delivered the opinion of the Court.
• This appeal involves a contest of the election for County-Judge in Scott County on August 6,1942. Under the provisions of section 2116 of the Code, the bill was 'filed by Roscoe Byrd before the Honorable J. H. Wallace, Chancellor of the Second Chancery Division against the defendant, C. W. Wright, for the purpose of asserting that complainant was lawfully elected to the office of County Judge in the General Election of 1942, and challenging the claim of the defendant that he was elected to said office on the face of the returns. Under the aforesaid provision of the Code the Chancellor sat as a Special Tribunal, decreed that the case would be heard on oral testimony, and after purging the returns of certain illegal votes cast for the defendant, decreed that complainant had been legally and duly elected County Judge of Scott County in the General Election of August 1942. From this decree defendant prayed, was granted, and has perfected his appeal to this court.
It is necessary first to dispose of an elaborate motion made by the complainant to strike the Bill of Exceptions and affirm the decree of the Chancellor.
It is insisted that since the Chancellor sat as a Special Tribunal and there is no statutory provision therefor, that he had no authority to sign the Bill of Exceptions; that because the Chancellor, as such Special Tribunal, made a rule that the cause should be heard on oral testi*630mony, that a motion for new trial is necessary; that no motion for a new trial was made, and that therefore the decree of the Chancellor, which contains the findings of fact, must be affirmed.
In effect, the motion is predicated upon a statement in the opinion of Barham v. Denison, 159 Tenn., 226, 239, 17 S. W. (2d), 692, 696:
“No means is provided by statute for preserving the record by bill of exceptions in contested election cases which are heard before the chancellor who sits as a special tribunal and not as a court. The jurisdiction of the chancellor was limited to the trial of the particular case, and when the contest was determined and the result was announced, the tribunal constituted by statute to decide the questions involved became functus officio. No inherent power lay in the chancellor to exercise any official act after his final determination. He possessed no power beyond the provisions of the statute.
‘ ‘ This presents for the first time, in this state, the question of whether or not the chancellor, sitting as a special tribunal, can verify a bill of exceptions; to preserve the record made before such tribunal, aftér exercising and- exhausting the extraordinary powers conferred upon him by the statute. However, being impressed that local conditions disclosed by the petition and the record invited this contest, we reviewed the facts as if the exceptions were duly preserved and made a part of the record. ’ ’
We think, however, that the appeal is controlled by section 2129 of the Code:
“Either party may have an appeal to the supreme court, and said appeal shall be governed, in all respects, as appeals from the chancery court.” (Emphasis ours.)
*631This section, of the Code was originally passed as Chapter 111 of the Acts of 1856-56.
As suggested by Chief Justice Green in Brown v. Hows, 163 Tenn., 138, 154, 40 S. W. (2d), 1017, it was passed to meet the decision of Wade v. Murry, decided in 1854 and reported in' 34 Tenn., 50) wherein it was held that the ’ Chancellor, hearing contested elections for judicial offices, sat as a Special Tribunal, not as a Chancellor, and that his decision was not subject to review. We think the language of Code, section 2129, is clear and needs no construction. The appeals in such eases shall be governed “in all respects, as appeals from the chancery court.”
We think further, that since the defendant took the precaution of having the Chancellor authenticate the Bill of Exceptions simultaneously with or at the time he entered his final decree that the statement in the opinion of Barham v. Denison, supra, does not raise the question of the authority of the “Special Tribunal” in the instant case. However, the complainant in his motion to dismiss the bill makes the further point that no motion for a new trial was made in this case, and this, we think, presents a serious question. We recognize that section 2129 of the dode provides that the appeal in the instant case is “in all respects, as appeals from the chancery court,” but,
“There is a class of cases heard in the chancery court upon oral testimony illustrated by Toomey v. Atyoe, 95 Tenn., 373, 32 S. W., 254; Beatty v. Sckenck, 127 Tenn., 63, 152 S. W., 1033; Choate v. Sewell, 142 Tenn., 487, 221 S. W., 190; and Trice v. McGill, 158 Tenn., 394, 13 S. W. (2d), 49. The first two of these cases were prior to chapter 119 of the Acts of 1917. The last two were subsequent to that act, but were tried upon oral testimony in the *632chancery court without the consent of parties expressed in writing. All these cases were reviewed as.law cases upon appeal in the nature, of a writ of error. They were tried irregularly, not. according to the forms of the chancery court, and .were not reviewed de novo as upon appeal in equity. It does not appear distinctly from the reported decisions in these cases whether motions fox new trial were made therein or not.. A motion for a new trial was necessary in each case. . . . The effect of the regulation is to secure a hill of exceptions in every chancery case tried on oral testimony, of which a review is sought, and a motion for new trial in every such case; not tried by consent of parties ‘expressed in writing,’ according to the provisions of chapter 119 of the Acts of 1917.” Fonville v. Gregory, 162 Tenn., 294, 301, 302, 36 S. W. (2d), 900, 902. (Emphasis ours.)
This rule was approved in Broch v. Broch, 164 Tenn., 219, 223, 47 S.W. (2d), 84.
The present case was tried on oral testimony in the Chancery Court, not “by consent of parties ‘ expressed in writing, ’ ’ ’ and not on application of one of the parties in the discretion of the Chancellor, in acccordance with the amendment contained in Chapter 106, Public Acts of 1935; but it was tried on oral testimony on order of the Chancellor, in accordance with the authority he had as a Special Tribunal under section 2116 of the Code.
This we feel, is one of those cases which is definitely tried irregularly on oral testimony and where a motion for new trial was necessary.
“Compliance with the new form (the method of trial of Chancery cases provided by Chapter 119, Acts of 19!?), however, requires that the consent of parties be ‘expressed in writing,’ and there was no attempt at such *633compliance in this case. The case was irregularly tried, and cannot be taken out of the authority of Beatty v. Schenck [127 Tenn., 63, 152 S. W., 1033], which has been consistently followed.” Trice v. McGill, 158 Tenn., 394, 397, 13 S. W. (2d), 49, 50.
From these authorities it seems clear that prior to the Acts of 1917, all cases heard in Chancery Court on oral testimony were held to be law cases, with limited review as such, after motion for new trial had been made and the Bill of Exceptions authenticated. By the Pub. Acts of 1917, chap. 119, the Legislature provided that when the parties expressly so agreed in writing (and this court has held that such written agreement must be a part of the record), a cause might he heard in Chancery Court on oral testimony and be reviewed on broad appeal as other Chancery causes. The amendment to the Acts of 1917 made by the Legislature in 1935, merely added a class of cases, where upon the application of one of the parties, and in the discretion of the Chancellor a cause might be heard on oral testimony, and thereafter be reviewable as in other Chancery causes. The present case falls into neither of these exceptions, and being tried on oral testimony on the order of the Chancellor, without agreement of the parties, and on no application from either of them, it is to be considered a Chancery cause irregularly heard and, therefore, under the authorities above cited, reviewable only after the motion for new trial was made and acted upon and the Bill of Exceptions presented to the Chancellor and authenticated by him.
'It results that the motion to dismiss the Bill of Exceptions must be sustained, and it remains to consider the Chancellor's written finding of fact, which constitutes a *634part of the record, since it is incorporated in the decree. Crowder v. Stafford, 1 Tenn. App., 529.
There is a strong presumption in favor of the decree of the 'Chancellor rendered on oral testimony and the burden is upon the appellant to upset that presumption so that the evidence preponderates against the decree. Williams v. Cantrell, 22 Tenn. App., 443, 124 S. W. (2d), 29; Higgins v. Lewis, 23 Tenn. App., 648, 137 S. W. (2d), 308; Webster v. Trice, 23 Tenn. App., 365, 133 S. W. (2d), 621.
“The provision for a presumption in favor of the judgment below casts the burden of carrying the preponderance of the evidence upon the appellant or plaintiff in error. If he does not carry this burden, he is not entitled to a reversal. He cannot carry his burden if the record does not include a bill of exceptions containing the evidence upon which the judgment below was rendered. In such,a situation the appeal must fail and the judgment must be affirmed.” Morrell v. Fire Ins. Co., 168 Tenn., 137, 140, 76 S. W. (2d), 317, 318.
We think it fair to add that in this case from our review of the record, the Bill of Exceptions would avail the defendant nothing. Under former opinions of this court, when a cause is tried before the Chancellor, without a jury, and on oral testimony, the Chancellor’s findings of fact are “almost conclusive” and to uphold his decree, this court will determine only that it is supported by material evidence. Smith v. Grizzard, 149 Tenn. 207, 210, 259 S. W., 537. Certainly in this case there was much material and substantial evidence to support the Chancellor’s findings of fact and his decree thereon.
It results that all assignments of error are overruled and the decree of the Chancellor affirmed.