The note sued on this ease was executed by the deceased, W. W. Constant, and delivered to H. H. Hadley, on the 10th day of January, 1889, due and payable twelve months after date, with 6 per cent, interest from date; principal $1,000. On the 24th day of August, 1894, the note was assigned and transferred to appellant, W. B. Matthews, by Hadley, for value.
On the 28th of May, 1895, Matthews presented the note for allowance to W. T. Lane, the appellee, the then administrator of the estate of Constant, who had died in the meantime, and the same was disallowed, and the same was filed in the probate court for suit, and Lane, the administrator, answered at the July term, 1895, and with his answer filed his counterclaim, to which Matthews filed his response, and, on motion of Lane, Hadley was made a party defendant.
Without date or file marks, a petition of Matthews appears in the record, made to the circuit judge, asking an order on the probate judge requiring him to perfect his record of the July term, 1890 [1895], of the probate court, showing that he had in fact at said term taken the appeal, and that a minute of the same had not been made, as should have been done. The affidavit for the appeal appears in the record as of the date of 24th July, 1895, but it does not appear to have been presented or filed in the probate court.
' On the 30th September, 1896, in term time, Lane filed his motion in the circuit court to dismiss the appeal, and, on hearing of the same, the court held that no appeal had been granted in the case, and the appeal was thereupon dismissed, over the objection of Matthews. No action appears to have been taken on the petition for writ of mandamus on the probate judge, and the record does not show that an appeal was taken. The dismissal of the appeal disposed of the case in the circuit court, and from that order this appeal was taken, the proceeding in the probate court, including* the evidence, being presented in the transcript sent up -to this court. No final action seems to have been taken on the petition for the writ of mandamus against- the probate court to compel it to make its records speak the truth, and thereby to show that this appeal was taken in due form; and we are unable to see whether or not there was any connection whatever between this petition and thé subsequent motions of defendant to dismiss, if,indeed, any such connection would change the status of things. On the motion to dismiss the appeal, or on the petition for writ of mandamus, we cannot say which, evidence was taken to show what really did occur in the probate court at the time the appeal is alleged to have been taken; but this evidence is too indefinite and uncertain to serve as a correction of the record in the latter case, and equally so to supply a record in the former ease, if such, indeed, were at all allowable.
Berry v. Singer, 9 Ark. 128, was a case of appeal from the circuit to the supreme court, and in that case this court said: “This is a motion filed by appellee to dismiss the appeal. The reason urged in support of the motion is that there is no showing of record that the appeal ever was allowed by the circuit court. The statute declares that the circuit court shall make an order allowing an appeal upon the performance of certain conditions therein specified. It is the order granting the appeal, and not the prayer for it, that operates to transfer the jurisdiction from the circuit to the supreme court. This being a question of jurisdiction, no presumption can be indulged; so that, although the record should affirmatively show that every prerequisite had been complied with, yet no jurisdiction could attach without an order expressly allowing the appeal.” And in Neale v. Peay, 21 Ark. 94, this court said: “It was decided in Berry v. Singer, 9 Ark. 128, that where, on appeal from the circuit court to this court, the record shows that the party appealing complied with all the prerequisites required by statute to entitle him to an appeal, but fails to show that the appeal was granted, this court will dismiss for want of jurisdiction. No good reason has been or can be given why the same rule should not apply to appeals from the probate court to the circuit court, the statutes regulating each being similar in their provisions, so far as regards the point in controversy,” — citing Gould's Digest, pp. 137, 867, for the regulation of appeals in both courts. The same rule as to appeals from the probate court continues to this day, substantially. Sand. & H. Dig., § 1149.
In Sykes v. Lafferry, 26 Ark. 414, this court said: “Under the code, there are two ways in which an appeal may be prosecuted: 1st. By a motion made during the term at which the judgment or final order was rendered. 2d. Upon application of either party to the clerk of the supreme court, in term time or in vacation. The record does not declare the fact that there was any motion for an appeal in the court below, nor that there has been application to the clerk of this court to grant such appeal. True,' the papers are marked “Filed January 24, 1870,” but that does not constitute an application for an appeal. There should be a formal petition to that effect, and a granting of the same by the clerk, in order to invest the court with jurisdiction to hear and determine the case on its merits. Therefore the case is dismissed.” See, also, Adams v. Hepman, 27 Ark. 156.
Judgment affirmed.