68 P. 527 | Ariz. | 1902
On October 3, 1898, there was pending in the probate court of Maricopa County an application for the admission to probate of a certain instrument in writing, purporting to be the last will and testament of James Roarke, deceased. By its order of that date the said court appointed Thomas Armstrong, Jr., an attorney, to represent, in said proceeding, the interests of eight absent and non-resident heirs at law of said decedent, named and specified in the order. The estate of said James Roarke was at that time in process of administration in said court as an intestate estate, and was valued at about forty-five thousand dollars. It has since depreciated to about sixteen thousand dollars. The distributive interest of these absent heirs under the law was two thirds of the entire estate. The pretended will, which was offered for probate, purported to give the whole of the estate to a nephew of the decedent, and, if sustained, its effect would be to wipe out the interest in the estate of those whom the appellee had been appointed to represent. Under these circumstances, the appellee, co-operating with counsel employed by the remaining heirs, entered actively upon a legal contest in the probate court against the admission of the alleged will, which was successfully prosecuted, resulting in the instrument being held to be a forgery, and the abandonment of all claims under it. To this contest the appellee devoted about thirty days of his time in the work of preparation, trial, and argument. The case was one in which zeal and industry were displayed on both sides. There were repeated hearings, and in all thirty or more witnesses were examined. On January 29, 1900, some time after the pro^ceeding had been finally terminated, the appellee filed in the
It is claimed that the court below erred in rendering any judgment whatever against the administrator for the payment of compensation to the said appellee on the facts shown, for the reason that the probate court had no jurisdiction to
In his second assignment of error the appellant questions the validity of the order appointing the appellee to act as attorney for absent heirs, on the ground that one of the parties specified in the order (William Roarke) was already
It is urged, finally, that the district court erred in denying the appellant’s demand for a jury trial in said cause. The point is sought to be made that as the Probate Act (Rev. Stats. Ariz. 1887, par. 1305), requires that “all causes removed by appeal to the district court shall be tried anew as if originally brought in such court,” the appeal proceeding takes the nature of an original action in that court for the recovery of attorney’s fees against the estate, in which either party would have the right to demand a jury. Such is not the contemplation of the law. The nature of the proceeding is not changed by the appeal, and the matter comes before the district court in no different form from that which it presented in the probate court. It is still the matter of the allowance of a proper fee to an officer of the court for services rendered in pursuance of his appointment, and the statute expressly provides that such fee shall “be fixed by the court.” It has been frequently held that the right of trial by jury is secured by the constitution only in cases in which it had previously existed in the administration of justice according to the course of the common law. Probate matters belonged to ecclesiastical jurisdiction, where a jury was not a right.
The findings of the district court in this ease are amply supported by the evidence, and, on the whole, we cannot say that there has been any abuse of discretion or error of judgment. The judgment appealed from is accordingly affirmed.
Sloan, J., and Doan, J., concur.