Sаm Carruba died testate in Jefferson’ County. His son, Paul Carruba, filed a petition in the Probate Court of Jefferson' County to probate the will of Sam Carruba. and two codiсils thereto. The widow of the-deceased and two of his daughters filed a. contest of the two codicils. A hearing was-set on the petition to probate and the contest. Before the date set for the hearing,, the contestants filed in the Probate Court a. notice of the taking of discovery depositions, of Paul Carrubа and one Annie Mae Richardson, a witness to the execution of one-of the codicils, under the provisions of Act 375, approved September 8, 1955, Acts of. Alаbama, 1955, Vol. 2, p. 901.
Paul Carruba filed objection to the taking of the depositions on the ground that Act 375, supra, does not apply to will contests-in the Probate Court of Jefferson County.. The objection was overruled. Thereafter Paul Carruba filed in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County a petition for the issuance of a writ of mandamus tо the Probate Judge commanding him to vacate his order requiring the attendance of Paul Carruba and Annie Mae Richardson for the taking of depositions and to quаsh the subpoenas.
Judge Bowron, to whom the petition for mandamus was presented, entered an order setting a hearing on the petition and suspending the taking of the depositions until the matter was disposed of in the circuit-court.
Following a hearing, Judge Bowron entered an order denying the prayer of the-petition for the issuance of the alternative-writ of mandamus. The previous order suspending the taking of depositions was vacated. Paul Carruba appealed to this court. Judge Bowron refused to approve a. supersedeas bond or to restrain the taking, of the depositions pending the appeal.. *716 However, this court, on thе application of Paul Carruba, the appellant, ordered the contestants and their attorneys not to proceed with the taking of the depositions pending further orders of this court.
The appellant, Paul Carruba, being uncertain as to whether appeal was the proper mode of securing a reviеw of Judge Bowron’s order refusing the issuance of the alternative writ of mandamus, has presented this case here by appeal and in the alternative by petitiоn for mandamus.
Judge Bowron having jurisdiction to order the issuance of an alternative writ of mandamus, his order refusing the issuance of such a writ is appealable. Seсtion 761, Title 7, Code 1940; Ex parte Register,
The question for decision is whether the provisions of Act 375, supra, apply to a will contest proceeding in the Probate Court of Jefferson County.
We have held that Act 375, supra, applies in civil cases at law in the circuit courts of this state (Ex parte Rice,
In Ex рarte Rice, supra, we observed that Act 375, supra, is uncertain as to the courts to which it may be applicable and we expressed the hope that the legislature would see fit to define clearly the courts in which the act is to operate. No such legislation has been enacted in so far as we are advised.
There is no language in Act 375 which expressly includes or excludes probate courts. Act 503, approved September 10, 1957, Acts of Alabama 1957, Vol. 1, p. 690, considered in Ex parte Hanna, supra, operates to make the provisions of Act 375, supra, applicable in counties having a population of 500,000 or morе. Jefferson County has a population in excess of that figure and the probate courts in counties having a population of 400,000 or more have been given general equity jurisdiction consistent with that of the circuit courts, in equity, in the administration of the estates of deceased persons, minors and insane persons, including tеstamentary trust estates. But a proceeding to probate a will in the probate court, as provided for in §§ 52-63, Title 61, Code 1940, as amended, is not an equitable prоceeding or a subject of equity jurisdiction in that court. Under the provisions of § 64, Title 61, a will contest filed in the probate court may be transferred to the law side of thе circuit court, not the equity side. It is within six months after a will has been admitted to probate that a will contest may be filed in the circuit court in equity. Section 64, Title 61, Code 1940.
Section 57, Title 61, Code 1940, was in existence at the time Act 375 was adopted. That section reads:
“For the trial of such contest [in the probate court], depositions of witnesses may be taken in like cases, for the same causes, and in the same manner, as depositions are taken in civil actions in the circuit court; and in all matters relating to the organization and impaneling of the jury, to the evidence, mode of proceeding, and investigation and determination of such contest, nоt specially provided for by this article, the court must proceed and be governed by the same rules and regulations, so far as applicable, as prеvail in courts of law in civil cases.”
Where a new statute specifies the procedure to be followed but is not complete in itself, it may with perfect prоpriety refer
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to and by reference adopt the provisions of an existing system for the regulation of the new proceeding. This does not require the specific adoption of the existing statute by name. Hutto et al. v. Walker County,
Appellant does not question that principle but asserts that § 57, Title 61, supra, does not opеrate to make the provisions of Act 375, supra, applicable to will contests in probate courts in that said § 57, Title 61, is of that class of statutes generally refеrred to as “reference statutes” which only incorporate the adopted statutes in existence at the time of the enactment of the adopting statute and do not prospectively include subsequent modifications or additions to the general subject adopted.
The principle referred to abovе applies where the adopting statute incorporates an earlier statute or a particular provision thereof by a specific and descriptive reference thereto. Phoenix Assur. Co. of London v. Fire Department of City of Montgomery,
However, when a statute refers generally to the law relating tо or governing the subject under consideration, the adoption by reference will be regarded as including not only the law in force at the time the adopting aсt became effective, but also later legislation on the subject, the law in force when the action or proceeding in question is taken. In re Heiman’s Will,
These rules of construction are discussed in 2 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d Ed.), p. 548, § 5208; 50 Am.Jur., Statutes, p. 58, § 39;
Section 57, Title 61, supra, the adopting statute, dоes not incorporate any earlier statutes by specific or descriptive reference. It refers, among other things, to the law generally which governеd the taking of depositions in civil cases in the circuit court.
We hold, therefore, that the section is to be construed as making applicable the provisiоns of Act 375, supra, which were in force at the time this cause was tried.
Our holding here is not in conflict with our holdings in Savage v. Wallace,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
