Crook v. Newborg & Son

124 Ala. 479
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 124 Ala. 479 (Crook v. Newborg & Son) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crook v. Newborg & Son, 124 Ala. 479 (Ala. 1899).

Opinion

TYSON, J.

— -This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment rendered by the city court of Anniston awarding a writ of mandamus to compel the appellant to certify his incompetency as probate judge to hear and determine the settlement of an account of one Gammon as administrator. The settlement to be*made by the administrator is one required under sections 298-299 of the Code after, declaration of insolvency of the estate.

One of the objections urged to the competency of the appellant, in the probate court, and upon which in part was based the demand that he certify his disqualifications to hear and determine the matters involved in said settlement as appears from the petition for the writ, was that S. L. Crook, a first cousin of the appellant, is one of the sureties upon the bond of Gammon as administrator. The fact of suretyship and the consanguinity of the surety, S. L. Crook, to the appellant, as alleged, is admitted in the answer to the petition.

It has been too often adjudicated by this court to be now a matter of doubt, much less of dispute, that sureties upon an administrator’s bond are bound and concluded by the decree against their principal primarily and to the same extent as their principal is bound. Banks v. Speers, 97 Ala. 563 and authorities there cited. So then the question fairly presented may be said to be this: Is a judge disqualified from determining a cause in which a decree or judgment must be rendered, in which a first cousin, though not a party to the proceeding eo nomine, has an interest in the result of the trial?

[481]*481Section 2637 of tlie Code provides that “No judge of any court, chancellor, county commissioner, or justice must sit in any cause or proceeding in which he is interested, or related to either party within the fourth degree .of consanguinity or affinity, or in which he has been of counsel, or in which is called in question the validity of any judgment or judicial proceeding in Avliicli he Avas of counsel, or the validity or construction 'of any instrument or paper prepared or signed by him as counsel or attorney, without the consent of the parties entered of record, or put in writing, if the court is not of record.”

By the Arery letter of the statute if S. L. Crook had been th» administrator, instead of a surety, the probate judge, his first cousin, would have been disqualified. Plowman v. Henderson, 59 Ala. 559.

The contention is that S. L. Crook, not being a party to the record and his liability as surety being remote or contingent, the disqualifying causes enumerated in the statute do not apply.

The purpose of the statute is to secure to litigants a fair and impartial trial by an impartial and unbiased tribunal. Next in importance to the duty of rendering a righteous judgment is that of doing it in such manner, as avíII beget no suspicion of the fairness or integrity of the judge. “The principle of disqualification is to have no technical or strict construction, but is to be broadly applied to all classes of cases where one is appointed to decide the rights of his fellow citizens. * * * Disqualifying statutes are not to be construed in a strict technical sense, but broadly with liberality. The term ‘party’ used to indicate persons to Avhom the judge is related and aa’Iio are connected Avith the litigation, is not confined to parties of record.” — 12 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, p. 41 and notes 3 and 4, p. 42.

The Supreme Court of Texas, in the case of Gains v. Barr, 60 Tex. 676, construing a statute which contains substantially the same language as ours, said: “A nar1‘oav or contracted construction of the term ‘party,’ Avhich confines it to the very person named on the docket as such, and excludes such as stand precisely in the same relation, Avould often defeat the end had in Anew of having justice impartially administered, free from the bias [482]*482and influence produced by the interest held in the cause by the judge or Ms relations.’”

In Foot v. Morgan, 1 Hill (N. Y.), 654, where the language of the statute ivas: “No judge can sit who is of such affiity to either party that lie might be challenged as a juror,’’ the court said: “There can be no doubt that the statute extends to the party beneficially interested, as well as the real party.”

In Moses v. Julian, 45 N. H. 52, will be found an exhaustive dissertation in which a great many decisions are cited'upon the subject of the disqualification of judges by reason of interest, relationship or affinity and' bias or prejudice. Speaking directly to the paint here under consideration the learned judge said: “Relationship or affinity to either party in interest, though not a party to the suit, is a cause of recusation by either.”

The same construction has been placed upon our statute- (Code, § 2637) by this court in Gill v. State, 61 Ala. 171, where it was said, after quoting section 540 of Code in haeo verba: “The parties to the present proceeding were the State of Alabama as complaining party, and Joe Gill as defendant. These were the only parties. It is manifest that the present case does not fall within the letter of the statute. But, if we confine the rule to the strict letter of § 540 of the Code, we thereby declare a judge may sit in judgment on a criminal, who took the life of his nearest relative. Nay, more; for offenses less than homicide, we declare that a judge may try an offender for a public offense against his own person or property. According-to the stern morality of the common law, a judge is required to be legally indifferent between the parties. Relationship, usually within the fourth degree of the civil law, the law in its severe, but humane ethics, regards as a bias that unsettles the perfect equipoise that justice demands.”

These authorities are conclusive that the disqualification extends not only to the party to the record, but that the judge is incompetent when related within the fourth degree to any person interested in the judgment or deci’ee.

Is the interest of a surety tipon an administrator’s bond in a decree to be rendered on, a final settlement of [483]*483his principal, so remote and indirect as that notwithstanding the relationship of the judge, he may render such decree?

The purpose of the settlement is to state the account between the administrator and those interested in the matter of distribution of the assets of the estate, whether they be heirs or creditors. An accurate statement of the account is a matter in which the administrator and the adverse parties are vitally interested. This, of necessity, involves the allowance of proper credits to the administrator for all money legally disbursed by him and' a charge against him of only such items as he is legally chargeable with. In the matter of the statement of this account, it is of some moment to the sureties upon the administrator’s bond, that their principal should be charged only with such items as he is liable for, and that he be credited with all moneys rightly paid out by him, since the decree to be entered in the cause, by which they are bound, is predicated upon the account as stated by the judge. Indeed, we doubt not, but that they can prosecute an appeal to this court for. the purpose of reviewing the decree.

The principle here involved was expressly decided by this court in the case of Wilson v. Wilson, 36 Ala. 655. In that case the probate judge himself was a surety upon an administrator’s bond.

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Bluebook (online)
124 Ala. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crook-v-newborg-son-ala-1899.