Under our decisions the notices must be posted in accordance with the conditional sales law, and a public place has been defined as a place where many people are accustomed to congregate or pass by, and where such notices are likely to attract public attention and their contents become known to the community, and thus give information of the sale to persons who may be interested and possibly become bidders. Dacus v. Knoxville Outfitting Co., 9 Tenn. App. 683; 78 C.J.S., Sales, Section 601, pages 363, 364. It appears that the side of the building on which the notice in question was posted was about 10 feet from a road used by the public generally and particularly by contractors doing business with the defendant, and that said building was located about 12 feet from the defendant's main office building.
See Appendix to 155 Tennessee Reports, page XII. The Supreme Court has the same Rules. Appendix to 155 Tennessee Reports, page V. Hence, if appellants' fourth assignment purported, by its terms, to be an assignment that the Chancellor erred in admitting evidence over objection, it fails to "quote the full substance of the evidence admitted" as required by the Rule above quoted. References to pages of the record, without a quotation of the evidence, or a full statement of its substance, is not a sufficient compliance with the Rule. Wood v. Green, 131 Tenn. 583, 175 S.W. 1139; State ex rel. v. Collier, 160 Tenn. 403, 423, 23 S.W.2d 897; Dacus v. Knoxville Outfitting Company, 9 Tenn. App. 683, 690; Edgington v. Kansas City, M. B. Railroad Company, 10 Tenn. App. 685, 690; Murray v. Patterson, 18 Tenn. App. 30, 35, 72 S.W.2d 558. We may add that there is not a scintilla of evidence in the record tending to show that there is error in the figures given by Mr. Goodloe on which the Chancellor based the finding quoted in appellants' fourth assignment of error; hence there is no reason to suppose that the appellants will suffer any real injustice from their failure to obtain an investigation by this Court of the technical admissibility of such evidence.