The appellant is the administrator of the estate of Jack Schneider, deceased. Among the assets of the estate were eleven airplanes which the deceased had used in his lifetime in connection with a school to teach students the art of flying. With permission of the court that part of the decedent’s business which consisted in the operation of this school was continued for a time by the administrator. The permission thus granted by the court did not include the right to conduct a mercantile business or to sell anything. In due course, it was decided to discontinue this flying school and to sell the airplanes.
On January 8, 1943, the administrator filed a petition in the estate proceeding reciting, so far as material here, that it had been decided to discontinue this school and to sell these airplanes together with certain tools and accessories, that these chattels had not been bought for the purpose of resale but had been bought with the intent that the purchaser was to be the *465 ultimate consumer thereof, and that the petitioner was advised and believed that an effort was being made and would be made to collect a sales tax under the Retail Sales Tax Act of this state. The prayer was that the Retail Sales Tax Act be construed by this court as to its application to the sale of this property, and that the administrator be advised as to whether any sales taxes would become due and payable on any such sale of the property.
An order to show cause was served on the State Board of Equalization and that board filed a demurrer. The court entered an order sustaining the demurrer without leave to amend and, thereafter, entered a judgment dismissing the petition. From that judgment of dismissal the administrator appealed. The respondent board has now moved to dismiss this appeal.
The trial court, while sitting as a probate court, has only the jurisdiction conferred upon it by statute.
(Texas Co.
v.
Bank of America N. T. & S. A.,
The probate court lacked jurisdiction to act in this matter
*466
in any way other than a dismissal thereof for both of the reasons above mentioned. Since that court lacked jurisdiction to grant the relief asked for it is proper to dismiss the appeal rather than to go on with a hearing thereof which could only result in an affirmance of the order appealed from.
(O’Donnell
v.
Board of Medical Examiners,
The motion is granted and the appeal is dismissed.
Marks, J., and Griffin, J., concurred.
