Horace H. and E. L. Peek filed tbeir petition against J. R. Irwin as administrator of the estate of Lizzie Peek Irwin, in which they made these allegations: The estate of Lizzie Peek
The defendant demurred generally on the ground that the petition set forth no cause of action, legal or equitable; and certain special grounds. The judge of the superior court sustained the general demurrer and dismissed the petition. The petitioners excepted and took the case to the Court of Appeals. That court reversed the judgment in Peek v. Irwin, 40 Ga. App. 624 (150 S. E. 863). The facts of the litigation growing out of the proceeding to probate the alleged will appear in Peek v. Irwin, 164 Ga. 450 (139 S. E. 27), 168 Ga. 442 (148 S. E. 88). This case is now in this court upon the grant of certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of Appeals, on which the defendant assigns various grounds of error. We do not deal specifically with the several assignments of error. We will deal with only one question, upon which these assignments rest. Under the facts alleged, are these petitioners entitled to recover from the administrator of the decedent counsel fees and other expenses incurred by them in their effort to have set up and probated a copy of this putative will? We think this question should be answered in the negative.' The next of kin have a right to put the executors on proof of the will, and this has been held a sufficient reason for not giving costs against them. Reeves v. Freeling, 1 Eng. Eq. Rep. 185. So this court has held that the next of kin are not generally liable for costs in calling on an executor to prove a will in solemn form, if the proceeding is not vexatious. Varner v. Goldsby, 22 Ga. 302. This court has suggested that if a will be bona fide presented for probate and not fraudulently pressed, and if a caveat to the probate is rejected, the costs should
In Davison v. Sibley, 140 Ga. 707 (79 S. E. 855), this court held that "An executor under a will probated in common form, who is called upon by heirs at law to probate it in solemn form, is entitled to an allowance of reasonable counsel fees out of the estate for such service, notwithstanding the will may be refused probate.” That case differs from the case at bar, in two particulars. One is that the instrument there sought to be proved in solemn form had been probated in common form. The other is that the heirs at law of the testator, who would get the estate if the probate of the instrument were rejected, called upon the executor to probate the instrument in solemn form. Under these facts there were good reasons for holding that the counsel fees of _the executor, in doing what the heirs called upon him to do, should be paid out of the estate. The heirs at law, when the probate of the instrument propounded was refused, became entitled to all of the estate of the alleged testator, after the payment of debts and any expenses of
The Court of Appeals in its decision held that the principle ruled in Young v. Freeman was not applicable, for the reason that a lost or destroyed will could not be proved in common form. In thus holding we are of the opinion that the Court of Appeals misconstrued the meaning of the decision in that case. This will appear from the argument made and the authorities cited to support the ruling made in that case. It was pointed out by Mr. Justice Beck, who wrote the opinion, that no legal duty rests upon the named executor to propound the will for probate in solemn form. He cited section 3862 of the Civil Code, which declares that the executor is not compelled to offer a will for probate, though it be in existence; and section 3868, which declares that the executor must offer the will for probate as soon as practicable after the death of the testator, and must qualify, unless restrained by the will, within twelve months after the same is admitted to record; but he pointed out that this provision required only the probate in common form, and not in solemn form. Again, he said: “We have pointed out above that in this State there is no legal duty resting upon the named executor to propound the will for probate in solemn form, unless cited to do so. His duty in the matter of offering the will
Manifestly the contest of the will in this case was a contest between the sole heir of the putative testatrix and the legatees under the instrument offered for probate. Under these circumstances the principles announced in Davison v. Sibley and Young v. Freeman, supra, should not be stretched so as to allow attorney’s fees to the putative executors. The unsuccessful fight of the executors was made for the sole purpose of benefiting the legatees, and of defeating the rights of the heir at law 3 and they should bear the burden of the contest, or look to those for whose benefit they acted for compensation for attorney’s fees expended by them in the interest of the legatees. The fact, if such it be, that the executors could not set up and prove a copy of this will in common form does not entitle them to compensation, out of the estate of the alleged testatrix, for attorney’s fees expended by them in their unsuccessful effort to establish and probate a copy of this will in solemn form. Such fact does not take their case out of the principle which we have announced, denying them compensation for such expenses. The fact merely defeats their right to an allowance out of the estate for attorney’s fees expended for such purpose. So we are of the opinion that a propounder of an instrument as the last will of a decedent is not entitled to attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred by him in an effort to probate such instrument in solemn form, where it had not previously been proved in common form, and not then unless he has been called upon by the heirs at law of the decedent or some person authorized to do so, to prove the instrument in solemn form. The fact that the instrument has been lost or destroyed, and can not be proved in common form, does not entitle the propounder to compensation for attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred in his effort to probate the rejected instrument. So we feel constrained to reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, and to remand the case to that court for further action in conformity with this decision.
Judgment reversed.