113 Ga. 1074 | Ga. | 1901
This court, at its March term, 1899, in the case of Clarke, trustee, et al. v. Ingram et al., rendered a decision declaring that a conveyance which had been made by the Bank of Americus to W. W. Elannagan, a non-resident of this State, as trustee for three other banks in that conveyance named, was void. See 107 Ga. 565. Eor convenience, we will hereinafter refer to this conveyance as the “deed of trust,” and to the three banks for whose benefit it was executed as the “ foreign hanks.” The opinion filed in that case sets forth in full the nature of the litigation upon which the decision mentioned arose. Before it was announced, Elannagan, while assuming to act as trustee, and W. E. Clarke, who upon Elannagan’s resignation as such had been appointed trustee in his stead, made divers collections of money upon choses in action belonging to the Americus bank, which had come into their hands under the deed of trust, and also sold to various persons much of the property which that deed purported to convey to Elannagan, as trustee. Shortly after the remittitur from this court had been entered in the court below, Thornton Wheatley, the receiver of the Americus bank, filed in that court an equitable petition in which Clarke was named as the sole defendant. This petition set forth a history of the litigation which had been had in the original case, stated the result thereof as above indicated, and contained prayers for direction and for an accounting and settlement by Clarke for and in respect of all the assets which had come into his hands as the successor of Elannagan in the alleged trust. The receiver subsequently filed an amendment to his petition, wherein he prayed “ the court
To this answer Wheatley, the receiver, demurred upon the following grounds: “First: There is no tender into court of any of the proceeds realized from the sale of the real estate or the collections of the choses in action, . . and the trustee has no right to ask that the collections of money from the sale of real and personal property and choses in action be withheld and the disposition
Before the case came on for trial, the foreign banks presented to the court a petition in the nature of an intervention, praying that they be made parties and that they be granted certain relief to which, for reasons assigned, they alleged they were entitled. After ■characterizing their petition as an “intervention in the nature of .an answer to the above-mentioned petition of said receiver,” they ■proceeded to staté that “ Your respondents hereby adopt the answer of their corespondent, W. E. Clarke, so far as the same is pertinent to this their answer.” The averments therein set forth were, in substance, as follows: The receiver has no right to proceed against Clarke for an accounting and settlement, since, as is fully shown by his report, “there has been no sale made and no collection made under the terms of said trust deed that is attacked . . or is sought to be set aside and cancelled on any grounds whatever.” ■On the contrary, “all the acts of said Clarke and his predecessor, Flannagan, as disclosed by the report attached to said Clarke’s answer, have been in an economical and orderly administration of said trust, and have been a prudent and skillful realization of funds from” the assets of the Americus bank; and accordingly, “the acts ■of said Clarke and Flannagan should, in the interest of all parties in this litigation, be ratified ” and confirmed by the court. “ The said Thornton Wheatley, receiver, has in his possession money and other assets which were never covered by the said trust deed and which should be fully reported to the court, with an accurate estimate of the value thereof, before any order or judgment is passed under the receiver’s petition; ” and he “ should be required, before ,-such judgment is rendered, to come to a settlement with the said
Following the foregoing allegations was a prayer on the part of the foreign hanks “ that all of the steps above outlined by them in regard to ascertaining the true funds in the receiver’s hands from all of the assets of” the Americus bank "be allhad and taken before any decree ” was entered by the court, and that “ the relief claimed by them above be granted.” The trial judge, after hearing argument from them as to their right to become parties to the litigation with a view to securing the relief sought, refused to allow them to intervene; and to this ruling they excepted. He thereupon sustained the demurrer to the answer filed by Clarke, and entered a decree in favor of the receiver. Being dissatisfied with the disposition thus made of the case, Clarke also excepted. We shall first direct our attention to the complaint made by the foreign banks that the court erred in not-allowing them to intervene, and then dispose of the questions presented by the assignments of error upon which Clarke relies.
It appears that when the case came on to be heard, the receiver elected to take the'assets of the Americus bank which still remain edl in the hands of Clarke, but “not to confirm the sale of the real and personal property or the collection of the choses in actions ” made, by him or by Flannagan. Accordingly the court, in framing its. decree, merely imposed upon Clarke the duty of surrendering possession of such only of the assets of that hank which he in his answer admitted were still in his hands, and expressly provided that-he should not be called upon to account for “ any proceeds derived from the sale of any of the real estate made hy ” him or by Flannagan. It will thus be seen that, relatively to the receiver, Clarke= practically escaped all liability growing out of his unauthorized dis
Judgment affirmed.