57 Ala. 619 | Ala. | 1877
Upon the final settlement of the estate of Josiah Garlington, deceased, of which Robert Strock, deceased, of whose estate appellant is special administrator, was one of the distributees, a contestation took place upon the question whether the said Robert had or had not received any money, and if any, how much, from the said J^siah’s estate, by way of advancement. The allegations th^-t he had, were made by the appellees; and a demurrer thereto having been filed by appellant, upon the ground that the\ allegations were not sworn to, and for several other caua®s assigned, was sustained for these latter causes, but not for tSLO reason that the allegations were not verified upon oath T^hieh the court held not to be necessary. Thereupon appelleesN&le<l amended allegations, not so verified, but obviating the otfh§.r objections made by the demurrer, and upon
If it was the purpose of appellant to insist that the amended allegations were defective because not sworn to, he should have demurred to them, also, for that reason. The contention cannot be made upon the former pleading, which has-become functus officio ; it must be made upon that which is the foundation of the proceedings that are actually had. The first assignment of error cannot therefore bé sustained.
Neither party having demanded a jury, the issue was tried, as the statute provided, by the court. And proof having been made that Robert Strock, deceased, was a grandson of the intestate, Josiah Garlington; and that his mother, a daughter of said Josiah, died in giving him birth, and that his grand-parents then took him to bring him up, and were at the expense of maintaining and educating him until his-death, in 1871; and evidence having been adduced tending-to show that his grandfather meant that this expense should be accounted for as an advancement to the boy as the representative of his deceased mother. Appellees, in order to strengthen that idea, asked the witness, a daughter of said Josiah, “if her father charged L. W. Duke and his wife (who were his son-in-law and daughter’), with board during-the year 1871? — she having already stated that they lived with her father that year.” To this question appellant,, as special administrator, &c., objected, on the ground that it ■ was irrelevant. But the court overruled the objection; appellant excepted, and the witness answered “ that they were charged board.” This witness was further allowed, against the objection and exception of appellant to the question, to • testify that her mother, the grandmother of Robert Strock,. said, when he was brought to her as a babe, “ that they would raise it if it took everything its mother had to raise it.” Two or three other questions were, in like manner, objected to as irrelevant, but allowed to be put to witnesses against the objections and exceptions of appellant. There was also evidence given, some tending to prove, and some tending to disprove,, the allegation that the grandfather intended what he had expended upon Robert Strock to be counted as so much advanced to him from his grandfather’s estate. But the evidence itself'was not set out. The court found that $560 had been thus advanced to Robert Strock. The questions for us • to decide are: whether the court committed error that will
It may be admitted, for the purpose of the argument, that the answers to these interrogatories were not relevant evidence. But they were not submitted to a jury. Although the judge performed the office of a jury in rendering a verdict upon the evidence, he also constituted the court. It belonged to him to decide what part of the evidence was legal, as well as its weight and effect in support of or against the matter alleged. And, generally, the court must hear the evidence before deciding whether it is legal or not. It is not, indeed, easy to see how it can be kept in ignorance of ■ such testimony. Though it is proper certainly for a party to object to evidence in such a case, in order to show that he does not consent to the admission of such as is inferior, or dispense with the production of the best. The cause then comes before the probate judge, as a cause in equity comes before a chancellor, in which objections are made to interrogatories to the witnesses, or the other instruments of proof. The evidence and objections go to him together; and upon consideration of them all, he makes up his decree. If there be error in this decree, it will be corrected upon appeal. But it will not be reversed because a witness was suffered to testify against objection, whose testimony was irrelevant, if the other evidence in the cause justifies the decree.
In like manner, in such a case as the present, before a judge of probate, the party who thinks errors have intervened to his prejudice, in the rendering of the decree, can have them reviewed by bringing the cause, with all the evidence set forth in a bill of exceptions, to this court. For when, as here, the duty of determining the matter in controversy, upon the evidence, is devolved by law on the court, unless a trial by j ury be demanded by one of the parties, an appeal may be taken from the decision of the judge below.—Bogle v. Bogle’s Administrator, 23 Ala. 546; Bradley v. Andress, 30 id. 80. But in order to enable this court to ascertain whether error did, in fact, intervene or not, all the evidence that was before the lower court must be incorporated in the record brought to this. In the present instance, this is not done; and we arc therefore not enabled to say that the judge of probate erred in his decree.
It is a different class of cases, in which the decision of the judge upon the facts taken by consent of parties in place of the verdict of a jury, can not be reviewed in this court.
The judgment of the Probate Court must be affirmed.