70 Ga. 604 | Ga. | 1883
This is a suit concerning personal property, and by the Code, §2483, upon the death of the owner, the title to real property vests immediately in his heirs at law, but the title to all other property vests in the administrator of his estate for the benefit of heirs and creditors, and it has been repeatedly decided that legatees, creditors and distributees can recover personal property only through an executor or administrator. 12 Ga., 278. Upon the appointment of an administrator, the right to the possession of the whole estate is in him, and so long as such administration continues, the right to recover possession of the estate from third persons is solely in him. If there be no administration, or if the administrator appointed consents thereto, the heirs at law may take possession of the lands, or may sue therefor in their own right. Code, §2485. Where the administrator declines to sue, he may assign the claim to a creditor or distributee, who may, at his own expense, prosecute the suit; but if he recovers, the procepds, after paying expenses of suit, are to be distributed by the administrator. Code, §2536. Without some special reason, a suit in equity cannot be maintained by a creditor, distributee or legatee, for the recovery of property from a third person. 61 Ga., 602, 607; 8 Ib., 356; 25 Ga., 252. No such ground for equitable interposition, as the above cases hold necessary, is alleged or shown in this case.
The emergency set out and relied upon here, viz: the
The complainants having no right of action at the commencement of the suit, could not maintain it by a right acquired during its pendency (55 Ga., 329), as by then obtaining either temporary or permanent letters of administration.
The view we take of this case renders it unnecessary to determine whether this is a public or a private corporation ; whether it is dissolved by the change and transfer of the service it was created to render, to others, authorized by the public authority to perform them, or whether it still exists as a body corporate, although it has ceased to render the services for which it was created or to exercise any of its franchises, and has, by such non-user, incurred a forfeiture; or what will become ultimately of the property belonging to the corporation, upon its dissolution or the forfeiture of its charter. The only question we need to determine is as to the right of these complainants to participate in its property during its existence, or after its dissolution.
In a case where it was apparent that the funds' of the corporation consisted entirely of private donations, it was deemed unimportant to ascertain who were the donors, for the reason that if they or their descendants could be ascertained, they had no interest in the subject-matter, having parted with the property thus bestowed; neither had those for whose benefit the donations were intended any such interest. “ The gifts were made, not indeed, to make profit for the donors or their posterity, but for something, in their opinion, of inestimable value; for something which they deemed a full equivalent for the money with which it was purchased. The consideration for which they stipulated, is the perpetual application of the fund to its objects, in the mode prescribed by themselves. Their descendants may take no interest in the preservation of this consideration. But in this respect their descendants are not their representatives.” Dartmouth College vs. Woodward, 4 Wheaton, 632, 642, 643.
In the case of The People vs. The President and Trustees
Upon this subject, see 5 Ga., 242; 53 Ib., 628; Code, §1688, cited by counsel for defendant in error. As to surrender of franchises, Code, §1686. As to when forfeiture is incurred and how it is effected, Id., §1685.
Judgment affirmed.