59 So. 303 | Ala. | 1912
This is a petition for a writ of certiorari to the judge of the probate court of Pike county,
On September 14, 1911, said Leonard Griffin filed his petition in said probate court, seeking to probate the last will and testament of Martha A. Motes, but stating that the original will had been lost, and could not be found. So the effort was to prove the contents of the lost will and have same probated. September 29, 1911, was set apart by the court as a day to hear said petition. On that day an attempt was made to contest the will, but was eliminated by the order of the court, to the effect that the party Avas not one of those authorized by laAV to contest. The court, however, proceeded to take testimony, and on the close of the testimony announced that it Avould “Avithhold its judgment and render it at some later day.” On the 13th of October, 1911, a decree was rendered as follows: “Probate Court, Special Term, October 13, 1911. State of Alabama, Pike County: In the Matter of the Petition of Leonard Griffin 'to Probate the Last Will and Testament of Martha A. Motes, Deceased. This being the day to hear and
The contention of the petitioner in this case is that, as there Avas no adversary party in the court below, so that an appeal could not be taken, his remedy is by certiorari; and that the decree of the probate court is void, because rendered at a time when said court was not legally :in session.
Section 5429 of the Code of 1907 provides for regular terms of the probate court on the second Monday in each month; and that “the judge may hold special or adjourned terms at any time whenever necessary for any special purpose.”
It is undoubtedly true that a court is Avithout au-' thority to render a judgment, except at the time prescribed by laAV for its sittings. In the early case of Moore v. McGuire, 26 Ala. 461, the judgment in a bastardy case Avas rendered in vacation, and the court states: “He must be sitting as a court, and holding either a special or adjourned term, Avhich must be certified upon the record, or a regular term, of which, being-regulated by public laAV, this court would judicially take notice.” Also: “The record furnishes no evidence that any such term av as ordered or held.” Pages 462, 463.
In the case of Harrison’s Adm’r v. Meadors and Wife, 41 Ala. 274, it Avas held that, in the absence of anything in the record to the contrary, this court would presume that the regular term of the court was continued from day to day until the day on which the decree was rendered. Page 279.
In the case of Arrington et al. v. Roach, Adm’r, 42 Ala. 155, which involved an order for the sale of person^
In the case of Roach, Adm’r, v. Gunter et al., 42 Ala. 239, where the probate court made an order reciting the filing of an application for the sale of land, and appointing another day for hearing the same, on which day, in a record denominating it “a special term,” the petition Avas granted, it Avas held that the decree granting the petition Avas valid; the court saying: “Unquestionably the probate judge has the power in vacation to appoint special terms. There is in buy no restriction 'of his authority to the appointment of special terms to ibe time when he is holding a regular term. On the contrary, he is expressly authorized to make in vacation ‘necessary orders, Avhich are grantable as a matter of course.’ The order for a special term may be appropriately classed as grantable as a matter of course.”
The case of Boynton v. Nelson, 46 Ala. 501, 512, 513, is based upon the principle that an executor cannot be removed without notice; and consequently such order is not one grantable “as a matter of course.” The complaint in that case was that the order removing the executor was made “at a special term to Avhich the court had not been adjourned, and the time in which an appeal might have been taken had elapsed before he became informed of such order” (pages 509, 510) ; and the opinion emphasizes the fact that “this decree not only fails to state that the cause had been continued to this day, but the plain meaning of the recitals is that
The decision in the case of Blake v. Harlan, 75 Ala. 205, is simply that, while a term of the probate court may be kept open from day to day, yet it cannot be continued, so as to include the next regular term, for the purpose of allowing a bill of exceptions to be signed, as that would be holding two terms of the court at the same time, and really evading the law requiring bills of exceptions to be signed during the term.
As will be seen, the statute does not require any notice nor any particular form for calling a special term of the probate court, but, as is proper, from the nature of the business in that court, leaves it discretionary with the judge to hold a special term whenever it seems necessary.
In the present case the evidence had been taken, and nothing remained but for the court to render its decree, which was a “necessary order. * * grantable as a matter of course.” Besides, the record states that it is a “special term,” and that “this being the day to hear and pass upon the petition, etc.,” and said court being a court of general jurisdiction in this matter, the re-’ citáis import absolute verity. We hold, then, that the decree is legal.
In this proceeding Ave can consider only the defects apparent upon the record.—Miller v. Jones, 80 Ala. 89; Cushman v. Commissioners’ Court, 160 Ala. 227, 49 South. 311; Town of Camden v. Bloch, 65 Ala. 237, 239; McAllilley v. Horton, 75 Ala. 491, 492; Stanfill v. Court of County Rev., 80 Ala. 287, 290; McCulley v. Cunningham, 96 Ala. 583, 585, 11 South. 694; Gray v. Southern Railway Co., 116 Ala. 654, 655, 22 South. 973; Max J. Winkler Brokerage Co. v. Courson, 160 Ala. 374, 377, 49 South. 341.