Thе executors and trustees of the will of James W. English filed their petition in Fulton Superior Court, and prayed that the court take jurisdiction of certain real property, a part of the trust estate, wherein they sought authority to modify an existing lease executed by the testator to M. Rich & Bros. Co., and to execute a proposed lease to the same lessee, with an option to buy; that a commissioner be appointed by the court to carry out the orders and directions imposed by the final decree; and that the executors and trustees, as officers of the court, be empowered to execute said modification and lease. All the persons who were beneficiaries of the trust established by the will of James W. English were made parties defendant except two beneficiaries who were executоrs and trustees, and who were parties plaintiff in their individual and representative capacities. A guardian ad litem was appointed for the minors. Mrs. Emily Robinson Ewing, a granddaughter of the testator, and others of the same class, were by order of court designated as representatives of a class consisting of all grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the testator who were in life or yet unborn. All of the defendants who were of age except Mrs. Ewing, and- the guardian ad litem of the minors, filed
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answers to the petition, in which they conceded that it was to the best interest of the estate that the proposed lease instruments be executed. Mrs. Ewing’s general demurrers to the petition as amended were sustained and the petition was dismissed. On appeal to this court, the judgment of the trial court was sustained.
First Nat. Bank of Atlanta
v.
Robinson,
209
Ga.
582 (
On October 30, 1952, Mrs. Ewing filed her application in the case, setting up that in resisting the application of the trustees and executors she had incurred expenses and obligations which should be taxed as costs in the case, to be paid out of the trust estate, and prayed that the court amend its judgment of dismissal by designating as a part of the costs the expense incurred by her, including fees for counsel employed by and representing her in said case. Subsequently, on March 16, 1953, this application was amended, in which amendment it was recited that, on appeal of the trustees and exeсutors, the counsel employed by her had filed briefs and argued the case in the Supreme Court,. and that the judgment of that court sustained the position and contentions of her attorneys. When the application of Mrs. Ewing came on to be heard, the trial court, on oral motiоn of counsel for the plaintiffs, dismissed it. A bill of exceptions, assigning error on this order, brings the case here for review.
The allowance and taxing of costs in equitable actions lies within the discretion of the trial court. Code, § 37-1105;
Peninsular Naval Stores Co.
v.
Culbreth,
162
Ga.
474 (
In upholding an allowance of counsel fees to certain beneficiaries who successfully obtained a construction of a testamentary trust, it was held in Field
v.
Field,
Counsel for the defendants in error contend that, since the applicant did not either bring any property or fund into the court, or increase any fund or property under the control of the court, and there was no fund in court preserved by her action opposing the application of the trustees and executors for direction, a court of equity has no powеr to award attorneys’ fees out of the trust estate. In support of this contention, they cite
Mohr-Weil Lumber Co.
v.
Russell,
109
Ga.
579 (
In the case at bar, the property .which the trustees and executors sought authority to lease and grant an option to the lessee to buy, was in the court, one of the prayers of the petition being “That the court take jurisdiction of the property identified and described in paragraph 1 of Exhibit ‘F’ of this petition and take jurisdiction of this proceeding, and thereafter hold and
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retain jurisdiction over said property until the termination of the proposed lease and options therein, as more particularly set forth in Exhibit ‘F’, attached to and incorporated into this petition, for the purpose of passing such orders in this case that may hereafter be proper, desirable or necessary.” The trustees and executors were amenable and subject to the supervision of the court in the management of the trust estate. Several of the beneficiaries of the trust estate were minors and wards •of chancery. “To preserve a trust estate, to supervise its management, to hold the trustee to the line of duty, for the purpose of preserving its corpus for the benefit of the beneficiaries, is an elementary branch of equity jurisprudence.
Johns
v.
Johns,
23
Ga.
31;
Knight
v.
Knight,
75
Ga.
386 (3).”
Clark
v.
Clark,
167
Ga.
1, 19 (
Mrs. Ewing, in resisting this application, was seeking to protect, conserve, and preserve the trust estate, and to see that the trustees and executors carried out the wishes of the testator as expressed in plain and unambiguous terms in his will. Acting for the preservation of the trust estate, it would be inequitable to say as a matter of law that she alone should bear the expense of litigation which she did not institute, and successfully resisted alone, which preserved the trust estate and prevented the trustees and executors, and other beneficiariеs, from changing the testator's will, which directed how the estate should be managed and distributed.
Horatius Codes, a legendary hero of ancient Rome, with two others, prevented the Etruscans, enemies of Rome, from crossing the Tiber River, while other Roman soldiers destroyed the bridge. It is said thаt the Roman authorities
“Gave him of the corn land, which was the public right;
As much as two strong oxen could plow from morn 'til night.” In the instant case, Mrs. Ewing stood alone in resisting the efforts of the trustees and executors, and other beneficiaries of the trust estate, to defeat the wishes and desires of the testator. The question of whether or not she is entitled to be reimbursed her expenses incident to this defense is not now before us, but we do hold that she is entitled to a hearing on her application for expenses and counsel fees incident to the litigation, and that the court erred in dismissing her application.
Judgment reversed.
