140 Ga. 157 | Ga. | 1913
J. S. Lavender and seven other parties, alleging that they were heirs at law of J. S. Lavender, deceased, that they were legatees under the last will and testament of the decedent, and that the administrator of the estate of the decedent gave his consent to the bringing of the suit, filed their petition against Thomas J. Hunt and John Jenkins for the recovery of certain lands of which it was alleged the decedent was seized and possessed at the time of his death, and which were subsequently duly set apart and assigned to Mrs. Eliza Lavender, the widow of the decedent, as dower. The widow died in the year 1911, and after her death in the same year the suit was brought. During the life of the widow the reversionary interest in the dower lands sued for had been sold under executions against the administrator of the decedent’s estate; and it is claimed by the plaintiffs that the value of this interest was largely in excess of the executions against the estate, and that the sale
1. The following charge of the court is excepted to: “I charge you, if you believe that this land sued for in this case was the dower lands of Mrs. Eliza Lavender, and that she died in 1911, and these plaintiffs were the heirs and legatees of Dr. 3. S. Lavender, they are entitled to recover, unless some legal reason is shown to the contrary.” This charge was not strictly accurate. It is apparent that the court failed to sum up all the facts which were necessary to constitute a prima facie case in favor of the plaintiffs; and when the court said that if such and such facts appeared plaintiffs would be entitled to recover, unless a “legal reason” to the contrary was shown, it meant that a prima facie case would be made in favor of the plaintiffs when the facts enumerated were established by evidence or admitted in the pleadings; and merely to prove that the petitioners were heirs at law and legatees under the will of the ■decedent, without showing that they were all of the heirs at law or that by the terms of the will they were the only legatees having an interest in the land sued for, would not authorize a recovery of the entire interest in the property sought to be recovered.
2. The court charged the jury that “An excessive levy is where an officer levies on more property than is necessary to discharge the lien in his hands, with costs.” This charge is not strictly accurate. The jury might have understood such instruction to mean that any excess value of the property over the amount of the liens and the costs would render the levy excessive and void; whereas the officer making the levy is allowed a reasonable margin — we might say, a liberal margin between the amount of the writ which he is seeking to have satisfied and the value of the property levied upon (Roser v. Georgia Loan &c. Co., 118 Ga. 181, 44 S. E. 994); and especially in a case like this, where the property levied upon was a reversionary interest in land, of which the purchaser could not obtain possession until the death of the life-tenant. See, in this connection, 2 Freeman on Executions, 412, and eases cited; Tiernan v. Wilson, 6 Johns. Ch. (N. Y.) 411.
A similar criticism might be made of the following charge of the
3. This was a joint action for the recovery of land; and if the evidence showed that one of the joint plaintiffs could not recover, then none could recover. Shaddix v. Watson, 130 Ga. 764 (61 S. E. 828). Under the evidence there seems to be some doubt as to whether J. S. Lavender, one of the joint plaintiffs, had received his share of the estate, and having received it was thereby excluded from any further participation in the subsequent distribution of the remainder of the estate. He testified that he had received 100 acres of the land of which his father died seized and possessed; the entire acreage of land belonging to the estate amounting to some 800 or 900 acres; and whether this 100 acres which the party last referred to received was his entire share of the estate of his father, 'or only his part of it exclusive of the interest in the reversion of the dower lands, may be made clearer upon the next trial. But the question whether or not J. S. Lavender had any further interest in the estate was one for the jury; and therefore the court should have given in charge the following, as requested: “If you believe, from the evidence that the plaintiff J. S. Lavender had his share of the estate of J. S. Lavender, deceased, that was coming to him under the will, and he received the same and applied the same to his own use, he would not be entitled to recover in this case; and if he can not recover, none of the plaintiffs can, and you should find for the defendant.”
The other requests to charge were properly refused. The propositions of law contained in them are ruled upon in the cases of Richards v. Edwardy, and Farlinger v. Edwardy, 138 Ga. 690 (76 S. E. 64).
4. In the progress of the trial J. S. Lavender, one of the plaintiffs, was asked the following questions: Q. “Isn’t it a provision of the will that as the children became of age they were to get their share of the estate?” A. “Yes, sir.” Q. “You got yours?” A. “Yes, sir.” This evidence, upon motion of the plaintiffs’ coun
Judgment reversed.