On appeal from a probate court’s grant of a temporary administrator’s petition to sell real property owned by an estate, two of the decedent’s heirs argue that the probate court erred when it failed to find that the temporary administrator had “good cause” for the sale. Because the record shows that the probate court failed to make this finding, which is required under OCGA § 53-8-10 (b), we vacate and remand for further proceedings.
Where a probate court sits as a finder of fact, we accept its findings if they are supported by any evidence. Lowry v. Hamilton, 268 Ga. 373, 374 (2) (489 SE2d 827) (1997). The probate court’s application of the law is subject to de novo appellate review, however. In re Estate of Haring, 314 Ga. App. 770 (1) (726 SE2d 86) (2012).
So viewed, the record shows that John Tomlinson, the temporary administrator of the estate of Fronice Price, filed a petition for leave to sell property located at 3331 Haddon Hall Drive, Buford, for $175,000. According to the petition, the sale was for the purposes of paying the estate’s debts and making distributions to the decedent’s heirs. Darrell Price and Diane Parris, two of the heirs, objected that the proposed price of only 59 percent of the property’s assessed value was too low. Price and Parris also pointed out that the estate had more than $350,000 in cash on hand and no debts.
*682On the day of the hearing, the probate court delayed ruling on Tomlinson’s petition so that the parties could consider Price and Parris’s own offer to buy the property for $180,000 on condition that the estate extend $90,000 in credit for the repair and renovation of the property. After Tomlinson and the two remaining heirs filed objections to this offer, the probate court found that the property was vacant and falling into a state of disrepair, was costing the estate money to maintain, and should be sold. The probate court then granted Tomlinson’s petition as “in the best interest of the estate.” This appeal followed.
Price and Parris argue that the probate court failed to apply the proper standard of proof when it concluded that the sale by the temporary administrator Tomlinson was “in the best interest of the estate.” We agree.
OCGA § 53-8-10 (a) authorizes an estate’s personal representative to dispose of property for any purpose that is “in the best interest of the estate.” OCGA § 53-8-10 (b) authorizes a temporary administrator to do so, however, only with the probate court’s leave “following the procedures [of] this article[,]” and “provided . . . that good cause is shown.”1 (Emphasis supplied.)
OCGA § 53-8-10 (b)’s imposition of a different and arguably higher standard on temporary administrators’ exercise of the power to dispose of property is also consonant with their limited powers under Georgia law. See Deller v. Smith, 250 Ga. 157, 159 (1) (b) (296 SE2d 49) (1982) (because a temporary administrator is empowered “principally” to preserve an estate “until a permanent administrator is qualified,” a temporary administrator is unable to sue for recovery of land or to distribute the assets of an estate) (citation omitted); Redfearn: Wills and Administration in Georgia, ed. Mary F. Radford (7th ed. 2008), §§ 11:7, 12:14 (detailing the differences between *683personal representatives and temporary administrators, including the “good cause” requirement of OCGA § 53-8-10 (b)).
In light of these well-established distinctions, this Court is not authorized to assume that a probate court’s finding that a temporary administrator’s proposed sale of an estate’s real property is in the “best interest of the estate” is also sufficient to show that the temporary administrator had “good cause” to make that sale.
All the words of a statute are to be given due weight and meaning. Courts should not so interpret a statute as to make parts of it surplusage unless no other construction is reasonably possible. All the words of the legislature, however numerous, ought to be preserved, and effect given to the whole, if it can be done.
(Citations omitted.) Undercofler v. Colonial Pipeline Co., 114 Ga. App. 739, 742-743 (152 SE2d 768) (1966). The probate court in this case was bound to decide whether this temporary administrator had made a showing of “good cause,” and we are not in a position to ignore its application of an improper standard of proof when it appears on the face of the order appealed from. See Cameron v. Miles, 311 Ga. App. 753, 755 (1) (716 SE2d 831) (2011) (even in the absence of a transcript, an appellate court must reverse when a trial court’s error appears on the face of the order appealed from). We therefore vacate the probate court’s grant of Tomlinson’s petition and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Judgment vacated and case remanded.
Andrews, P. J., Barnes, P. J., and Miller, J., concur. Phipps, C. J., Ellington, P. J., and Ray, J., dissent.