delivered the opinion of the Court:
This cause was brought into the Circuit Court of Tazewell county by appeal from the decision of a Judge of Probate. The following errors are relied on to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court, to wit: That the Circuit Court refused to permit Crain, the. appellant in the Circuit Court, to amend the appeal bond, or file a new bond; and that the Court dismissed the appeal. ' It appears, by the record, that the appeal bond was made payable to Bailey and others, and not to the People of the State. By the 136th section of the act entitled “ An Act relative to Wills and Testaments, Executors and Administrators, and the Settlement of Estates,”(1). it is declared, that “The party appealing shall at the time of taking such appeal, file with the Judge of Probate, a bond with good security, payable to the People of the State, conditioned to prosecute his appeal and pay all costs, should the judgment be affirmed; and said bond may be put in suit by and for the use of the party entitled to such costs.” The statute makes no provision to amend the bond, or file a new bond, in case an insufficient one is filed. The bond executed in this case, was not in conformity with the statute. Without power in the Court to dismiss an appeal brought without filing any bond, or such a bond as the act requires, the statute could be completely evaded. The Circuit Court consequently possesses the power to dismiss an appeal, in order to prevent parties from prosecuting appeals in a mode different from that pointed out in the statute. Whether the Circuit Court could not, in its discretion, have authorized a new band to be filed, or an insufficient bond amended, is not a question before this Court. As the statute makes no provision for amending the bond, or filing a new bond, the application to be permitted to do so, was necessarily addressed to the discretion of the Court; and the rule is well settled, that error cannot be assigned for the refusal of a court to grant a motion addressed to its discretion.
The judgment, therefore, of the Circuit Court, must be affirmed with costs.
Judgment affirmed.
Note. See the case of Swafford v. The People, Ante 289; Dedman v. Barber, Ante 254.
R. L. 654; Gale’s Stat. 719.