From a final decree, of date July 11, 1914, dismissing the bilí filed by the appellants against appellees, among others, this appeal is prose*147cuted. The only errors assigned are addressed to the result made effective by this decree.
The complainants’ note of testimony for the final submission of the cause made the depositions of several named persons matters for the court’s consideration in arriving at its judgment in the premises. In the formal applications of the solicitors for both parties litigant, for submission of the cause, addressed to the clerk and register of the court, depositions are mentioned as being of the subjects on which the submission for final decree should be had.—Sims’ Chan. Prac., § 561. The decree itself does not.exclude or negative, by any. of its recitals, the idea that the submission included as subjects of the court’s consideration the depositions mentioned in the complainants’ note of testimony and depositions referred to in the application of complainants to the clerk and register to submit the cause to the court. It has long been the established practice in this jurisdiction that the omission from the record, on appeal from a decree rendered on pleadings and proof, of matters of evidence embraced in the submission of the cause, gives rise and effect to the presumption that the decree was sustained by the proof Toon v. Finney, 74 Ala. 343; Winter v. City Council, 79 Ala. 481, 490; Wood v. Wood, 119 Ala. 183, 185, 24 South. 841; Jefferson v. Sadler, 155 Aal. 537, 46 South. 969; Kale v. T. C. I. & R. R. Co., 183 Ala. 507, 62 South. 738; Jordan v. Hardie, 131 Ala. 72, 79, 31 South. 504. This presumption results from the obligation the appellants assume to affirmatively show error in the decree assailed.
The record on appeal in this cause does not contain any depositions. Consistent. with the stated presumption that the decree was supported by the evidence before the trial court, it may well be that vital features *148of the bill were disproven. The note of submission for complainants is effective to show that the matter of depositions noted thereon were before the court.—Wood v. Wood, 119 Ala. 185, 24 South. 841.
It is an idea common to the solicitors that the submission was on bill and answers only. The record does not, as indicated, sustain that notion. The cause here must be viewed as the record shows it.
The decree is accordingly affirmed, though amended to provide that the dismissal should be without prejudice. The costs of the appeal will be taxed against appellants.
Anderson, C. J., and Sayre and Gardner, JJ., concur.-