169 Ga. 631 | Ga. | 1929
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
“An administrator is authorized to provide for the estate competent legal counsel, according to the exigencies of the estate he represents.” Civil Code (1910), § 4010. In exercising this power an administrator should use the same care as a prudent man would exercise in employing competent legal counsel in a matter in which he is personally concerned. Lawton v. Fish, 51 Ga. 647, 651. Contracts between attorneys and client, wherein it is stipu
The controversy in this case, as made and urged by counsel for the parties therein, is made to depend solely upon the question whether a fraud was perpetrated upon the ordinary in procuring his order approving the settlement of the case brought by the administrator for the recovery of insurance on the life of the intestate, and in approving the payment of 50 per cent, of the recovery to the attorneys of the administrator for services rendered in procuring such settlement and collecting the full single in
• The order- passed by the ordinary recites that the president of the administrator bank appeared before the -court in person - and confirmed ■ the statement of facts therein, and that he was well satisfied with the results obtained in the litigation. Thereupon the ordinary passed the order approving said settlement and the payment of 50 per cent, of the recovery to the attorneys for their services. In their intervention the intervenors do not deny any of the facts stated in the petition, or any of the facts recited in the order of the ordinary based thereon.
Do the facts alleged show that any fraud was perpetrated upon the ordinary to induce him to sign the order approving the settlement of the insurance case, and the payment of 50 per cent, of the recovery to the attorneys for the administrator ? The pleading of
So construing the intervention of the guardians, does it show any fraud practiced upon the ordinary, which induced him to grant this order? The fraud of which the guardians complain is that neither the administrator nor its attorneys called to the attention of the ordinary the contract by which Kimball was employed. Conceding the truth of this allegation, which we must do upon demurrer or upon objections urged by the attorneys against being
Whether the order of the ordinary in this matter would be conclusive on the parties is not now for decision. If the administrator by contract employed Mr. Gamble to represent this case in connection with Mr. Kimball, who was first employed, and such contract was made by the administrator with due care, then such contract would be binding, with or without the order of the ordinary. In the second place, this order, in the absence of traverse or denial of the facts set out in the petition under which it was granted, or of the recital of facts in the order, should be taken to be prima facie true; and not being void for the alleged fraud, it would be binding upon the parties.
So we are of the opinion that the trial judge erred in making these attorneys parties to said intervention and this suit; and for this reason it is unnecessary to pass upon any of the other questions or assignments of error arising upon the subsequent trial, raised by the record and discussed by counsel.
Judgment reversed.