The petition is for mandamus to compel Circuit Judge Turner to reinstate the decree rendered by the special chancellor, granting and decreeing a new trial in a certain equity cause entitled, City Bank & Trust Company v. J. B. Du Bose, formerly pending in the law and equity court of Monroe county, which decree was declared null and void by Circuit Judge Foster.
The chancellor was not selected and appointed by agreement of counsel to try said cause; the “incompetency” of the judge of the court to hear and try the issues being admitted, the register in chancery appointed the special chancellor pursuant to the provisions of section 160 of the Constitution and of section 4627 of the Code. Among other *441 things, it is there provided that such special judge or chancellor so appointed by the clerk ■or register shall “sit as a court,” and “hear, decide, and render judgment in the same manner and to the same effect as such incompetent chancellor or judge could have rendered but for such incompetency.”
The legality of the acts of the special chancellor must be tested, as would be those of the regular judge of the law and equity court of said county. That court had ceased to exist, by operation of law, being consolidated into the circuit court, and it was declared in the consolidation act that:
“All causes, or proceedings of every kind pending in any court hereby consolidated into the circuit court shall proceed to final judgment therein as though they had begun in the circuit court in the first instance.” Acts 1915, p. 279, § 3.
“expires with the reasons which caused it to he issued. * * * The commission of the special judge is but the incident to that of the regular officer, and must follow and expire with its principal, and therefore, when Judge Caldwell went out of office, the commission of the special judge ■ceased to exist, as a valid commission, and he became functus officio. The successor of Judge Caldwell became the proper officer, under the ■Constitution, for the trial of those causes, which, in consequence of the disability of his predecessor, had been referred to the special judge. It was never intended that there should be two judges in every respect competent and qualified, under the Constitution, to preside in the same court, for the trial and determination of the same cause, at the same time.” Caldwell’s Adm’r v. Bell & Graham,
The same conclusion was reached by the Louisiana court, where, under a provision of the Constitution, a member of the bar had been selected to sit in a cause in which the judges of the Court of Appeals were unable to agree, and before decision one of the dis■agreeing judges was succeeded in office by a regular judge who was qualified to decide the cause. State v. Judges, etc.,
The decisions in Briggs v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroau Co.,
*442
The case of Hamill v. Gibson,
We are of opinion that the writ of mandamus should be, and it is hereby, denied.
Mandamus denied.
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