177 Ga. 686 | Ga. | 1933
(After stating the foregoing facts.) R. Tippen Ragan executed a will by the terms of which he devised all of his property to his grandmother (his mother’s mother), Mrs. Julia L. Tippen. He named no other legatee. He appointed his grandmother as executrix, and imposed no limitation or restriction upon her disposition of his property. About a year later he died. His ’ will was probated in common form. A short time after his death his grandmother executed a will devising all her property to Mrs. M. F. Mulky, Mrs. A. E. Paris, and Mrs. Minnie Bobo as her sole legatees, devisees, and beneficiaries, and nominated the National City Bank of Rome as her executor. The bank as executor was proceeding to probate both wills in solemn form — the will of R. Tippen Ragan as administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo, and the will of Mrs. Julia Tippen as executor. At this stage Miss Anna Ragan filed the present action. She is a sister of Ragan’s father, and Mrs. Tippen was the mother of Ragan’s mother. Ragan had no brother or sister, and never married. Miss Anna Ragan is the only surviving paternal aunt, and he left surviving no uncle or aunt upon his mother’s side. It thus appears from the petition that Mrs. Julia L. Tippen was his next of kin, and that had he died without a will his estate would have fallen to his grandmother under the rules of distribution. The petition is predicated upon an alleged oral agreement, in which petitioner is alleged to have been present and to have participated, by which R. Tippen Ragan agreed to devise his entire estate by will to his grandmother, upon her promise and agreement that, should she survive said R. Tippen Ragan, she in return would execute a will devising at her death to the petitioner, Miss Anna Ragan, all of the estate devised to her by R. Tippen Ragan remaining in her hands at the time of her death. The petition alleges that in violation of this agreement
It is not necessary to deal with ail the grounds of demurrer, for reasons now to be stated, because we are of the opinion that the court did not err in dismissing the petition. The allegations amount merely to a statement that Mrs. Tippen failed to perform her promise as to the disposition of her property. The promise alleged to have been made was not based upon any consideration flowing from the plaintiff. It appears that R. Tippen Ragan lived with his grandmother, and that circumstance as well as the close relationship would seem to render the disposition of his property perfectly natural, and to transmute several of the allegations of the petition into mere conclusions of the pleader, unsupported by any facts authorizing these conclusions. The allegations are insufficient to establish an implied trust in favor of the plaintiff. They show only that the alleged contract was between R. Tippen Ragan and his grandmother, to which the plaintiff was not a party, and in which no consideration moved from the plaintiff. 'Consequently there was no such privity as would authorize an action by the would-be beneficiary. Upon the principles just stated the rulings of this court in Sterling v. Sterling, 12 Ga. 201, and Shropshire v. Rainey, 150 Ga. 566 (104 S. E. 414), seem to be controlling. In the Sterling case it was said: “The doctrine is thus stated by Judge Story: ‘Uses or trusts to be raised by any covenant or agreement of a party in equity, must be founded on some meritorious or some valuable consideration; for courts of equity will not enforce a mere gratuitous gift (donum gratuilum) or a mere moral obligation. I-Ience it is, that if there be a mere voluntary executory trust created, courts of equity will not enforce it. And upon the same ground, if two persons, for a valuable consideration, . . covenant to do some act for the benefit of a third person, who is a mere stranger to the consideraslion, he can not enforce the covenant against the turo, although
“The facts alleged in the petition in the case at bar do not bring it within any of the exceptions heretofore recognized in any of the
Of course specific performance has been granted in a number of cases of mutual wills; but, so far as we are aware, in each of these cases some consideration flowed from the plaintiff to the deceased. Under the rulings of this court equity will not interfere with the duty of an executor to proceed with the probate of a will. In Adams v. Johnson, 129 Ga. 611-613 (59 S. E. 269), this court held: “It is the duty of the nominated executor to offer the will for probate,
The next question which arises is whether the laws of Georgia authorize or will permit the reformation of a will. We think not. To allow these wills to be reformed would be to make for each of the testators, after death, a new and different disposition of their property from that expressed by these testators when in life. It was held in Willis v. Jenkins, 30 Ga. 167, that “A will can not be reformed by making additions to it, because the whole will must be in writing ab origine.” In the opinion it was said: “Can this will be reformed by striking out and inserting? We think not. There is no doubt that on a different issue, to wit, the issue of devisavit vel non, and [that?] parts of the propounded paper to which the testator had not assented ought to be rejected; but to allow the insertion of anything into it, upon parol proof, would be to set aside the law which requires the will — the whole will — to be in writing. . . Contracts which are within the statute of frauds are allowed to be reformed by inserting such things as may have been omitted from the writing through fraud, mistake, or accident; but contracts and wills are placed on very different footings by that statute. Wills must be wholly in writing ab origine; contracts need not be. . . But the statute [of frauds] affects the two very differently. Under the conjoint operation of the rule and the statute, the doctrine with respect to contracts is, that if the parties leave a written vestige, this may serve as a skeleton on which parol evidence can hang such lacking components . . as may have been withheld by fraud, mistake, or accident. But not so with a will. The statute demands that the whole of it shall be in writing.” Citing 1. Jarman on Wills, 349. In Smith v. Usher, 108 Ga. 231, 233 (33
Judgment affirmed.