53 S.E.2d 748 | Ga. | 1949
The exception in this case is to an order for the sale of lands of an incompetent person, entered at chambers in vacation by a judge of the superior court, in a proceeding instituted by the guardian of the incompetent person, pursuant to the Code, §§ 49-203, 49-204. The application for leave to sell did not contain any allegations of an equitable nature or prayers for equitable relief. The proceeding was one at law and not in equity, and jurisdiction of the cause on appeal is vested in the Court of Appeals and not the Supreme Court.
In a preliminary order the judge of the superior court recited that the incompetent ward had been served personally, and it was ordered that Mrs. Frank R. Hean, sister of the ward, be served with a copy of the petition, and that John L. Adams be appointed guardian ad litem and served with a copy of the petition. The order was signed by the judge "At chambers, this 3rd day of March, 1949." On March 4, the guardian ad litem accepted the appointment and agreed to serve. On March 7, Mrs. Hean was served personally with a copy of the petition by a deputy sheriff in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, and on March 12, Mrs. Hean acknowledged service of the petition. A copy of the published notice, that application would be made by the guardian to sell for reinvestment, was attached to and made a part of the petition. Objections to the sale of the real estate were filed by two sisters of the incompetent person.
After a hearing, an order was entered directing that the lands be sold under the terms stipulated by the petition and amendment, that the guardian take a deed to secure debt for the deferred payments, that the proceeds of the sale be invested in United States Government bonds, and that the proceedings be entered of record and the costs paid by the guardian. The order was signed, "At chambers in Milledgeville, Georgia, this 2nd day of April, 1949."
The two sisters of the incompetent person, who objected to the sale, excepted to the order of sale. The proceedings in the present case were instituted by a guardian of an incompetent ward, seeking an order for reinvestment of the property of his ward, under the Code, §§ 49-203, 49-204. The bill of exceptions recites that the case is brought to the Supreme Court, "which has exclusive jurisdiction in all cases of an equitable character, the same being a proceeding before the judge in chambers, and involving solely the question of sale by a guardian for purposes of reinvestment." In order to determine the court having jurisdiction of this case, it is necessary to decide whether it is one in law or in equity.
The portions of the Code, §§ 49-203, 49-204, applicable in the present case, were codified from the acts of 1889, page 156, and *359
acts of 1890-1891, p. 229. Prior to these acts it was the law of this State that all sales by guardians would be under the direction of the ordinary, and sales for reinvestment would fall "under the same rules and regulations as are prescribed for sales by administrators of estates." Code of 1863, § 1779; Code of 1873, § 1828; Code of 1882, § 1828; Crawford v. Broomhead,
During the period that the statutory authority to allow sales by guardians of minors for reinvestment was vested in the ordinary, it was held many times by this court that a judge of the superior court was without authority to order a sale of the legal estate of minors in realty at chambers. See Milledge v.Bryan,
The cases of Sharp v. Findley,
In Mize v. Harber,
An examination of the record in the present case shows that the application for sale for reinvestment conforms strictly to the provisions of the Code, §§ 49-203, 49-204. These sections are applicable *361
to sales for reinvestment by guardians of incompetent persons. Code, § 49-603; Ocmulgee River Lumber Co. v. Appleby,
"Whether an action is one at law or in equity is determined by the allegations of the petition and the nature of the relief prayed, and not by the designation given to the action by the pleader." Griffin v. Securities Investment Co.,
Equity jurisdiction may, of course, be invoked in a proceeding by a guardian to sell for reinvestment. The case of Turner v.Prigmore,
The present case is within the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals and not the Supreme Court.
Transferred to the Court of Appeals. All the Justicesconcur. *362