153 Ga. 570 | Ga. | 1922
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The court seems to have put its judgment on the ground, that
But it may be said that guardians can malm their returns within twelve months after their appointment, “ and by the first Monday in July in every year thereafter” (Civil Code, § 3059); and that, construing this law with section 3992, the intention is to require an executor to make his returns at any time within twelve months. Separate and distinct methods are provided for the making of returns by guardians and executors. A guardian can make his first return at any time within twelve months after his appointment. The executor, must make his first return by the first Monday in July of the first year after his appointment, and one in each and every year thereafter by the same date. The ordinary can only cite a guardian to appear and show reason for his delay in making his returns after the expiration of twelve months from his appointment; and the guardian only forfeits his commissions when he fails to make his return before the end of the year. Civil Code, § 3063. Immediately after the session of the July term of the court of ordinary in each year, the ordinary can cite the executor to show cause for his neglect. Civil Code, § 3996. Byne v. Anderson, 67 Ga. 466 (2), 473. The executor failing to make annual returns, as required by section 3992, forfeits all commissions for transactions during the year within which no return is made, “ unless the ordinary, upon cause shown, shall, by special order on the minutes,” relieve him from such forfeiture. Civil Code, § 4069. We conclude that the construction of section 3992 of the Civil Code is not affected by section 3059; and that an executor must make his first return of receipts and expenditures by the first Monday in July, although he may have qualified within less than a year prior to that date.
Frequent settlements make fast friends, and prompt returns by executors conduce to the faithful administration of the estates committed to their charge. When an executor fails to make his annual returns, as required by section 3992, he forfeits all commissions for transactions during the year within which no return is made. Civil Code, § 4069. A special order on the minutes is necessary to relieve him from such forfeiture. Doster v. Arnold, 60 Ga. 316; McBride v. Hunter, 64 Ga. 655. Formerly, a failure to make returns forfeited all commissions. Cobb’s Dig. 306; Adair v. St.
The court therefore erred in striking those paragraphs of the petition in this case which sought to have the executor account for moneys of the estate which he retained for commissions which had been forfeited.
In his first exception of fact the plaintiff excepts to the auditor’s finding “that'J. 0. Bridges was authorized to receive from the defendant, Tarver, for and in behalf of the beneficiaries of J. C. Hudspeth, the property of the estate which was turned over to Bridges by Tarver, and that under the evidence in this case the said beneficiaries and the plaintiff in this case are estopped to claim that the delivery of this property by Tarver to Bridges amounted to a devastavit; and alleges that said finding was contrary to the evidence, and without evidence to support it.” The plaintiff’s seventh exception of law asserts that the auditor erred in finding that “ as a matter of law, . . under the undisputed evidence in this case, the turning over by the defendant Tarver to J. O. Bridges of all the property of the estate in his hands after the purported appointment of Bridges as administrator de bonis non was not a devastavit.” The plaintiff claims that said ruling was contrary to law and was unwarranted by the evidence. So we will deal with this exception of fact and this exception of law together, as both relate to the same subject-matter. Are both of these findings without evidence to support them? J". B. Tarver
There is evidence in the record tending to show, and authorizing the auditor to find, that the legatees had become greatly dissatisfied with Tarver’s management of the estate, and wished him removed; that all the legatees, who were sui juris, had selected Bridges to act as executor; that they had employed an attorney to secure Tarver’s removal and Bridges’ appointment as administrator; that Tarver’s resignation was forced; that the reason for his resignation, stated in his petition to resign, was not the true reason moving him to that eourse/that previously to the passing of the order allowing his resignation, and appointing Bridges as administrator, the former as executor had turned over to the latter lands and personal property of said estate amounting to $80,920.06, for which Bridges gave his individual receipt, not as executor, said receipt being dated August 3, 1915, and having been filed in the office of the ordinary on September 20, 1915, the date of said order; that all ■this was done in pursuance of the plan and arrangement of said legatees to get rid of Tarver, and have Bridges appointed administrator in his place; and that when said order was passed both
The plaintiff claims that when Tarver as executor turned over the property of this estate to Bridges under this void appointment, which Tarver as a matter of law was bound to know, this constituted a devastavit for which Tarver as executor and the surety on his bond are liable. The plaintiff insists that Tarver is liable for all the acts of Bridges in assuming to exercise the authority of executor, his true relation to Tarver being that of a mere agent acting under his guidance in administering the estate. Counsel for plaintiff rely on the case of Rusk v. Hill, 117 Ga. 722 (45 S. E. 42). In that case the administrator, without consulting the heirs of his intestate, allowed one not an heir to participate with them in the distribution of the assets of the estate, which, this court court held, he did at his peril; and that the lawful heirs were not estopped from subsequently calling upon him for an accounting, notwithstanding they may have known of such misapplication of trust funds and raised no objection thereto, if at the time they ignorantly supposed he was properly administering the estate, and in no way misled the administrator into the belief that he was acting with their approval and consent. The principle announced in that case is widely different from the law applicable to the facts •of the case at bar. All the legatees of this estate were of age. They were anxious to have the executor removed. They selected his successor. They employed an attorney to take steps to remov§ the executor and to have appointed in his stead the person of their choice. They wished to get the estate out of the hands of the executor named in the will, and to get it into the hands of the person whom they sought to have appointed in the place of the duly qualified executor. The whole transaction by which the executor was removed, and the person of their choice appointed in his place, was done under the guidance and direction of the attorney of the legatees. When the order was granted by the court of ordinary removing the executor and appointing Bridges in his place, both the executor and the legatees supposed that the same was valid, and that the executor was properly removed, and that Bridges was properly appointed executor of the estate in his stead. If the
The legatees under a will, when the interests of minors and creditors are not involved, can distribute the same by consent, when and how they please. Amis v. Cameron, 55 Ga. 449. Legatees under a will, when all of them are of age, can divide the estate among themselves, although the will directs that it shall be divided by commissioners appointed by the ordinary. Hatcher v. Cade, 55 Ga. 359. This court has said: “If a testator can give legal directions as to the management of his estate after his death, there seems to be no reason why the legal and equitable owners of an estate after an intestate’s death, who are sui juris, can not do the same thing by directing the operation of the business after all the debts of the estate are paid) to the extent of their own interest.” Daniel v. Bank, 147 Ga. 695, 698 (95 S. E. 255).
So, if the executor is willing to resign, and, at the request of the legatees, does offer to resign, so that a person of their choice can be appointed in his stead, as executor, and in pursuance of an agreement between him and the legatees he files in the court of ordinary a petition praying for an order allowing him to resign, and asking the appointment of the person chosen by the legatees as his successor in the trust, which order is granted with the knowledge, consent, and approval of the legatees, both supposing such order valid, and under an arrangement between the executor and the legatees by which the excutor had previously turned over the estate to the person so chosen as his successor, the latter, when it develops that said order is void, will be treated as the agent of the legatees rather than that of the executor; and the executor and his surety will not be held for a devastavit by reason of having turned over the estate to such person so sought to be appointed thé successor of the executor in the trust under said void order. The person so appointed executor, although the appointment is void, will be deemed and treated as the agent of the legatees; and his possession of the estate, so acquired, will be deemed that of the legatees. So we are of the opinion that the court did not err in overruling the plaintiff’s first exception of fact and his seventh exception of law.
The plaintiff, in his fourth exception of law and second ex
In making distribution of an estate, an administrator gave one share to the mother and to her children, under a mistake of law, the fact being that it belonged to the mother alone, who consented, under the same mistake of law, to said distribution, hut did nothing to mislead the administrator, who was not at all influenced in his action by her consent. It was held that the mother was not estopped by her acts in claiming of the administrator her full rights as an heir at law. Davis v. Bagley, 40 Ga. 181 (2 Am. R. 570); Id. 45 Ga. 108. There is a wide difference between that case and the case at bar. In this ease what the executor did was at the urgent solicitation of the legatees. He resigned under pressure. What he did in attempting to resign his trust, and in turning
A testator by his will, probated in 1856, gave directly to his daughter, then a child, the residue of his estate. She married in November, 1866, and in 1868 her husband settled with'the executor and received and receipted for her legacy, acting for himself, and not as the agent or the trustee of his wife, This court held that the wife was not bound by his receipt. Windsor v. Bell, 61 Ga. 671. That case and the case at bar are wide apart. There the wife did nothing to mislead the executor. The payment to the husband of her legacy was not done with her knowledge or consent. There was no decisive evidence of ratification by the wife; and it was held that she could not ratify, so far as her legacy went to pay her husband’s debts. What was done in the case at bar was all done with the consent of the life-tenant and at her request.
The case at bar is more like Rabun v. Rabun, 61 Ga. 647, where it was held that “If a legatee of full age, through ignorance or mistake of his legal rights, consents to be excluded from sharing in a fund about to be distributed by the executrix, his mother, and the distribution is made accordingly, the executrix will be free from any liability to him for money thus, with his express consent, innocently paid to other parties.”
It is true that where an executor operates the farms of his testator after the current year, any loss thereby sustained would not fall upon the estate, and should not be allowed the executor. Poullain v. Brown, 82 Ga. 412 (2) (9 S. E. 1131); Johnson v.
It is immaterial, in view of the conclusion which we have reached as to Bridges’ relation to the legatees, what became of these farm products after they went into the hands of Bridges. So we do not think that the auditor erred in his findings of law and fact in reference to this matter; and the court below did not err in overruling these exceptions so far as the life-tenant was concerned.
In his fifth exception of law to the auditor’s report the plaintiff excepts to the overruling of his motion to exclude all evidence, offered by the defendants, as to what it was worth to oversee the farming operations on the farms of the estate during the year 1915, on the ground that the executor had no authority to carry on these operations, and for this reason would not be entitled to any extra compensation for so doing. In the sixth exception of law the plaintiff excepts to the auditor’s finding that the executor was entitled to extra compensation “for his services in operating the farms of the estate.” The objection to this finding is that it is contrary to law and wholly unauthorized under the evidence. In his third exception of fact to the auditor’s report the plaintiff excepts to the auditor’s finding allowing the executor the sum of $1200 by way of extra compensation for his services in operating the farms of the estate. Plaintiff insists that said finding is not only excessive in amount, but contrary to law and without evidence to support it. We will deal with these exceptions together. The court overruled these exceptions so far as the life-tenant was
An executor can only continue the business of his intestate until the expiration of the current year. Civil Code, § 4012. The life-tenant, being sui juris, as we have undertaken to show, could authorize the executor to manage the estate, so far as her interest therein was concerned, in any manner that she might see fit. If she did not originally authorize him to conduct the farming business during 1915, she could have ratified his unauthorized act in so doing. If, after the executor had pitched and cultivated the crops on the farms in 1915 until they were practically matured, she procured him to resign and to turn over these crops to Bridges to be disposed of by him, the latter being her agent, as we have undertaken to show, there would have been a ratification on her part of the act of the executor in operating these farms during 1915. This being so, the executor would be entitled to extra compensation for these services, the same not falling within his ordinary duties as executor. When the plaintiff for the use of the legatees filed this equitable proceeding calling him to account, he could set up his claim for this extra compensation, although the same had not been allowed by the court of ordinary. Adair v. St. Amand, 136 Ga. 1 (6), supra. There being evidence to sustain the auditor’s finding of fact and his findings of law in this matter, the court did not err in overruling these exceptions so far as the life-tenant was concerned.
But exception is taken by the plaintiff to that part of the decree of the court finding that he was entitled to recover, for the use only of the remaindermen, $4979.57 illegally expended by the executor in the farming operations, $352.76 expended in making betterments and repairs on the lands of the estate, the sum- of $1200 reserved by the executor for extra compensation for conducting these farming operations, and $262.08 illegally reserved by .the executor as commissions on moneys invested in bank stock and expended by him in said farming operations. The error assigned is that these recoveries should be for the life-tenant as well- as the remaindermen. All of these sums constituted portions of the corpus of the estate. To the corpus of the estate the life-tenant has no title or claim. She would only be entitled to the rents, issues, and profits thereof. So she would not be entitled to a judg
Generally, pleadings are amendable at any stage of the cause. Civil Code, § 5681. It is too late, after the court has approved the auditor’s report, for the defendant to file, by way of amendment, new and independent defenses to the 'plaintiff’s action; but it is always permissible to amend pleadings, even after the auditor’s report has been approved by the court, so that the same will support a decree administering the proper equitable relief to all the parties upon the facts reported by the auditor. Milner v. Mutual Benefit Building Association, 104 Ga. 101 (3, 4) (30 S. E. 648). This was the purpose of the amendment which was allowed; and this is always permissible. The pleadings can always be adjusted by amendment to the facts as found by the auditor, or proved be
A new trial is granted in this case solely on the ground that the court erred in striking that portion of the petition which sought to recover from the executor the funds which he appropriated in payment of his commissions which had been forfeited by his failure to make his return in due time; and we direct that on the next trial this issue alone be tried and determined.
Judgment reversed in part and affirmed in part, with direction.