63 Ga. 250 | Ga. | 1879
A bill making the following case was filed by an alleged •creditor against a trustee, and his cestui qiie trust (Jiusband ¡and wife), and, on demurrer, was dismissed by the court. The trust was created on May 13th, 1867, by a deed of gift from the wife’s father, one Belvin, to the husband, McG-ehee, conveying to him 632J acres of land, in trust “ for the sole separate use, behoof and benefit of the wife during her natural life, and at her death to be divided among her children and ■the heirs of their body, share and share alike; and with this further provision, that in the event she should depart this life leaving no child or children, said land to revert to •the estate of the donor if he is in life, to be subject to his •control and disposition, and if he should not be in life, to revert to his surviving children and the heirs of the body of any deceased child or children who may have died leaving such heirs.” A copy of the deed is made an exhibit to the bill. The trustee and his wife moved upon the land
In compliance with agreement, complainant furnished supplies of money, provisions, clothing, etc., amounting to $346.17, of which $260.48 was paid. An account of the articles is annexed to the bill, which account seems to debit the trustee merely as au individual. It opeas in January and closes in November, 1877, and sets forth each item, with prices, etc. All of these supplies were furnished to and used upon the trust estate, and were necessary therefor. The complainant was induced to take the individual note of the trustee in lieu of the prior note signed by Mm as trustee, and to receive the collateral note ot Kendrick, and to advance supplies on the faith of the same, by the assurance of the trustee that the collateral was a good and valid rent note, and would be paid at maturity. It was, however, not a good and valid rent note as represented; Kendrick did not owe the trustee, individually, but if he owed rent at all it was to the trust estate, and the trustee has since so informed complainant. When Kendrick’s rent became due the trustee collected it and applied it to the use of the trust estate; both the trustee and complainant distrained for it, and the trustee contested and litigated the validity of the complainant’s claim. Kendrick was insolvent when he made the note, and is still insolvent. “ The whole” was a fraudulent scheme to defraud complainant and get from him the original note which was against the trust estate,and to get the advances which he made daring the year
The bill prays for an injunction restraining the trustee, as such and individually, from disposing of any of the personal property on the farm, and from selling or disposing of any of the rent notes he may hereafter receive, or any of the crops ; also, that complainant have a decree declaring the personal property on the farm to be the property of the trustee individually, and not the property of the trust estate ; that the complainant also have a decree, both against the trustee and against the trust estate, for the amount due him by note and account, as charged in the bill; that a receiver be appointed to take possession of the trust estate and rent out the same, and after paying one-half of the rents, or so much as may be necessary, for the snpport of the wife, to pay over to the complainant the balance until his demand shall be fully discharged ; that the complainant may have a decree against the trust estate for the amount collected by the trustee from Kendrick, and for general relief.
The defendants demurred to the whole bill on numerous grounds : — 1st. No equity. 2d. That as to the account of Picard, it does not appear that the complainant has any title or interest therein, hut the same belongs to Picard. 3d. Full and complete remedy at law. 4th. No right to any of the relief prayed for, and no decree could be rendered which could be enforced without destruction to the estate of the beneficiary for life. 5th. No liability of the trust estate for the collections made by the trustee on the Kendrick note. 6th. The prayer improper, because for a decree declaring the personal property to belong to the trustee individually, and also that the same be sold to satis
Did the court err in sustaining the demurrer, and dismissing the bill %
Judgment reversed.