Ex Parte Sumlin
This text of 85 So. 810 (Ex Parte Sumlin) 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.
Opinion
Under our Statutes (sections 2855-2867, Code 1907; sections 1888-1899, Code 1852), an appeal from a decree or judgment of tlie probate court on a contest as to the validity of a will may be taken by the party aggrieved to either the circuit court or the Supreme Court. On such appeals the jurisdiction of the circuit, as well as of the Supreme Court, is revisory only, and the judgment is reviewed solely upon the record, including a bill of exceptions when required. Sections 2863, 2864, Code 1907; Tapp v. Cox, 56 Ala. 553; Truett v. Woodham, 98 Ala. 604, 13 South. 519.
The petitioner conceives that a provision found in section 1 of the act of September 28, 1915 (Gen. Acts 1915, p. 939), “to regulate and prescribe the method of securing jury trials in civil causes at law and in misdemeanors,” viz.:
“In all cases in the circuit court brought by appeal or certiorari from judgments of justices of the peace or other inferior courts, the issue and question of fact shall be tried by the judge of the court without the intervention of a jury unless a demand for a trial by jury be made in writing,” etc.
—has the effect of repealing the provisions of the Code which limit the proceedings on appeals like this to a review of the record of the trial in the probate, and authorizing a trial de novo upon the demand of either party for a jury trial in the circuit court.
Petitioner relies upon the case of Montgomery So. Ry. Co. v. Sayre, 72 Ala. 443, as supposedly sustaining his contention. There an appeal was taken to the circuit court from a preliminary assessment in ad quod damnum proceedings, under a statute providing that—
“An appeal may be taken by «either party, and the same proceedings shall be had as in ordinary cases of appeal from the probate to the higher courts of this state.” Section 1838, Code 1876.
Under the compulsion of construing that statute as in harmony with the constitutional guaranty of a trial by jury in all cases of appeal from such assessments, it was held that the “proceedings” thus to be assimilated were referable to the preliminary steps required to be taken, and not to the mode of trial in the circuit court. This was confessedly a iatitudinarian construction, and justified only by the necessity of conforming to the Constitution, and it was pertinently observed:
“The ease reaching that [the circuit] court by appeal, the Constitution intervenes, and, on the demand of either party the damages must be assessed by a jury.”
Between that case and this there is no sort of analogy, for here the petitioner had already had a trial by jury in the court of original 'and exclusive jurisdiction.
*378
Writ denied, and petition dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
85 So. 810, 204 Ala. 376, 1920 Ala. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-sumlin-ala-1920.