46 S.E.2d 529 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1948
1. Where application by petition is made to partition lands between tenants in common, under the provisions of the Code, § 85-1504, and the petition recites that the statutory notice required by § 85-1506, has been given, the petition is not demurrable on the ground that there is no process, nor prayer for process, attached to the petition.
(a) An executor's assent to a legacy divests him of the title to the property embraced therein and perfects the inchoate title of the legatee.
2, 3, 4. The petition set out a cause of action and was not subject to the general and special demurrers urged against it, and the judge did not err in overruling the demurrers thereto.
On June 3, 1947, the judge entered an order directing the defendants to show cause before him on June 27, 1947, why commissioners should not be appointed to sell the real estate described in the petition and distribution made to those holding title to said lands. This order was served upon Mrs. Georgia C. Armstrong, in her several capacities as stated above, on June 4, 1947. The other defendants named in the petition acknowledged service. William R. Armstrong acknowledged service as executor of the estate of J. P. Armstrong. *467
Mrs. Georgia C. Armstrong in her several capacities filed a demurrer to the jurisdiction of the court upon the grounds, that process was not asked for in the petition and attached thereto, and a copy of the petition and process had not been served upon her, and that "the facts set forth in said petition are insufficient in law to constitute a pending cause of action in the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia." Subject to this demurrer, she demurred generally to the petition upon the grounds: that, under the allegations thereof, the plaintiffs were not entitled to have the land partitioned; that no parties defendant were named in the petition; and that the petition was not made returnable to any specific term of the court. She demurred specially to each paragraph of the petition upon the ground that the allegations thereof were mere conclusions of the pleader without sufficient facts alleged to support them.
On September 12, 1947, the plaintiffs amended the prayers of their petition and asked, "that each of your petitioners receive one-sixth of the proceeds of the sale of said lands and Annie C. Neidlinger be paid one-sixth, which your petitioners and Annie C. Neidlinger own by devise to them under the will of their father, Robt. S. Armstrong; and that the remaining three-sixths of the proceeds of said sale be paid over to the executors of the will of J. P. Armstrong to be held by them and ultimately disposed of by them under the provisions of said will."
The judge overruled each of said demurrers, and Mrs. Georgia C. Armstrong, individually and as executrix under the will of J. P. Armstrong and as life tenant of his estate and as his widow and sole heir at law, excepted.
1. The contention of the plaintiff in error, that the Superior Court of Fulton County was without jurisdiction of the petition because no process was asked for or attached to the petition and it was not made returnable to any specific term of said court, can not be legally sustained. The petition alleged that the 20-day notice required by the Code, § 85-1506, was given to the parties at interest. "In applications for partition of `lands and tenements in this State the party applying for the writ of partition shall *468
give to the other parties concerned at least 20 days' notice of intention to make application.' No other process is necessary than this statutory notice . . to bring the respondent into court to meet the application." Anderson v. Anderson,
(a) The contention of the plaintiff in error, that the petition shows on its face that the petitioners have no individual right to partition the property because the estate of R. S. Armstrong is still being administered by his executor, is likewise without merit. The petition alleged that R. S. Armstrong died March 12, 1920, and that his will was duly probated. While the date of the probate is not given, the presumption is that this was done as soon as practicable after the death of the testator. See Code, § 113-615. The petition alleged that the executors of the estate of R. S. Armstrong have assented to the vesting of the devise of the property to the petitioners and their sister. It does not appear from the allegations of the petition, as contended by the plaintiff in error, that the estate of R. S. Armstrong is still being administered and that any right to partition the property would, therefore, be vested in his executors. The petition alleged that the testator had been dead more than 27 years at the time the petition for partition was filed. This raised a presumption of assent by the executors and that there were no debts due the estate. In this connection, seeFlemister v. Flemister,
2. The court did not err in overruling the general demurrers to the petition. The petitioners were not seeking to partition the land as devisees under the will of J. P. Armstrong, as contended by the plaintiff in error; but are seeking, as the owners of a two-sixths undivided interest therein, which they acquired as devisees under the will of R. S. Armstrong, to obtain their share of said land. The executors of the will of R. S. Armstrong, even if this estate is still in the process of being administered, have no interest in said land, for any interest they had therein was divested when they assented to the legacy and the title to said land thereupon vested in the legatees under said will to the same extent that title was vested in the testator at the time of his death. The plaintiffs were not seeking to partition the land as the holder of the remainder interest in that portion of the land owned by J. P. Armstrong at the time of his death, which estate was being administered upon by his executors; but the petition, as amended, specifically asked that the proceeds from the interest owned by the estate of J. P. Armstrong be turned over to his executors to be disposed of by them under the provisions of his will. The fact that one of the testators devised a life estate in his undivided half interest to his widow would not prevent the holder of the other one-half undivided interest, or those claiming under him, from having the land partitioned so that they might obtain their share of said land. In this connection, see Rutland v. Ridgdill,
3. It is contended in the brief of the plaintiff in error that the *470 petition was defective, in that copies of the wills of J. P. Armstrong and R. S. Armstrong were not attached to the petition or set out therein, but this contention was not made in the court below and can not be raised for the first time in this court. The demurrers of the plaintiff in error to the effect that the allegations of the petition were conclusions of the pleader, unsupported by allegations of facts on which to base same, would not reach this alleged defect, but this was matter for a special demurrer. The plaintiff in error further contends that there was a nonjoinder of parties defendant, in that George A. Hendry is not a party to the proceedings, but this too was a matter for special demurrer. Moreover, since it is alleged that he no longer owns any interest in the lands sought to be partitioned, he would not be a necessary party to the proceedings. The plaintiff in error further contends in her brief in this court that the petition should have alleged whether the alleged consent of the executors of the will of R. S. Armstrong for the petitioners to take the property devised to them by said will was in writing or not. This too was a matter for special demurrer, and can not be raised for the first time in this court. However, the contention is without merit, as the assent of executors of a will for a legatee to take a devise may be written, or oral, or it may be implied or presumed from all the attendant facts and circumstances. The only special demurrers filed by the plaintiff in error were to the effect that certain paragraphs of the petition were mere conclusions of the pleader without sufficient facts alleged to support same, and none of these demurrers was meritorious.
4. The petition stated a cause of action and was not subject to the demurrers urged against it, and the judge did not err in overruling the general and special demurrers to the petition.
Judgment affirmed. Felton and Parker, JJ., concur.