Court Opinion

ID: 6514865
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:25:41.954329+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:59.417087
License: Public Domain

THORINGTON, J.
The jurisdiction conferred by sections 3184-3206 of the Code on the judge of probate to authorize the erection of dams for water grist-mills, saw-mills, gins or factories, is special and limited, and can be supported only when the record shows affirmatively every fact necessary to uphold the jurisdiction. The right conferred by the statute is the exercise of the power of eminent domain, and involves the taking of private property, as much as if lands were taken. Under the limitations of the Constitution, no such right can be exercised unless the mill or other structure specified in the statute is to be operated fox the public, under regulations established by law; and section 3184 of the Code in express terms limits the exercise of the right to mills, gins and factories to be so operated.
The petition filed by appellant with the probate judge fails to show that the mill the petitioner proposed to erect is to be operated for the public, or to set forth any fact from which that inference would arise; such, for instance, as that it was a mill which would grind for toll. The statement in the petition, furthermore, is that the petitioner proposed, besides the mill, to “operate other machinery,” without stating that it was machinery pertaining to, or constituting part of, a grist-mill, saw-mill, gin or factory, which are the only structures authorized by the statute. It is clear, therefore, that the petition fails to set forth the necessary facts to authorize the judge of probate to assume jurisdiction, and .the entire proceedings before him were void. — Bottoms v. Brewer, 54 Ala. 288.
An appeal was taken from the proceeding before the probate judge by the contestants to the Circuit Court, where the petition was not amended, but remained as it was in the *585proceeding before tlie probate judge. In the Circuit Court there was a motion submitted by the parties resisting the petition to quash the proceedings had before the probate judge, for irregularities and defects apparent from the record. The petitioner then filed a motion to strike from the docket and files the above mentioned motion, on the ground that the proceedings before the probate judge were not subject to review on appeal to the Circuit Court, but that the proceedings in the Circuit Court should be de novo, pursuant to section 3205 of the Code. This last motion was denied by the Circuit Court, and judgment was rendered on the first motion, dismissing the suit and quashing the judgment “rendered in the Probate Court.” The petitioner, or plaintiff in the court below, reserved exceptions to the rulings and judgment of the Circuit Court, which were incorporated in a bill of exceptions, and an appeal was taken to this court. . .
Formerly, appeals were taken in cases of this kind directly from the Probate Court to the Supreme Court, either upon the record, to review the questions of law arising thereon, or with a bill of exceptions, to review conclusions of fact. — Martin v. Rushton, 42 Ala. 289; Rushton v. Martin, 43 Ala. 555. But the statute under which this appeal was taken (Code, § 320(3) — the only statute authorizing an appeal in such cases — extends the right only to an appeal from any assessment of da,mages made or had in the proceeding before the judge of probate, and directs that on such ajipeal the trial in the Circuit Court shall be da novo by jury. This language obviously contemplates that the new trial on the appeal is to be one of fact by the jury on the question of damages, and not of questions of laiv by the court, arising from defects in the proceedings before the probate judge. The effect of the appeal is to waive irregularities and formal defects in the proceedings before the probate judge, and to confine the. inquiry in the Circuit Court to the assessment of the damages to the landowner, which must be de novo before a jury, in the usual manner that issues are tried before a jury in the Circuit Court. For defects of law appearing upon the face of the proceeding before the probate judge the remedy is not by appeal, but by the common-law writ of certiorari, which may be invoked where there is a c-lear legal right and no other legal remedy. Under that writ the jurisdiction of the court and the regularity of its proceedings, that is, errors of law apparent on the record, are available, but the trial is not da novo, and conclusions of fact can not be reviewed. — Memphis d: Charleston R. Co. v. Brannum, ante, p. 461; McAllilley v. Horton, 75 Ala. 491.
*586The judgment rendered by the Circuit Court is upon a motion wmcn raised questions tbat should have been brought before the court by the common-law writ of certiorari, and was not authorized on appeal. The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the Circuit Court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the proceedings before the probate judge were coram nonjudice, and therefore void.
Reversed and remanded.