189 F. 285 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia | 1911
This is a motion to remand. The suit, brought in the state court and removed to this court, was to compel Field, as one of the executors of George H. Camp, deceased, to assent to a legacy to tlic plaintiff, Mrs. Camp. The proceeding is instituted under a provision of the Code of Georgia, and the two sections of the Code which are mal erial here are sections 3895 and 3896 of Hopkins’ Code of Georgia of 1910. They are as follows:
“See. 3895. Assets to Pay Debts. All property, both real and persoual, in this state, being assets to pay debts, no devise or legacy passes the title until the assent of the executor is given to such devise or legacy.
“Sec. 3'896. Effect of Assent. The assent of the executor may be presumed from his conduct, as well as his expressed consent; the executor, however, cannot, by assenting to legacies, interfere with the rights of creditors, nor can he, by capriciously withholding his assent, destroy the legacy. In equity the legatee may compel him to assent.”
The motion to remand is on the ground that :
“The petition in said case is not a suit at common law, as contemplated by the statute conferring jurisdiction upon this honorable court; the petition in this ease is not a suit in equity, as contemplated by the statute conferring jurisdiction upon this honorable court; the matter in dispute does not exceed the sum or valine of $2,000 in the sense contemplated by said statute, in that no recovery is sought from the defendant therein. The xxetition does not seek a money judgment against the defendant, but simply to compel the performance of a duty assumed by him as executor of said deceased.”
No amount is stated in the suit brought in the state court as being involved, but tlie petition for removal states that the matter in dispute exceeds the value of $2,000 exclusive of interest and costs.
The statute (3896) shows clearly that a proceeding in equity, entirely independent of and distinct from the administration of the estate by the ordinary’s court, is authorized. If a suit to require the assent of the executor to a iegacy may be brought in the superior court of the state, why may not such suit be brought in the Circuit Court of the United States, if the necessary jurisdictional amount is involved and the requisite diverse citizenship exists? I see no reason whatever why it may not.
I think this case is fully controlled by a recent decision of the Supreme Court in Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank & Trust Company, Executor, 215 U. S. 33, 30 Sup. Ct. 10, 54 L. Ed. 80. This is the last decision which deals with the distinction between cases which will and those which will not interfere with the control of probate courts over the estates of decedents. The part that is pertinent here is stated in the second syllabus as follows:
“While federal courts cannot seize and control property which is in the possession of the state courts .and have no jurisdiction of a purely probate character, they can, as courts of chancery, exercise jurisdiction, where proper diversity of citizenship exists, in favor of creditors, legatees, and heirs, to establish their claims and have a proper execution of the trust as to them.”
No question is made in this case as to the existence of the requisite diverse citizenship.
The motion to remand will be overruled.