State v. Judge of Probate Court of New Orleans

Garland, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

The olographic testament of the late Nicolas Girod having *393been presented to the Court of Probates, the Judge ordered it to be registered and executed, ahd appointed. Aimé Gillet and Adelin Dreux, dative testamentary executors. William Freret, Mayor of the city of 'New Orleans, and Denis Prieur . . . presented their petition, asking an appeal to this court, which the Judge of Probates refused to allow; whereupon, they moved for a rule on the Judge to show cause why a mandamus should not issue, directing him to grant an appeal. The Judge appeared and stated' twelve grounds of objection, why the rule should not be made absolute, only two of which we shall no- , >r tice, the others presenting matters for consideration when the case shall come before this tribunal. The Judge first says, the Court of Probates has a discretionary power in the appointment of dative testamentary'executors, which he is to exercise ex officio, and relies upon article 1671 of the Code. If by this, the Judge means he can appoint or not at his discretion, we think the law quoted does not sustain him, it says, “if the testator has omitted to name a testamentary executor, or if the one named refuses to accept, the judge shall appoint one ex-officio.” This seems to leave no discretion at all; it is- an imperative duty. But if the judge means the law gives him a discretion in .the selection of the person, he then presents" the question to be examined when an appeal shall be allowed. That we imagine is the point in controversy between the exécutors and the persons claiming the appeal.

The judge having assumed that the power is discretionary, further assumes that this court cannot control- the decisions of the judges of the inferior courts in matters depending solely on their discretion. Having shown that the power given to the judge is not discretionary, we might stop here, but as he has referred to one of the early decisions of this court, a dictum which might'seem to support the position assumed, we will examine the case cited from 3 Martin’s Reports, 335. That- was an application for a mandamus, to compel the judge of the first district to allow a cause pending before him to be tried by a jury. This court said, in a question of that description, it *394would not exercise any control over the judge, until the case sjj0Ui¿ ]¡e decided and come up in the proper manner.

An appeal lies from the apPointment of dative testamefata-ee6*Judge*’ ^of fromatethe íp-poiniment syndics and curators of vacant fiststcs*

in 4 Idem, 308, it was held an appeal would lie from a judgment confirming the nomination of a syndic. In the same volume, page 371, it was decided an appeal could he taken from ^ aPP°iutment of a curator to a vacant estate. Other cases 0f a character somewhat similar have long since been sanc- . tioned by this tribunal. But supposing the power of appointment of dative testamentary executors to be discretionary, it was decided in 4 La. Rep., Ill, that cases submitted to the dis-of a judge or court, are submitted to his legal discre-jo ^ . o tion, and in the exercise of it, he is as liable to error as in any other part of his duty, and his errors are equally fatal to the rights of suitors; and consequently his decisions are subject to examination in this-court; 4 Martin, 497.

It is ordered that the rule be made absolute.