See attachment for the "VIGA TIRANTE" solution.
This is an old and limited solution for the problems caused by edge footings. When it was practiced, mostly masonry structures times, the difficulty was to get integrity between walls and floors and so finding the force T, to be provided by some actual and effective anchorage was paramount. You can see that you have in place a device to ensure the centering of the reaction if you have something to deliver C and T, forces to be surmised equal and of opposite direction. C being weak, it was assumed many times to be taken by the lateral strength to compression of the soil, or better, if materialized, provided by some tie at ground level.
However by no means it is warranted the footing will not attempt to rotate under the N·e pair and so subject the column to additional moment, except hinged. A hinged support for masonry or steel could maybe accepted, more rarely for concrete. In masonry, some eccentricity at bottom support of the wall would be resulting, anyway; actual hinges would have their own constructive issues.
It is for this reason that the "viga tirante" solution is practiced less and less today, it having being substituted by the superior "centering beam" solution, a beam that occupies the dashed portion between external and 1st inner footings in our drawing, and by its flexural strength provides at the -in our drawing- right side of our edge footing a moment counteracting N·e that directly forbids the worrying rotation, then negating any additional moment in the column from edge footing.