In re Watts

By Court,

Johnson, J.:

The petitioner, on the fourth day of May, 1870, took out letters of administration on the estate of John T. Bussell, deceased, in -the county of Santa Fe, and- at the May term, 1871, of the probate court in and for said county, was removed from said administration by order of said court. During the months of May and July of the last-mentioned year, petitioner, by petition and supplemental petition, applied to the judge of the district court for the first judicial district for writs of certiorari and error to said probate court, for the alleged reason that said court had refused to grant him an appeal from its judgment and order revoking his letters of administration. The judge of the district court for said district denied the prayer of said petition and supplemental petition; and thereupon petitioner appeals to this court.

The Bevised Statutes declared by the act of the legislative assembly, approved January 24, 1865, are to be considered as all re-enacted on that day, and all parts of them touching tlie same subject-matter are to be construed in such manner that tbe one part be not repugnant to tbe other. This is substantially the rule of interpretation that has governed this court when construing these statutes. The Revised Statutes, sec. 4, p. 122, provide that appeals from the judgment of the probate court shall be allowed to the district court in the same mariner and subject to the same restriction as in case of appeals from the district to the supreme court. How are appeals to be taken from the district court to the supreme court ? On page 106, section 3, we find that “no such appeal shall be allowed, unless, first, the appeal be taken at the same term at which the judgment or decision appealed from was rendered; and, second, unless the appellant or his agent shall, during the same term, file in the court his affidavit, stating that such appeal is not taken for the purpose of vexation or delay, but because the affiant' believes that the appellant is aggrieved by the judgment or decision of the court.”

The provisions of section 5, page 184, do not dispense with the requirement of this affidavit in appealing from a judgment or decision of the prolate court to the district court. In his original petition, the petitioner did not show that the required affidavit had been filed in the probate court during the same term at which the judgment was rendered, and his supplemental petition admits this fact, and undertakes to excuse his not having filed the affidavit. Ordinarily, the failure to show that all the legal steps had been taken to have the appeal allowed would be sufficient ground of denial of the writ of certiorari.

A portion of the exclusive original jurisdiction given to the probate courts by section 3, page 122, Revised Statutes, is the granting of letters testamentary and of administration and the repealing of the same. The petitioner did not show to the judge of the court below that in exercising this jurisdiction, the probate court had acted unlawfully, or injuriously to the rights of others, either in the removal of himself from the administration of the es'tate, or in the appointment of another administrator de bonis non; but, after avowing in bis supplemental petition that personally be has' no wish to continue as such administrator, shows that his desire for the appeal was, in his own language, to wipe out the stain attempted to be fastened upon him of having in any manner neglected or mismanaged the interests of said estate. However commendable it may be in a person to seek to vindicate himself, a writ of certiorari, supersedeas, or error, could not be made effectual touching the irrelevant matters shown in the petition; and it is not proposed to discuss them in this opinion.

Upon full consideration of all the material allegations of the petitions and the supplemental petition, it is the undivided opinion -of this court that the judge of the court below did not err in denying to interfere with the proceedings of the probate court in the premises.