183 Ga. 659 | Ga. | 1936
Lead Opinion
On February 14, 1912, Joseph F. Gatins executed to the Trust Company of Georgia a deed of trust reserving unto himself a life-estate, and creating certain trusts as to estates in remainder. Subsequently the charter name of the trustee was changed to Lowry Bank and Trust 'Company of Georgia, and later by charter amendment the original name was restored. On July 7, 1926, the trustee resigned, and the Adair Realty and Trust Company was appointed as a successor trustee. On October 31, 1927, the Adair Realty and Trust Company resigned, and Howell E. Jackson and other individuals were appointed as successor trustees. During the administration of the trustee first named, a loan of $50,000 was obtained from the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company, and was secured by conveyance of the property described in the trust deed, as evidenced by a note and security deed dated January 1, 1924. Dur
The trustees last named also filed an answer to the cross-petition. On demurrer the answer was dismissed. The answer attacked the notes and securities for the two loans of $50,000 each, and the third loan of $25,000, as void. These loans were made in pursuance of decrees granted respectively by the superior court
In the second case instituted by Joseph F. Gatins and the same trustee (the name of which had been changed to Trust Company of Georgia by amendment of its charter) the petition alleged the substance of the record in the first case. Also, that in pursuance of the decree mentioned above the petitioners had borrowed $50,000 from the New England Mutual Life Insurance Company, and executed a security deed conveying the trust properties, and made a report of the expenditure of that amount for the purposes
It was provided in the decree rendered in open court on May 5, 1931, that the prayers of the petition be granted; that the trustees “are hereby ■ authorized to join the said Joseph F. Gatins in borrowing, for the purposes set forth in said petition, the sum of twenty-five thousand ($25,000) dollars from the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company, upon the terms and at a rate of interest which in their joint judgment and discretion is approved, and to secure payment of said loan by the execution of a mortgage or security deed conveying to Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company title to the real estate, . . said mortgage or security deed in favor of Massachusetts' Mutual Life Insurance Company to be executed subject to the present loans aggregating the principal sum of one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars now against said propertjr, and the said Benjamin K. Gatins, Howell E. Jackson, and Mary G. Jackson, as trustees as aforesaid, and the said Joseph F. Gatins be and are hereby authorized to jointly pay commissions for securing such loan and such other expenses as they may jointly deem proper, as well as the expense of these proceedings, including a reasonable attorney’s fee, and to include all thereof in the sum to be secured by the mortgage or se
It is declared in the Code: “All equity jurisdiction shall be vested in the superior courts of the several counties.” § 37-101. “ Generally, equity jurisprudence embraces the same matters of jurisdiction and modes of remedy as were allowed and practiced in England.” § 37-124. “Decrees ordinarily bind only parties and their privies; but a pending suit shall be a general notice of an equity or claim to all the world from the time the petition shall be filed and docketed; and if the same shall be duly prosecuted and shall not be collusive, one who purchases pending the suit shall be affected by the decree rendered therein.” § 37-117. “Any person who may not sue at law may complain in equity, and every person who is remediless elsewhere may claim the protection and assistance of equity to enforce any right recognized by the law.” § 37-1001. It is unnecessary to inquire further into the common law of England adopted in this State as applicable to the instant case, but in this connection see Beall v. Fox, 4 Ga. 403; Weems v. Coker, 70 Ga. 746; Caldwell v. Hill, 179 Ga. 417 (176 S. E. 381, 98 A. L. R. 1124). It is further declared: “A judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction shall be conclusive between the same parties and their privies as to all matters put in issue, or which under the rules of law might have been put in issue in the cause wherein the judgment was rendered, until such judgment shall be reversed or set aside.” Code, § 110-501. Under the pleadings set forth above, the superior court had equitable jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties, and the several decrees rendered in the exercise of such jurisdiction were authorized under the principles of law stated above. They were conclusive upon the last set of trustees who now complain in their answer to the cross-petition in the instant case. The notes and instruments of security now attacked by the answer to the cross-petition were authorized by the decrees, and consequently were not void. It is said that the pleadings in the case number' 68055 were insufficient to authorize the part of the decree, which allowed the trustee to join in contracting the second loan of $50,000. But when all the
The rulings announced in headnotes three to five, inclusive, do not require elaboration.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
A trustee who has been given the power to borrow money and execute notes therefor has incidental authority to include such terms and conditions as are usually contained in such instruments. Cocke v. Bank of Dawson, 180 Ga. 714, 720 (180 S. E. 711). At the time the contracts involved in this case were executed, stipulations to pay attorneys5 fees were customarily inserted in notes for borrowed money, the law as to contracts for the payment of attorneys5 fees having been changed since the dates of the contracts involved in Bolles v. Munnerlyn, 83 Ga. 727 (10 S. E. 365), and Wagnon v. Pease, 104 Ga. 417 (30 S. E. 895). See Ga. L. 1890-1, p. 221; Ga. L. 1900, p. 53; Code, § 20-506. There is no merit in the contention that the contracts here under consideration were void as to attorneys5 fees. A different conclusion is not required by decisions to the effect that for jurisdictional purposes attorneys5 fees are considered as principal. Other questions discussed in the motion for a rehearing are sufficiently dealt with in the original opinion.