Opinion op the Court by
Judge HobsonAffirming.
G'eorge Y\r. Landram, as revenue agent, instituted tli-is proceeding in the Livingston county court to have assessed to appellees certain land named by him as omitted' property. The county court held that the defendants had assessed and paid taxes on all or substantially all of their land. Prom this judgment an appeal was taken by the revenue agent to the Livingston circuit court. In that court a general demurrer was sustained to the statement, and, the revenue agent failing to plead further, the proceeding was dismissed. Prom this judgment, the appeal before us is prosecuted.
It is averred in the statement in substance that the defendants had listed the tract of land for taxation for the years named at from 500 to 600 acres, and it was averred that there were in the tract “637 acres according to the calculation of P. R. Vick, county surveyor of Livingston county, and 660 4-10 acres according to the calculation of G. W. Landram-, the revenue agent who is prose uting the action for the commonwealth of Kentucky against the defendants herein, and which he, said ay nt, claims to be correct. ’ ’ This is not a sufficient allege tion that there was any more land in the tract than been listed. It is- not an allegation that there were 637 acres or that there were 660 4-10 acres, for it is not alleged that either of *113the calculations was correct. A fact must be positively alleged. It is not sufficient to plead evidence of the fact.
Aside from this, there are a number of exhibits filed with the petition to which reference is made therein and none of these are copied in the record. The record is not a complete transcript. The clerk only certifies that he copied certain papers, naming them. An exhibit cannot make a bad petition good, but an exhibit contradicting the allegations of the petition with which it is filed may make it bad on demurrer. In the absence of the exhibits, we must conclude that they warrant the judgment of the circuit court in sustaining a demurrer to the petition.
It is also, complained that the court gave judgment in favor of the defendants against the revenue agent for their costs. In doing this the court followed the provisions of the act of 1906. See Acts 1906, pp. 227-228, c. 22, art, 17. It is insisted that this- provision of the act of 1906 does not apply to proceeding’s instituted under the former statute, although tried after the new act took effect. But the record before us fails to show when this proceeding was instituted, and, in the absence of a complete record, we must presume that the circuit court ruled properly. Rule 27 (75 S. "W., 6), of this court is in these words: “Hereafter this court will conclusively presume, after sub mission, that records brought up to this court on schedule filed in the clerk’s office of the inferior court, as prescribed by section 737 of the Code of Practice, is the complete record, and that all parties interested have consented to try the appeal on such record. Before submission the court will, in its discretion, allow a transcript of other parts of the record *114to be filed when deemed necessary in furtherance of justice. ’ ’
But no schedule was filed in the clerk’s office of the circuit court. We have before us a partial record made up without a schedule.
Judgment affirmed.