By the Court,
Kingman, J.Various issues were made up in this case, and a jury being waived were tried by the Court. The finding of the Court was general, to which the plaintiff in error excepted and brings the case to this Court for revision. There was no motion for a new trial, no exceptions to the proceedings other than the one to the finding of the Court. We do not think the case comes to us in such a manner as will authorize us to determine that the decision of the Court below was erroneous.
The Code provides, Sec. 291, that, “ upon the trial of questions of fact by the Court, it shall not be necessary for the Court to state its finding except generally for the plaintiff or defendant unless one of the parties request it with a view of excepting to the decision of the Court upon the questions of law involved in the trial, in which case the Court shall. state in writing the conclusions of fact found separately from the conclusions of law.”
This provision was necessary to meet the changes made by the Code as to the manner of trial and the mode of presenting the testimony in a case. When issues of fact and law are both settled by the same trier, it is absolutely indis*339pensable that the facts found should be separately stated in order that it may be made apparent whether there is a misapplication of the law to those facts.
It is only errors apparent upon the record, that this Court take cognizance of, and those are errors of law. We can not retry the case upon its merits. In this case if we should come to a conclusion that the evidence as we understand it and the proper applications of law, might bring us to a different conclusion from that of the Court below, it would be a retrial of the whole cause, not a review of alleged errors of law. In the former chancery practice this was a consistent course to pursue by appellate tribunals, because the evidence on which the chancellor acted was all reduced to writing, and the same facts in the same fullness of detail were presented to the revisory tribunal as were acted upon by the chancellor, but the Code authorizes oral testimony in all cases. If it were then to allow an appeal and re-trial of the cause upon the evidence as presented by a bill of exceptions, the Appellate Court would try the cause without the benefit of seeing the witness, of judging of his credibility by his intelligence or his manner, which might show to the Court below such- evident bias as greatly to weaken his testimony. If the Code allowed such a course the Appellate Court would be much more likely to commit error than to correct it. The Code is not open to this charge. The section we have quoted clearly points out the course that must he taken if either party desires to except to the decision of the Court upon a question of law. Sec. 10, Ohio State, 691.
The plaintiff in error not having done so in this, case, has not put his case in such a condition that we can determine whether an error of law has been committed or not, the decision of the Court below mugt be affirmed,
All the justices concurring.