By the Court
This is an application made by the Plaintiff in Error for the issuance from this court of a common law writ of certiorari to the Probate Court of the County of Brown to bring up the record in the matter of the estate of Wm. Wood, deceased. The petition shows that Mr. Wood died intestate, in the spring of-1857; that during 1857 or 1868 the Plaintiff in Error and Robert Wardlaw were appointed administrators; that commissioners were appointed to examine claims against the estate, &e., on the 25th day of June, 1858, and their commission appointed the 25 th day of December, 1859, as the limit of the time within which claims were to be received; that the commissioners held their meetings in Blue Earth County, and by their notice requested all claims to be presented within six months from June 25, 1858; that the notice was only given in Brown county; that the commissioners heard and allowed claims on the 27th day of January, 1860, without the time being extended by the Probate Court; that the Plaintiff in Error had large claims against the estate, which were allowed by the Probate Court, and that he and
According to the statements in the petition the commissioners were guilty of a number of irregularities in their proceedings, and when the Plaintiff in Error objected to the allowance of Mr. Myricks’ claims before the Probate Court, among other things, for the reason of such irregularities of the commissioners, • the court should have set aside their proceedings. In either case, however, the Plaintiff in Error here had redress by appeal to the District Court: first, from the decision of the commissioners within sixty days after they reported, (Comp. Sts., p. 442, sec. 20); and second, from the decree of the Probate Court made on the accounting of the administrator, within thirty days after notice of the decree. Comp. Sts.,p. 494-5. It is claimed that some of the errors committed were jurisdictional, and that the judgment is void. . We may concede this to be the case, and still it does not alter the view we take of the question. ^
It is quite clear that the Legislature, in prescribing the mode in which the proceedings of Probate Courts should ho reviewed, intended that such should be the general course of practice. It is manifest throughout the statutes that in all cases of appeal from courts inferior to the District Court the review should in the first place be had in that court. Proper times are limited within which all this character of errors must he corrected, and although cases might arise in which this court would review the decisions of other courts by means of a common law writ of certiorari after the
Under all the circumstances of this case we do not think the petition makes a case for the writ, and the application is denied.