23 Or. 111 | Or. | 1892
The question of practice involved in this controversy has been directly presented and decided by this court in Wilkes v. Cornelius, 21 Or. 345 (23 Pac. Rep. 473). It arose upon a claim for money for services rendered, which the executor disallowed, when the claimant ant presented it to the county court for allowance under section 1134, Hill’s Code, providing for the adjudication of claims against the estate of a deceased person in a summary manner. The county court disallowed the claim, and an appeal was taken to the circuit court, the transcript containing all the evidence received by the county court. From this it will be observed that the proceeding was prosecuted in the nature of a suit in equity as distinguished from an action at law, as prescribed by s'ection 1077. Referring to the mode of procedure, and the judgment obtained under section 1134, Thayer, C. J., said, at the top of page 345: “It declares that the order of allowance or rejection of the claim shall have the force and effect of a judgment, from which an appeal may be taken as in ordinary cases. Such a judg
The case was sent back, and after a trial before a jury in the circuit court, resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the claimant, it was again brought to this court on appeal: 21 Or. 348. In delivering the opinion
It is upon the refusal of the executor or administrator to allow the claim or demand that the statute (section 1134) provides that the county court, after notice has been given, may proceed to hear and determine in a summary manner such claim or demand against the estate. When this is done, and a party is dissatisfied with the judgment order allowing or rejecting such claim, and has appealed from it, what possible objection can there be to the circuit court trying the issues according to legal principles as is dpne in like cases? Why subject the party when the obligation is legal, and the court presided over by a trained lawyer capable of instructing the jury upon the law in the premises, to the slow and tedious, expensive and cumbrous, method of taking depositions or reducing the evidence to writing? We see no reason for it, and think the case is controlled by Wilkes v. Cornelius, supra.
It results that the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.