161 Ga. 884 | Ga. | 1926
Quoting from the brief of the counsel for the plaintiffs in error, “L. E. Humber died testate in Bussell County, Alabama, leaving a large amount of real estate in Alabama and Georgia, and owing a large amount of debts, and probably very much more than his estate could pay. The plaintiffs in error qualified as his executors in Bussell County, Alabama, and the same executors qualified as such in Muscogee County, Georgia, under the statutes of Georgia, providing for such qualification. Under the laws of Alabama set out in the petition, it became necessary for creditors to file their claims and take certain steps required by the statutes of Alabama within a certain time, or else their claims were forever barred and unenforceable against the estate of the deceased in Alabama. The plaintiffs in the court below, who were creditors, failed to comply with the statutes of Alabama, and their claims were barred. They then filed the present action in the Muscogee superior court against the executors, who had qualified in Georgia, and sought certain equitable relief, and sought to recover a judgment against the executors as such in Georgia upon the claims which were barred in Alabama. The vital question to be determined in the case at bar is this: Having permitted their claims to become barred in Alabama, can the creditors maintain an action on those barred claims against the executors in Georgia?” This quotation from
On January 12, 1924, the judge by consent of parties granted a temporary restraining order, enjoining the defendants from removing from the State of Georgia any of the money, choses in action, or other assets of L. F. Humber until the further direction of the court. On February 16, 1924, the defendants filed a demurrer based upon four grounds. The attack made upon • the petition in the first ground of the demurrer was met by amend-. ment. The second ground avers that all of the claims are barred and unenforceable, “because they were not proved and filed as required by the laws of Alabama, as required by sections 2590, 2593 of the Code of Alabama of 1907, and because they were not presented in twelve months after the grant of administration in Alabama as required by said code section.” The third ground presents in substance the same question as that embodied in the second; and the fourth ground sets forth that the' petition should be dismissed “because the petition shows that proceedings have been filed in Alabama to declare the estate insolvent — that is the estate of the said deceased Humber — and that such proceedings, when the insolvency is so adjudicated, will have the effect of depriving the executors of said will of the administration of said estate both in the State of Alabama and in the State of Georgia.” The trial judge overruled the demurrers, and the exception is to that judgment.
There are two questions presented by the record. (1) Has the superior court of Muscogee county jurisdiction to administer the estate which the testator left in Georgia? (2) Are the claims of the petitioners bqrred? The question of jurisdiction
Conceding that the executors are mere ancillary executors, and that they qualified as executors merely upon proof of their ex-ecutorship in Alabama, as provided by our code, for the mere purpose of collecting debts due the testator, and conceding, but not at this time deciding, that any distribution of the estate as far as the interest of heirs or legatees is concerned should be governed by the laws of Alabama, because that Stkte was the domicile of the testator, nevertheless the question here presented con
In the case of Latine v. Clements, 3 Ga. 426, the point here involved was not before the court. Only one question relating to a foreign will was considered, and it was held that “An action will lie against an administrator with the will annexed, in Georgia, on a judgment obtained in Virginia against an executor.” The court properly based its decision upon articles 3 and 4 of the constitution of the United States, which require that “full
Can equity out of assets in this State compel the payment of the debts of the testator, regardless of that comity of States by reason of which we concede to the laws of a sister State extraterritorial jurisdiction? In Mitchell v. Cox, 28 Ga. 32, this court held: “If H. dies in Arkansas and there is a creditor of the de
But it is said that under the law of Alabama the claims of all the plaintiffs are barred, and for this reason, regardless of anything else, the petition is demurrable and should be dismissed. If it be conceded that the laws of Alabama governing the distri
So we conclude that the law of Alabama, which would bar the claims of the petitioners, has no extraterritorial potency. The law of Georgia as to this prevails; and the trial judge correctly held that the claims of the petitioners as set forth in their petition were not barred.
Judgment affirmed.