contract. The declaration does not plead such a contract and, in
my opinion, no such contract could be made out upon the facts of
this case. It would be necessary to find in the conversation deposed
to by the plaintiff an antecedent promise by the defendant as to the
correctness of his estimate of the average house takings, given
antecedently to and in consideration of the plaintiff's entering into
the contract of purchase and intended to be collateral, extrinsic or
supplementary to the main contract as distinguished from being
part of it. The circumstances narrated by the plaintiff support no.
such view of the statement which the plaintiff attributes to the
defendant. The defendant was, I think, as a matter of law, entitled
to a verdict upon the second count (sec. 7 of the Supreme Court
Procedure Act 1900). Rule 1518 of the General Rules of the Supreme
Cowrt provides that no direction, omission to direct, or decision as
to the admission or rejection of evidence given by the Judge pre-
siding at the trial, shall, without the leave of the Court, be allowed as
a ground for a notice of motion for a new trial or to enter judgment
unless objection was taken at the trial. It is not clear if, in per-
mitting the question whether there was evidence of a warranty to
be argued, the Supreme Court meant to exercise its power under this.
tule, or if, on the other hand, Davidson J. relied upon the rule.
There is some doubt whether the rule applies to a case in which the
evidence discloses the entire absence of a cause of action recovered
upon. But, in any event, I think that in the present case the
defendant should be allowed to contend that the verdict was upon