Fannie Yeal, a distributee of the estate of Mrs. E. A. Eoop, cited the defendant administratrix, Mrs. Bessie Goodwyn, under the Civil Code (1910), § 4073, for a settlement. The administratrix set up in response thereto that the estate was not yet ready for distribution, as she had not collected all due it. Upon the hearing before the ordinarjr, he rendered an order or judgment allowing and disallowing certain claims, and finding that $2334.77 had come into the hands of the administratrix, and that after paying the claims allowed, in the sum of $1077.41, the administratrix had on hand $1257.36 belonging to the estate, and ordered that the same be paid out to the heirs at law as therein provided. From this judgment the administratrix appealed to the superior court, and the appeal was dismissed because of her failure to pay the costs and give bond or file an affidavit in forma pauperis, and to this judgment she excepts.
“An appeal lies to tlie superior court from any decision made by
Plaintiff in error contends that the judgment rendered by the ordinary is a judgment de bonis testatoris and defendant in error contends that it is a judgment de bonis propriis. According to the view we take of this case, the trial judge was correct in dismissing the appeal, regardless of whether the judgment appealed from was one de bonis testatoris or one de bonis propriis, because section 5009 of the Civil Code (1910), does not apply to appeals from the
In Thompson v. Stephens, 138 Ga. 205 (75 S. E. 136), which
■ The court has given careful consideration to the decisions in Bryson v. Scott, 111 Ga. 196 (36 S. E. 619); Webb v. Webb, 24 Ga. App. 464 (101 S. E. 200), and all of the authorities cited in the briefs by the plaintiff in error and the defendant in error, and also Civil Code (1910), § 4088, Merritt v. Merritt, 66 Ga. 324, and Williams v. Merritt, 109 Ga. 217, 219 (34 S. E. 1012), to the effect that a personal judgment can not be rendered in airy proceeding against an administrator where there is no plea of ne unques executor, or a release to himself, or plene administravit, or plene administravit praeter filed, on which the same can be based, and which has been determined against him; and we have reached the conclusion above stated that the trial judge was correct in dismissing the appeal in this case.
Judgment affirmed.