Murrill v. . Sandlin

86 N.C. 54
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 N.C. 54 (Murrill v. . Sandlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murrill v. . Sandlin, 86 N.C. 54 (N.C. 1882).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The jurisdiction to grant, and, for sufficient cause, recall letters testamentary and of administration, is conferred by law upon the clerk of the superior court, acting as judge of probate. C. C. P. § 418; Simpson v. Jones, 82 N. C., 323. The mode of proceeding to revoke letters that have been issued is summary, and pointed out in section 470, which provides that when “it appears to the probate judge, or if complaint is made to him on affidavit that any person to whom they were issued is legally incompetent to have sueh letters, or that such person has been guilty of a default or misconduct in the due execution of his office, or that the issue of such letters was obtained by false representations made by such person, the judge of probate shall issue an order requiring such person to show cause why the letters should not be revoked. On the return of such order, duly executed, if the objections are found valid, the letters issued to such person must be revoked and superseded, and his authority shall thereupon cease.”

It is thus incumbent on the probate judge to make the inquiry, and ascertain for himself the facts upon which the legal discretion reposed in him to remove an incompetent or unfaithful officer, is to be exercised. The original authority to act is delegated to him alone, and he may require the whole issue made between the parties, or any specific question of fact, to be tried by a jury, under the supervision of the judge of the superior court. When these have been determined by the jury, the probate judge, with such supplemental findings of fact by himself as may be necessary, proceeds to decide the question of removal, subject to the right of either party to the contest to have the cause reheard upon appeal.

This was not the course pursued in the present case, but *56 the voluminous allegations, explanations and denials in the complaint and answer, were transmitted to the superior court, and tried in the first instance before the judge upon the submission of two issues to the jury. Thus the appellate or reviewing jurisdiction of the superior court is made to usurp the original and primary jurisdiction vested in the probate judge, and which he has never exercised. This irregularity renders it necessary to remand the cause in order that the probate judge may himself first act upon the application. See Capps v. Capps, 85 N. C., 408.

We can only determine, upon the case made in the court below, the sufficiency of the facts to require or warrant the removal, but it is not improper to say that the management of a trust fund ought not to be committed to, or left in the hands of an appointee whose interests or personal bias may be found hostile to the demands of official duty, when made to appear, and the estate thus deprived of that legal protection to which it is entitled.

Let the cause be remanded.

Per Curiam, Cause remanded.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.C. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murrill-v-sandlin-nc-1882.