. St. § 4, the widow's remarriage pending suit did not diminish the damages which she and her minor children, as joint plaintiffs, might recover.-Archer v. Bowling 179 S. W. 15.

95 (Ky.) Under Ky. St. § 6, measure of damages for killing by malicious use of firearms, etc., held a sum reasonably compensating the widow and children for loss of deceased's earning power, together with punitive damages, divided one half to the widow and the other half to the children.-Archer v. Bowling, 179 S. W. 15.

176 (Tex.Civ.App.) In action for breach of contract to furnish electric current for plaintiff's theater building, plaintiff, in testifying to his loss of profits, was not bound to estimate his loss for each night separately.-City of 99 (Mo.App.) In action for death of plainBrownsville v. Tumlinson, 179 S. W. 1107. tiff's two year old daughter, verdict, exclusive

of the $2,000 penalty, for $5,420, could not be declared excessive.-Albert v. St. Louis Electric Terminal Ry. Co., 179 S. W. 955.

DEBTOR AND CREDITOR.

See Fraudulent Conveyances.

DECLARATIONS.

See Criminal Law, 413, 418, 422-427.

DEEDS.

See Covenants; Estoppel, 21, 38: Evi-
dence, 185, 419; Husband and Wife,
14; Logs and Logging, 3; Mortgages;
Perpetuities; Trial, 253.

I. REQUISITES AND VALIDITY.
(A) Nature and Essentials of Conveyan-
ces in General.

6 (Ark.) Instrument, though containing a granting clause, held, when considered as a whole, an executory contract, and not a deed. -Mays v. Blair, 179 S. W. 331.

(E) Conditions and Restrictions.

145 (Tex. Civ.App.) An agreement in a deed whereby vendees were to raise sugar cane and sell it to the vendor held a condition, and not a covenant.-Imperial Sugar Co. v. Cabell, 179 S. W. S3.

147 (Tex.Civ.App.) A deed providing that title should pass to the vendee only upon condition of full performance of the contract is not ineffectual because partly based upon a sale of personal property.-Imperial Sugar Co. v. Cabell, 179 S. W. 83.

lien and declared it did not become absolute un165 (Tex. Civ.App.) Where a deed retained a til full performance by vendee, the vendor held entitled to possession under unimpaired title, where the vendees repudiated the conditions.Imperial Sugar Co. v. Cabell, 179 S. W. 83.

IV. PLEADING AND EVIDENCE.

194 (Ark.) Plaintiff, in an action to set aside a deed to a railroad, had the burden of showing that it had been wrongfully delivered; delivery to an agent and the recording of the deed raising a presumption of delivery.-Vaughan_v. Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 179 S. W.

165.

17 (Ky.) The fact that the grantor conveying land in consideration that the grantee should care for him during his lifetime lived only 68196 (Ky.) Where a conveyance is volundays thereafter did not render the considera- tary and without consideration or upon an intion inadequate; the test being whether the adequate consideration, and where there is a conveyance was fair and reasonable when made. relation of trust and confidence between the -Meece v. Colyer, 179 S. W. 579. parties, the burden is upon the grantee to prove that the grantor acted freely and understandingly.-Meece v. Colyer, 179 S. W. 579.

(B) Form and Contents of Instruments. 38 (Ark.) Description of land in deed as "part" of a quarter section held insufficient, "part" not, as claimed, referring to the grantors' interest, but to the area.-Mays v. Blair, 179 S. W. 331.

(D) Delivery.

The mere fact that the grantor and the grantee, were uncle and nephew does not establish such a confidential relation as would give rise to the presumption of fraud.—Id.

208 (Ark.) Evidence held to sustain a finding that a deed had been delivered, and that the title had vested in the grantee.-Vaughan v.

66 (Tex. Civ.App.) Whether a deed was de- Chicago, R. I. & P. Ry. Co., 179 S. W. 165. livered, held for the jury.-McLemore v. Bick-211 (Ky.) In a proceeding to set aside a erstaff, 179 S. W. 536.

(E) Validity.

70 (Ky.) Where option to purchase land payable in corporate bonds provided for repurchase of the bonds by the corporation, its inability to repurchase held not a badge of fraud, nor ground for canceling the deed.-Yellow Chief Coal Co.'s Trustee v. Johnson, 179 S. W. 599; Same v. Preston, Id. 602.

III. CONSTRUCTION AND OPERA

TION.

(A) General Rules of Construction. 100 (Ky.) Where the meaning of an expression in a deed is not clear, evidence of the

deed, etc., based on a conspiracy between a real estate agent and vendee, held, that there was sufficient evidence, outside of the acts and declarations of the vendee, to sustain a judgment in favor of the vendor.-Cole v. Collins, 179 S. W. 607.

DE FACTO OFFICERS.

See Officers, 43.

DEFAMATION.

See Libel and Slander.

DEFAULT.

surrounding circumstances is admissible.-Wil- See Judgment, 138.

son v. Marsee, 179 S. W. 410.

DELEGATION OF POWER.

101 (Ky.) Where the meaning of a deed is not clear, evidence of the subsequent acts of the parties construing the deed is admissible.-Wil- See Constitutional Law, 60, 63. son v. Marsee, 179 S. W. 410.

(C) Estates and Interests Created.

DELINQUENT CHILDREN.

124 (Ky.) Deed held to vest fee-simple title See Infants, 12, 18.

in grantees.-Chappell v. Frick Co., 179 S. W. 203.

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129 (Ky.) A deed conveying without limi- See Carriers, tation in the granting clause certain property not to be subject to the debts of the grantees or the control of their husbands, the property upon the death of both to go to the children of one, held to convey a life estate merely.-Tay- See Trover and Conversion, 9. lor v. Dedman, 179 S. W. 216.

DEMONSTRATIVE EVIDENCE.

See Criminal Law, 404.
DEMURRER.

(D) Exceptions and Reservations. 143 (Ky.) Where a grantor deeded land to another, reserving a life estate and power to revoke, the fee, upon her death without revocation, passed to the grantee regardless of her will. Commonwealth v. McCauley's Ex'r, 179 See Indictment and Information, 147;

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II. PERSONS ENTITLED AND THEIR See Corporations, 152, 156.
RESPECTIVE SHARES.

(B) Surviving Husband or Wife.
52 (Tenn.) Under Laws 1913, c. 26, remov-
ing disabilities of coverture of married women,
a wife's personal property, undisposed of by her,
passes, jure mariti, to her husband.-Baker v.
Dew, 179 S. W. 645.

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DIVORCE.

See Constitutional Law, 83; Courts, 223; Witnesses, 60.

IV. JURISDICTION, PROCEEDINGS, AND RELIEF.

(A) Jurisdiction, Venue, and Limitations. 62 (Tex. Civ.App.) Under Vernon's Sayles' Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 4632, prescribing the in the county, jurisdictional to the maintenance period of inhabitancy in the state and residence of an action for divorce, a temporary absence during the six months next preceding filing of the petition would not affect right to maintain the action.-Fox v. Fox, 179 S. W. 883.

(D) Evidence.

tion for divorce and for the recovery of her 124 (Tex. Civ.App.) Evidence in wife's acseparate property held to show that she had been a bona fide inhabitant of the state for one year, and a resident of the county for six months next preceding the filing of the petition, within the jurisdictional requirement of Vernon's Sayles' Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 4632.-Fox v.

See Guaranty, 57, 67; Principal and Sure- Fox, 179 S. W. 883. ty, m104115.

DISCOVERED PERIL.

See Negligence, 83; Railroads, 390; Street Railroads, 103.

DISCRETION OF COURT.

130 (Ky.) Evidence in a husband's action for divorce for the wife's abandonment, with counterclaim for divorce on the ground of cruel and inhuman treatment, etc., and for alimony, 376, held not to establish husband's cruel treatment so as to entitle wife to alimony.-Rice v. Rice, 179 S. W. 200.

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DISORDERLY HOUSE.

See Constitutional Law, 63; Criminal Law, 396; Nuisance, 65, 72.

9 (Tex.Cr.App.) Married woman living with her husband, who herself leased the premises and paid the rent, might be convicted of unlawfully keeping the house for prostitution.-Jackson v. State, 179 S. W. 711.

12 (Tex.Cr.App.) That information for unlawfully keeping a house for prostitution alleged defendant to be a tenant, and not a lessee, was no ground for quashing, since "tenant" was synonymous with "lessee."-Jackson v. State, 179 S. W. 711.

17 (Tex.Cr.App.) Evidence in a prosecution for unlawfully keeping and being concerned in keeping a bawdyhouse held sufficient to support a conviction.-Thompson v. State, 179 S. W. 98.

(F) Judgment or Decree.

152 (Ky.) The entry of a divorce judgment on the order book of the court is indispensable to establish the fact that a divorce has been granted.-Robinson v. Robinson, 179 S. W. 436. V. ALIMONY, ALLOWANCES, AND DISPOSITION OF PROPERTY.

221 (Mo.App.) An order allowing or denying suit money to enable wife to prosecute an. appeal from an adverse judgment in a divorce suit is entirely independent from the issues in the divorce suit, and the right thereto is in no way dependent on the right to divorce.-Hall v. Hall, 179 S. W. 738.

223 (Mo.App.) Where the lower court which denied a wife divorce awarded her temporary she was also entitled to suit money; it appearalimony pending appeal, that order showed that ing that she was destitute, so the denial of suit money was an abuse of discretion.-Hall v. Hall, 179 S. W. 738.

224 (Mo.App.) Where a wife is destitute, she is entitled to suit money to prosecute an appeal from judgment denying her divorce.Hall v. Hall, 179 S. W. 738.

236 (Mo.App.) Under Rev. St. 1909, § 2375, agreement of parties to commute arrears of alimony and to change amount of alimony held enforceable, in absence of fraud or imposition.Francis v. Francis, 179 S. W. 975.

240 (Ky.) A wife given a divorce on the ground of abandonment and cruel treatment and awarded the custody of small children held entitled, in addition to an allowance for their

support, to alimony in the sum of $150 per | the petitioners.-Bottoms v. Borah, 179 S. W. year.-Goff v. Goff, 179 S. W. 826. 996.

241 (Mo.App.) Under Rev. St. 1909, § 2376, whether an award of alimony to the wife shall

DRAMSHOPS.

be in gross or a periodical allowance depends See Intoxicating Liquors.
on the husband's financial ability.-Wright v.
Wright, 179 S. W. 950.

DRINK.

An award of alimony in monthly installments See Food, 25. of $100, instead of a gross sum of $7,500, held not an abuse of the discretion vested in the court by Rev. St. 1909, § 2376, where it appeared that the defendant husband was earn- See Carriers, 284. ing $340 per month.-ld.

DRUNKENNESS.

DUE PROCESS OF LAW.
283–296.

249 (Ky.) Notwithstanding Ky. St. § 2121, and Civ. Code I'rac. § 425, did not authorize it, the court granting a divorce to the wife might See Constitutional Law, order her to pay the amount expended by the husband in permanent improvements upon her property.-Sandusky v. Sandusky, 179 S. W.

415.

A husband who, under agreement with his wife for repayment out of rents, expended money in permanent improvements upon her property, held entitled to recover in her suit for divorce the amount so spent.-Id.

285 (Mo.App.) An appeal from an order denying suit money in a divorce case will be considered, though the bill of exceptions in the principal case was not in the record and the printed abstract had not been prepared, for that is the principal purpose for which suit money is necessary.-Hall v. Hall, 179 S. W.

738.

DUPLICITY.

See Indictment and Information, 125.

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286 (Ky.) Where, in a wife's action for di-18 (Ky.) Where, on conveyance of a warevorce, evidence on issue of money wrongfully house surrounded on three sides by the grantor's withheld by husband is doubtful, the finding of land, a way over railroad tracks furnished acchancellor will not be disturbed.-Hester v.cess to the entire premises, plaintiff, having changed the construction of the premises, canHester, 179 S. W. 451.

DOCKETS.

See Trial, 11.

DOCTORS.

See Physicians and Surgeons.

DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE.

See Criminal Law, 447.

DOMICILE.

See Divorce, 62; Venue, 22.
DOUBLE TAXATION.

See Municipal Corporations, 407.

DOWER.

See Curtesy: Eminent Domain, 157; Taxation,866, 889.

DRAFTS.

See Embezzlement, 6.

DRAINS.

I. ESTABLISHMENT AND MAIN

TENANCE.

14 (Ark.) Jurisdictional notice not conforming to map and report describing proposed drainage district, and not enabling owner to know whether his land was to be included, held to invalidate all subsequent proceedings.-Paschal v. Swepston, 179 S. W. 339.

II. ASSESSMENTS AND SPECIAL

TAXES.

not claim as a way of necessity a passway to the rear portion of the warehouse.-Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co. v. Warwick Co., 179 S. W. 611.

Where plaintiff used way across railroad tracks, it cannot claim a way of necessity over defendant's land which surrounded its property on three sides on the ground that the way across the tracks might be revoked.-Id.

II. EXTENT OF RIGHT, USE, AND
OBSTRUCTION.

61 (Ky.) In a suit to enjoin obstruction of a way, evidence held to show that the prior use of the way had only been permissive and that it was not open to the public or a way of necessity.-Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co. v. Warwick Co., 179 S. W. 611.

EJECTION.

See Carriers, 352-382.

EJECTMENT.

See Pleading, 8.

III. PLEADING AND EVIDENCE.

86 (Ky.) Plaintiffs in ejectment held not entitled to recover without showing that defendants were occupying land within the exterior lines of the patent under which they claimed, and without an exclusion.-Tussey v. Hale, 179 S. W. 390.

IV. TRIAL, JUDGMENT, ENFORCE-
MENT OF JUDGMENT, AND
REVIEW.

122 (Mo.App.) A judgment in an action of ejectment omitting any description of the premises would not sustain an order of restitution for. the lot involved or for any lot, though it was not void and might have been amended.-Eaker v. Harvey, 179 S. W. 985.

82 (Ark.) On evidence in a proceeding for the amendment of former orders relating to assessments, held, that court could not say that the trial court erred in refusing to treat it as establishing with sufficient certainty the fact

ELECTION.

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6 (Mo.) Under Rev. St. 1909, §§ 4550, 4551, a draft is not subject to embezzlement prior to delivery.-State v. Wilcox, 179 S. W. 482, 483.

9 (Ky.) Certification to sheriff for collection of franchise tax due county from corporation held necessary condition precedent to his embezzlement thereof.-Commonwealth v. Brand, 179 S. W. 844.

146 (Ky.) Under the Primary Act, a nominee may create a vacancy by withdrawal even though he agrees to accept the nomination.-1 (Mo.) Conversion is any using or dealing Elswick v. Ratliff, 179 S. W. 11.

A nominee held not entitled to withdraw his resignation delivered to the county clerk after it was accepted by the party authorities and another selected.-Id.

with the property of another which impliedly or by its terms excludes the owner's dominion; the word "imply" meaning it is "virtually involved or included; involved in substance; inferential, tacitly conceded-the correlative of express or expressed."-State v. Wilcox, 179 S. W. 179.

156 (Ky.) Under Ky. St. 1915, § 1550, subsec. 26, nomination certificate of Republican candidate for representative filed with secretary 23 (Mo.) In a prosecution for embezzlement of state October 4th held filed too late; the by a bank cashier, an instruction that the fact election being November 2d.-Dobbs v. Crecelius, that the proceeds of the check whereby the em179 S. W. 12. bezzlement was consummated went to another did not constitute a defense was not erroneous.State v. Wilcox, 179 S. W. 479.

Ky. St. 1915, § 1550, subsec. 26, is mandatory in character, and noncompliance deprives a nominee of the right to have his name printed on the official ballot.-Id.

IX. COUNT OF VOTES, RETURNS,

AND CANVASS.

28 (Ky.) An indictment held to charge conversion not of a note, or horse, but of money, the proceeds of sale of a horse, giving in a descriptive way its source.-Commonwealth v. Holliday, 179 S. W. 235.

260 (Ky.) Election commissioners cannot 38 (Ky.) In a prosecution of a sheriff for canvass questioned ballots unaccompanied by embezzling a county tax, testimony of the clerk statement of whether and how counted, as restatement of whether and how counted, as re- of the county court during defendant s term quired by Ky. St. § 1482.-Graham v. Treadway, of office that the latter had failed to report 179 S. W. 1029. collections as required by Ky. St. § 4147, was admissible.-Commonwealth v. Brand, 179 S.

X. CONTESTS.

269 (Tenn.) The Chancery Court has no jurisdiction of a bill brought to contest the election of the one receiving the highest number of votes, on the ground of his ineligibility, or to declare the election void.-Hogan v. Hamilton County, 179 S. W. 128.

280 (Ky.) Under Primary Election Law, § 28, and Civ. Code Prac. § 625, failure to give notice of contest until nine days after the award of certificate of nomination held a jurisdictional defect, so that the contest would be dismissed.-Edge v. Allen, 179 S. W. 212.

W. 844.

Testimony as to a receipt given the sheriff by his deputy, as to the handwriting of the receipt, who had given it, and ill feeling between the deputy and the defendant growing out of the receipt, was inadmissible.-Id.

Pleadings of the sheriff's sureties' suit to recover sums they were required to pay for his defalcations in office were irrelevant.-Id.

The prosecution may prove that a demand has been made by the proper person for the payment by defendant of the money he is accused of embezzling.-Id.

Evidence that defendant had arranged with his deputy to take the former sheriff's books and collect unpaid taxes, etc., held inadmissible.

299 (Ky.) Questioned ballots unaccompanied by statement of whether and how counted, required by Ky. St. § 1482, will be counted by the court in election contest.-Graham v. Tread--Id. way, 179 S. W. 1029.

ELECTRICITY.

See Contribution, 5; Municipal Corporations, 682.

4 (Ky.) A void ordinance granting to an electric light and power company a franchise held to give the company a license to use the streets, and a reasonable time within which to remove its property.-City of Princeton v. Princeton Electric Light & Power Co., 179 S. W. 1074.

A city need not allow the use of its streets by a public service corporation without a franchise, merely because it has entered into obligations with citizens which it cannot perform without a franchise.-Id.

(Ky.) One furnishing to a city electric light and power under a franchise void under Const. § 164, may not enforce collection therefor.-City of Princeton v. Princeton Electric Light & Power Co., 179 S. W. 1074.

A city, paying for light furnished by an electric light company operating under a void franchise held not entitled to recover the sums paid. -Id.

ELIGIBILITY.

See Officers, 19, 35.

EMBEZZLEMENT.

39 (Ky.) In prosecution of sheriff for embezzlement, defendant's testimony that upon demand by the county for the tax he was accused of embezzling, but which he did not know he had not accounted for, he was financially unable to turn it over, held admissible.-Commonwealth v. Brand, 179 S. W. 844.

In prosecution of sheriff for embezzlement of a tax which he claimed he had no memory of receiving, evidence that at the time of the receipt defendant suffered from his nerves and could not look after his office was admissible. -Id.

39 (Mo.) In a prosecution for embezzlement by a bank cashier evidence of shortages in the bank's assets other than those resulting from the transaction counted on was admissible upon the question of fraudulent intent.-State v. Wilcox, 179 S. W. 479.

EMBLEMENTS.

See Life Estates, 25.

EMINENT DOMAIN.

See Railroads, 113.

II. COMPENSATION.

(A) Necessity and Sufficiency in General. 75 (Ark.) Const. art. 12, § 9. prohibiting appropriation of property until full compensation See Criminal Law, 371, 396, 448, 673; In- is made in money or secured, held not to apply dictment and Information, 202.

to exercise of power of eminent domain by the

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