On the 10th day of March, 1894, the city court of Anniston rendered a personal decree against C. A. Thompson, a married woman, in favor of the movants, for the sum often thousand, nine hundred and fifty-nine 36-100 dollars, ordering the issue of execution thereon. On the 19th day of March thereafter, Mrs. Thompson, having made and filed with the clerk of the court the affidavit prescribed by the statute, (Code §3629), claimed an appeal from the decree, without giv*417ing security for the costs of appeal, or bond with sureties to supersede its execution. The clerk refused to make a transcript of the record and certify the appeal. Thereupon she applied to the city court for an order requiring the clerk to make a transcript and certify the appeal, and for a suspension of the execution of the decree, until the appeal was heard and determined. The court granted the application and made the order, and the movants, having given notice to the judge of the city court and to Mrs. Thompson, now move for a rule nisi directed to the judge, to show cause why a peremptory mandamus should not issue commanding him to vacate, the order. The parties have appeared and submitted arguments and briefs in support and in opposition to the motion.
1. It is suggested by the counsel opposing the motion, that it ought to be overruled, because it is not accompanied by a petition or other like pleading, stating the facts on which the right to relief is based, verified by the oath of the movants. If the right to relief was dependent on matter not appearing of record, in whatever form the application was made, a verification of it by the oath of the applicant, or affidavit in support of it, making a prima facie case, would be essential. When the application is made to this court for the grant of the writ directed to an inferior court of record, because of matters necessarily of record, an authenticated transcript of the record, renders unnecessary the verification by the oath of the applicant, or other affidavits to support it. The authenticated record is the sole evidence upon which the court acta. A petition stating the facts upon which the right to relief is claimed, would be more formal, and in correspondence with the mode prescribed by the statute, when a like application is made to the courts of original jurisdiction. — Code, § 3158. The practice of applying by motion, entered here on the motion docket, of which notice is given to the parties in adverse interest, has prevailed too long now to be departed from, however informal it may seem. — Ex parte Garland, (Opinion of Walker, C. J.), 42 Ala. 559.
2. The writ of mandamus, it may be, has been employed by this court more liberally as a remedy for the correction of the errors of inferior tribunals, than would seem consistent with the principles of the common law. *418If this is true, it is in some degree attributable to the existence of peculiar statutory proceedings, in which errors may intervene, incapable of correction by appeal or other revisory remedy. In other cases, to prevent a failure of justice, or irreparable injury, when there was a clear legal right, and an absence of any other adequate remedy, there has been resort to mandamus. The recent cases of Ex parte Barnes, 84 Ala. 540, and Reynolds v. Crook, 95 Ala. 570, are illustrative. In the first case, in the course of a suit commenced by attachment, the goods on which a levy had been made were sold and the proceeds of sale were in the hands of the sheriff. A claim of exemption was interposed by the defendant, which was invalid, the attachment having been sued out to enforce the lien for the rent of a storehouse. Yet the circuit court sustained it, and made an order directing the sheriff to pay the proceeds of sale to the defendant. The order was erroneous, and was destructive of the lien for the payment of the rent. It was not ¿final judgment from which an appeal would lie, and the execution of which the plaintiff could suspend by the giving of a bond with sureties. To prevent a failure of justice and irreparable injury, a mandamus was awarded, compelling a vacation of the order, and the restoration of the parties to the condition in which they were, when the error was committed. In the second case, in the course of a suit in equity for the final settlement of an administration, creditors had been notified to come in and make proof of their claims. A creditor appeared, filed and proved her claim, which was allowed. She having died, the proper personal representative appeared, and moved for a revival of the decree in his name, which was refused. The court interfered by mandamus, compelling the revivor, for otherwise there would have been a failure of justice. The claim having been allowed, the right of the creditor established, there was an obvious necessity for his continuous representation in the progress of the suit, in which orders or decrees might be made, of injury to him, to which there was not opportunity for objection or exception. These cases are illustrative of the principle upon which this court has proceeded. If an order, or judgment, or decree, is made or rendered, which is not the subject of revision by appeal, or other revisory remedy, and yet is err’one-*419ous, working injury to the party complaining, and there be no other legal remedy, adequate to the correction of the error and the prevention of the injury, mandarinos will be awarded. — 2 Brick. Dig. 240, §§4-5; 3 Brick Dig. 626, §§ 15-39.
The statute under which Mrs. Thompson asserted the right to an appeal without giving surety for costs, and a suspension of the issue of execution on the decree, so far as is now material, reads : “From any judgment of the circuit or city court, or from any order or decree of the court of probate, or from any decree of the court of chancery subjecting to sale the separate estate of a married woman, or any part thereof, be the same her statutory separate estate, or a separate estate otherwise created, she is entitled to an appeal to the supreme court to revise such judgment, order, or decree, without giving security for costs of appeal, on making affidavit that she is unable to give such security.” — Code, § 3629. When the statute was originally enacted (March 9th, 1871; Pamp. A.cts, 1870-71, p. 45) there were but few instances in which a personal judgment or decree could be rendered against a married woman. The one was for her debts contracted before her marriage, the husband being relieved of his common law liability for their payment, and the statute expressly declaring that therefor she alone was suable and .her separate estate liable as if she were -unmarried. Code of 1876, § 2704. — For her torts committed before or subsequent to marriage, her liability to suit remained as at common law; and a personal judgment could be rendered against her, if the liability was ascertained and fixed. Her statutory separate estate was liable ‘ 'for articles of comfort and support of the household, ’ ’ and the liability was enforced by an action at law against her and her husband. But as to the wife, a personal judgment could not be rendered. So far as she was concerned, the only judgment which could be rendered, was a judgment subjecting her statutory estate to levy and sale. The judgment had in it, all the properties and elements of a judgment in rem, rather than of a judgment in personam. — Ravisies v. Stoddart & Co., 32 Ala. 599. The only orders or decrees a court of probate could render, unless they were founded on a liability incurred by her in a representative capacity, was for the sale of her statutory or other separate estate, and like *420all orders or decrees of sale rendered by that court, were in rem not in personam. In a court of equity, the equitable separate estate of the wife was charged with the payment of her debts, as she would have been charged at law if sui juris. But it was the éstate only which was charged ; a personal liability.was not fixed upon her, and a personal decree was not rendered against her. Reading the statute in connection with other statutes, and with the principles of the common law, relating to the liability of a married woman to suit, we ascertain its scope and extent. When there is a judgment or decree, not binding a married woman personally, but directly operating upon and subjecting to sale, by the force of its own terms, her statutory or other separate estate, as a matter of right, she is entitled to an appeal to this court, without security for costs; and of itself, the appeal operates “a suspension and stay of all proceedings,” until it is here heard and determined. As was said in Cahalan v. Monroe, 65 Ala. 254 : “It is only when the decree directly orders or directly condemns to sale her estate, that the statute confers the privilege of an appeal without surety for costs. No other decree subjects, exposes, makes liable to sale her estate. The statute must not, by construction, be strained to meet cases not within the fair meaning of its terms, which are plain and unambiguous, because it may be supposed such cases are equally meritorious, and entitled to - as great consideration from the legislature, as those which are embraced by its words. ’ ’ The decree of the city court is an ordinary decree for the recovery of money, affecting and binding Mrs. Thompson personally ; so long as unreversed or unvacated, establishing conclusively, that the complainants therein, are entitled to have and recover of her, the sum of money therein expressed. This is the entire force and effect, which can be accorded to it. Of itself, it.does not operate upon, or charge any of her property, real or personal, whatever may be her title to it. It is only an execution issuing upon it, which may become a lien upon her property, the subject of levy and sale. From the decree, she was not entitled to an appeal without giving security for costs, nor was she entitled to a stay or suspension of execution, without bond with sufficient sureties, payable and with condition as prescribed by the statute..
3. The order of the city court, not only requires the *421making of the transcript and certificate of appeal by the clerk, but it stays the issue of execution, until the appeal is heard and determined. From the order an appeal will not lie ; and if it would, it could scarcely be said to be an adequate remedy. During its pendency, there could be alienations of the estate of the defendant, the subject of levy and sale, to the irreparable injury of the complainants. As now, so long as the order of suspension remains of force, preventing the complainants from the acquisition of liens, by the issue and delivery of execution to the sheriff, alienation of all the property of the defendant may be made, rendering the decree fruitless and unavailing. The caséis a clear one for a mandamus ; there is no other adequate remedy.
It is ordered and adj udged- that a rule nisi issue to the judge of the city court of Anniston, requiring him to appear on Monday, June 18th, 1894, before this court, and show cause why a peremptory mandamus shall not issue, commanding him to vacate the said order.