Payne v. Thompson
Payne v. Thompson
Opinion of the Court
An execution having issued out of tbe probate court against tbe appellant, as surety of Perryman, in bis administration of tbe estate of James Thompson, be applied to the judge of the Circuit Court for a supersedeas returnable into tbe circuit court. Tbe judge granted tbe writ, and also a certiorari commanding tbe probate judge to send' up to tbe circuit court all matters of record touching tbe issue of tbe execution, “ that said circuit court may determine what of- right ought to be done in tbe premises.” A transcript was sent up showing a revivor, on tbe 13th of March, 1871, of a judgment previously rendered against Perryman, as administrator, in favor of tbe appellee; tbe issue of an execution against the
No revision of the judgment of revivor was sought, but only the quashing of the execution. A formal proceeding by supersedeas is in the nature of an audita querela. As such, it should be granted out of the court where the record, upon which it is founded, remains, or be returnable in the same court. It can not be granted out of any court returnable in the same court, where the record upon which it is returnable is not there.' If the record be not brought into the court where the writ is sued, there shall be judgment against the plaintiff. — Comyn’s Digest, Aud. Quer. (E. 2.)
The probate court must be held to have authority, under its general powers, to supersede its own execution in a proper case, especially when it has general jurisdiction of the subject. Whether the judge has authority fo issue the writ of supersedeas is not so clear, but no harm can result from so construing his powers in application to executions proceeding from his court. The circuit judge had jurisdiction to grant the writ returnable into the probate court. But he could not make it returnable into his court, unless under some other process the record was to be brought there. The certiorari did not carry it there, in this instance, because no review of the judgment upon which the execution issued was asked or granted, and the inquiry was consequently confined to matters subsequent to that judgment.—Marshall v. Candler, 21 Ala. 490. The case was improperly in the circuit court, and there was no error in dismissing it.
The execution was subject to a supersedeas. It was not proper to issue one against the sureties until after a return of “no property” against the administrator, made to a regular term. — Rev. Code, § 2281.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PAYNE v. THOMPSON
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- Published