10 Tex. 467 | Tex. | 1853
Several questions have been raised by the appellant’s coun■sel, and discussed with great ability, both orally aud by his brief.
On the iirst question — the right of ihe administrator to liave the order of the probate judge revised in the District Court — we believe this right cannot be questioned,'aud that it is not only given by statute, but that it could liave been exercised under that court’s general jurisdiction to prevent error aud great injustice to tiie parties.
On the question how the case shall bo tried after it is brought into the District Court, there may be some difference in opinion whether it is to be tried upon tiie record of the Probate Court only, or upon the record and upon facts to bo proven on the trial, both. We believe that it should be tried upon the record aud proof of such facts on the trial as may be essential to enable the District Court to form a correct judgment in revising tiie proceedings of the Probate Court. This conclusion, it is believed, can be sustained, first, by a fair construction of tiie statutes, and, secondly, by a necessary implication resulting from the organization of the Probate Court, the proceedings of which
We believe this question was settled in the case of Chrisman v. Newsom, (see 9 Texas Reports, 113.) Chrismau was dissatisfied with a judgment of tiie Probate Court against him as tiie administrator of Jordan; failed to appeal within the fifteen days; presented his petition, to the district judge, showing- in what lie was injured and why it was that he liad not appealed, and obtained a. certiorari. Tiie district judge reversed the judgment of the Probate Court and remauded the case to the Probate Court without directing what should he done by tiie Probate Court or the grounds of its decision. On appeal it was held that the certiorari was only one of two modes of bringing- up a case from the Probate to the District Court, and, when brought up, that cases were to be tried alike in all respects; that the District Court'ought to have tried the case de novo, as on appeal, and certified its judgment to the Probate Court, to he carried by that Court into effect. We quote from memory, and possibly, may not be precisely accurate.
But the Probate Court, from its organization, is not required to spread tiie facts or the evidence in support of its orders and judgments upon tiie record. It would not be possible that the revising court could determine on tiie correctness of such orders and judgments without the exercise of the right to have all. controverted questions proven and tried on the merits. Where a power is granted to correct and revise the errors of a court so organized as tiie Probate Court tiie grant of power is made in reference to such organization, and ifc carries with it an authority to use tiie necessary means of arriving- at a correct judgment. And these means are in most cases evidence of the facts or attending- circumstances.
The question whether an executor or administrator could bind an estate by-a promise to pay the debt of his testator or intestate, though at one time very unsettled, is believed to be no longer so. And tiie current of authority for more than a century has been uniform that it cannot be done. Tiie ou& ground, on which it ever could have been questioned was predicated on the assumption that the subsequent promise was not ground of action, but that it rested on the original promise, and that therefore by the subsequent promise tiie administrator or executor did not create a new debt against the estate.
Tiiis court decided in Coles v. Kelsy, 2 Tex. R., 541, in conformity with what wo conceived to be not only reason but a current of authorities for years past, that the now promise and not the old was the foundation of (he action. See Angelí on Limitations, whore a .collection of the authorities will be found. If the debt or claim is barred by (ho statute it is no longer a debt of the. estate or claim against it. And to permit tiie represent alive to admit its validity on presentation would be to allow him to create a debt against tiie decedent.
But is ifc shown by the record that either the Probate Court or Hie District Court decided the law differently from what we have laid it down ? There is
Judgment affirmed.
Note 81. — Poag v. Rowe, 16 T., 590; Moore v. Hardison, 11 T., 407. But to set aside a judgment approving such allowance, proceedings for that purpose must be instituted in the District Court, and within, it seems, some reasonable timo. (Moore v. Hillebrant, 14 T., 312; Eceles v. Daniels, 16 T., 136; Hillebrant v. Burton, 17 T., 138; Lott v. Cloud, 23 T., 254; Mosely v. Gray, 23 T.,496; Giddings v. Steele, 28 T., 732; Baker v. Rust, 37 T., 242; Smith v. Downes, 40 T., 57; Leaverton v. Leaverton, 40 T., 218.
Note 85. — Francis v. Williams, 14 T., 158; Brown v. Hobbs, 19 T., 167.