Counsel for the plaintiff in error state in their brief that, despite the length of the decree, which comprises nine pages of the record, there are only two issues in the case, which are: (1) whether or not the judge abused his .discretion in refusing to remove the executor or require him to give bond; and (2) whether or not, under the will, the defendant is entitled to withdraw $25 per month from the corpus of the estate. We agree with counsel’s analysis of the case, and will reach a decision by a determination of the two issues thus stated. *20 We will decide them in reverse order since the first named issue is affected by a decision of the second.
In construing a will the court is required to examine it as a whole and to search- diligently for the intention of the testator as the same may be revealed therein. Code, § 113-806;
Sproull
v.
Graves,
194
Ga.
66 (
The other issue requiring a decision is whether or not the court erred in refusing to remove the executor' or require him to give bond. While Code § 113-1101 makes the provisions of Code § 113-1229 applicable to executors, and, by the .provisions of the latter section, an executor may be removed or required to give additional security—in the exercise of a sound discretion by the ordinary—when it is shown that he is guilty of waste or mismanagement or that he is insolvent or, for any reason, he is unfit for the trust, yet despite this power courts are reluctant to exercise it when no strong case therefor is shown. 33 C. J. S. 1030, § 89;
Johns
v.
Johns,
23
Ga.
31. And the discretion vested by the statute in the ordinary is to be exercised by the jury or judge acting as jury on appeal to the superior court. See
Moody
v.
Moody,
29
Ga.
519;
Stanley
v.
Spell,
46
Ga. App.
91 (
Judgment affirmed.
