§ 14-39-109 - Filing of claims -- Appeals.
               	 		
14-39-109.    Filing of claims -- Appeals.
    (a)  Publication  shall make all creditors parties, with the right to relief as fully as  if especially named. At any time, they may file with the clerks of the  courts their claims, or attested copies, retaining the original, if they  desire. However, the court may order that the original be produced and  placed in the custody of the clerk.
(b)    (1)  The  simple filing of claims, respectively, attested by the affidavit of the  owner or his agent or attorney shall be proof of the claims in common  form and, if not contested, entitles them to payment pro rata.
      (2)  For  administering the oath in proving the claims, in common form and,  filing them, the clerk shall receive the sum of ten cents (10cent(s)) to  be paid at the time of making the oath and filing the claim.
(c)    (1)  If  any creditor or receiver and back-tax collector shall desire to contest  the validity, in whole or in part, of any claim filed in common form,  he may do so in a summary way, in the progress of the cause.
      (2)    (A)  The  opposing parties in these contests shall reduce to writing the facts  that are necessary to their determination and file them.
            (B)  When  filed, they shall become part of the record, and the court shall have  power, upon motion and in a summary way, to hear and determine all  questions of priority of payment in the progress of the cause.
(d)    (1)  When  any party is dissatisfied with the decision of any litigated question,  he may have the question reheard, upon appeal or writ of error in the  Supreme Court. However, only so much of the record as pertains to that  particular litigation shall form the transcript and record for the  appellate court.
      (2)  The costs  shall be paid by the parties to such appeal as the appellate court may  direct unless the receiver and back-tax collector is a party to the  litigation on behalf of creditors generally; in that case the costs may,  if the appellate court thinks proper, be charged to the whole or to  some particular fund, as right and justice may require.