5 Mich. 225 | Mich. | 1858
The writ of error lies, upon any final judgment or determination of a court of law and of record, to remove the record into this Court, for review. — See Comp. L. §§ 5332 and 5340; and cases cited by counsel. To authorize it, it is necessary that there should be a final judgment or determination upon the matter in controversy in the inferior court, and it is never employed merely to bring up interlocutory decisions, or discretionary orders made pending the litigation. Usually, this writ, being a common law writ, is directed only to courts proceeding after the course of the common law; and I am not aware that our laws, giving to this court a general supervisory power over all inferior jurisdictions, have been construed, in any case, to allow this writ to run to courts of probate, or to any other than a common ,law jurisdiction.
It is true Probate Courts are “ courts of record,” being
The character of. this jurisdiction is worthy of notice. While appeals from Justices’ Courts to the Circuit, and from chancery to this Court, are only allowed after final judgment or decree, from Probate Courts they are allowed from orders, sentences, decrees or denials, whenever and as often as occasion may arise [vide, Comp. L. §§ 3007, 3631); and the Circuit Court does not, in analogy with its jurisdiction in appeals from Justices’ Courts, try and determine the issue de novo, and render an original judgment, but proceeds in analogy with the jurisdiction of this Court in appeals from -chancery, and, unless a question of fact is to be decided.
To allow a writ of error to the Circuit Court, for the purpose of reviewing its proceedings upon these appeals, would interminably procrastinate the settlement of estates, and operate as a most oppressive burthen upon the public. This consideration, of itself, were the question a doubtful one, would induce us to hesitate long, before we recognized this remedy;, but a consideration of the nature of the Avrit, and the remedy, satisfies us that it lies in no case where the proceedings are not after the course of the common law, and only after judgment on an issue formed according to it; and it is not enough that the proceedings are in a court which ordinarily and, primarily exercises common law jurisdiction. It is true this Court has exercised jurisdiction in cases of appeals from probate judges to the Circuit Courts, and also in appeals from commissioners of claims to that court (vide, In the Matter of the Estate of Godfrey, 4 Mich. 308; In the Matter of the Appeal of Dickinson, 2 Mich. 337; McBride vs. Cicott
We think the same principle underlies this question as did that in Parker vs. Copland, 4 Mich. 548, and that the reasons which induced this Court to retain the writ of error in that case would quash it in this.
Writ of error dismissed.