If a cause be transferred by order of the chancery court to the circuit court, or vice versa, the clerk of the court ordering the transfer shall forthwith deposit all the papers in the cause, together with his certificate of the fact of the transfer, in the court to which it was transferred, taking the receipt of the clerk therefor. Codes, 1892, § 936; 1906, § 1012; Hemingway's 1917, § 732; 1930, § 765; 1942, § 1680. If a cause be transferred by order of the chancery court to the circuit court, or vice versa, the clerk of the court ordering the transfer shall forthwith deposit all the papers in the cause, together with his certificate of the fact of the transfer, in the court to which it was transferred, taking the receipt of the clerk therefor. Codes, 1892, § 936; 1906, § 1012; Hemingway's 1917, § 732; 1930, § 765; 1942, § 1680. If a cause be transferred by order of the chancery court to the circuit court, or vice versa, the clerk of the court ordering the transfer shall forthwith deposit all the papers in the cause, together with his certificate of the fact of the transfer, in the court to which it was transferred, taking the receipt of the clerk therefor. Codes, 1892, § 936; 1906, § 1012; Hemingway's 1917, § 732; 1930, § 765; 1942, § 1680. If a cause be transferred by order of the chancery court to the circuit court, or vice versa, the clerk of the court ordering the transfer shall forthwith deposit all the papers in the cause, together with his certificate of the fact of the transfer, in the court to which it was transferred, taking the receipt of the clerk therefor. Codes, 1892, § 936; 1906, § 1012; Hemingway's 1917, § 732; 1930, § 765; 1942, § 1680.
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