107 Ga. 49 | Ga. | 1899
On March 21, 1896, the Houston Guano and Warehouse Company brought suit, in the county court of Houston county, against John F. Sanders as trustee of his wife and their children (naming them). The purpose of the suit was to subject a certain tract of land, held by the trustee for the benefit of his wife and children, to a certain debt contracted by the trustee with the plaintiff in January, 1893. The petition described the trust property, referred to the deed creating the trust, and stated where the same was recorded. It was alleged that the trustee was still in possession of the land mentioned in the deed, for the use and benefit of the cestuis que trust named; that in the year 1893 he was farming upon the land for the benefit of his cestuis .que trust, and that as such trustee he bought of petitioner, on January 11, 1893, for use on the farm carried on, mules and wagons; that they were necessary to enable the trustee to carry on the farm for the benefit of the cestuis que trust; and that without such articles he could not have conducted the farm. This indebtedness was •evidenced by certain promissory notes given by the trustee, ■copies of which were attached as exhibits to the petition. The petition set forth the cause of action in orderly and distinct paragraphs, fifteen in number, and we refer above to only some of its allegations, as they are the only parts material to be considered in connection with the issues involved in this case. The petition was duly served upon the trustee as defendant; and he having failed to file any answer to the suit, the judge of the county court, at the trial term, rendered a judgment finding for the plaintiff the amount of the debt sued for, subjecting thereto the trust property mentioned in the petition, and directing that the fi. fa. issued thereon be levied upon the trust property described in the petition. This judgment shows upon its face that it was predicated upon the fact • that there was no •denial by the defendant of the allegations contained in the petition. A fi. fa. was issued upon the judgment and levied .upon the land described in the trust deed. The plaintiffs in error, who are all the beneficiaries named in that deed, except the mother and a minor child, filed a claim to the property, which came on to be tried at the April term, 1898, of the superior
The deed by virtue of which claimants assert title was executed November 19, 1885, and was a conveyance from W. L. Sanders to John F. Sanders, in trust for his wife and their children (naming them) “ and any children they may have born to them in future.” The consideration named in the deed was for services rendered the grantor by the mother of these children, in waiting upon and nursing him for years, and also his late-wife, then deceased, and it was also for the further consideration that the said mother and her husband, the trustee, would continue to wait upon, take care of, and support the grantor out of the property conveyed by the deed. The deed then recited a conveyance to the trustee “in trust for the sole, separate use and benefit of the said Hattie Sanders and her children above mentioned, and any that may in future be born, and her assigns forever, free from and exempt from all debts, etc., of her present or any future husband.” On the trial it was admitted that the claimants were all of the cestuis que trust in the deed named, except one of the children who was still a minor; that the claimants were all of age on January 1, 1893; that none of them lived on the land in dispute, except Hattie Sanders, who was the wife of John F. Sanders; that none except her received any. of the benefits of the proceeds of the land, since January 1, 1893; that all the claimants were of age on that day; and that, the minor who did not join in the suit was fifteen years old.at the time of the trial.
The position that it was necessary to have made the beneficiaries parties defendant in the suit against the trustee, is clearly untenable. The statute nowhere requires service upon the beneficiaries in such a case. Civil Code, § 3202, provides that'any person having a claim against any trust estate, for services rendered to said estate, or for articles or property or money furnished for the use of said estate, or where a court of equity would render said estate liable for the payment of said claims, may collect and enforce the payment of such claim in a court of law. The sections immediately following provide how such claims may be enforced in a court of law, and simply require that the petition shall set forth the grounds of the claim, how and in what manner the estate is liable for its payment, and shall give the names of the trustees and cestuis que trust. Section 3206 provides that the judgment thus rendered shall impose no personal liability on the trustee, but shall only bind the trust estate, and execution shall issue accordingly. The only provi
It is further insisted by counsel for plaintiffs in' error, that the petition to subject this property in the hands of the trustee was fatally defective, in that it did not allege that the income of the estate was insufficient to pay the debt. On the trial it appeared from the petition that the trustee was realizing from the land an income sufficient for this purpose. The reply to this is, that the statute nowhere requires such an allegation in order to support a suit of this character; but on the contrary provides that the estate itself, that is the corpus, can be subjected to the debts created, for property or money furnished for the use of said estate, and also for services rendered the estate. The decision of Greenfield & Brown v. Vason, 74 Ga. 126, relied upon by counsel for plaintiffs in error, is not in point. There it was sought to subject a trust estate at law for necessaries furnished the cestuis que trust. It appears from the opinion delivered by Justice Hall in the case, that it was an-' effort to charge a trust estate, in the hands of the defendant as trustee, for the value of goods furnished by the plaintiffs. It will be noted the goods were not furnished the trustee for the use of the estate, but they were furnished the beneficiaries themselves; and while it was alleged that they were necessary for the cultivation of the land belonging to the trust estate, it also appeared that they were for the maintenance and support of the cestuis que trust. It appeared in that case that the trustee demurred to the petition, and the court decided that the demurrer should have been sustained, among other rea
Complaint is further made in the bill of exceptions, that the-court erred in refusing to permit the claimants to prove that the trustee applied the income for the year 1893 solely for the-benefit of himself and wife. There is no pretense that there was any collusion between the trustee and the creditor to misappropriate the income from the trust estate, or that the creditor ever had any knowledge of such intention on the part of the trustee, when he extended him the credit. Manifestly such a breach of trust or failure of duty on the part of the trustee, in disbursing the income, would not, under the facts of this-case, defeat the creditor’s right of action. The remedy of the beneficiaries for this wrong is against the trustee himself, and not against the innocent creditor who had nothing whatever to do with disbursing the profits or income that the trustee might have realized from the land, which he was enabled to cultivate by the use of the property furnished by the creditor. It is true that the giving of a note in this case by the trustee constituted no evidence that it represented the debt for which this-trust estate was liable. Upon its face the note only indicated individual liability of the trustee himself. The owner of the note, however, did not rely upon its possession to warrant a. recovery against the trust estate. The fact that he received from the trustee a note would not of course preclude him from showing its real consideration to be of such a nature as to render the trust estate liable. As ruled in the case of Gaudy v. Babbitt, 56 Ga. 640, where the trustee as such has given his promissory note for the debt, and the note is declared upon, the same is admissible in evidence, but the note itself is not sufficient to-
The petition which .sought to enforce the payment of this claim against the trust estate substantially complied with the requirements of the statute in such cases. As against a general demurrer, we think it was sufficient; and if it was open to special objection on account of not being explicit and full enough in certain of its allegations, such defects were clearly amendable, and therefore, in the absence of any such objections, are cured by the judgment of the court. This judgment was necessarily conclusive on the cestuis que trust, although the trustee might have neglected to make the proper defense to the action. In the case of Clark v. Flannery & Co., 99 Ga. 239, the present Chief Justice rendering the decision announced this principle: “If the trustee was unfaithful to his trust in improperly allowing the judgment to be rendered, he and his sureties, if any, are liable to the beneficiaries thus injured.” See also opinion of Justice Bleckley in Kupferman v. McGehee, 63 Ga. 257.
The judgment attacked in this case was rendered by the judge of the county court, in which court.there is no provision for jury trial in civil cases, but the presiding officer of that court is both judge and jury in such cases, and the same principles of pleading and proof touching proceedings in the superior court are likewise applicable to the county court. Civil ■Code, §4204.
Under section 3203, if the claim against a trust estate exceeds one hundred dollars, the petition shall be brought in the superior court; and under section 3205, if it does not exceed that sum, suit may be brought in a justice’s court. These sections are simply codifications of an act passed before the statute establishing the county court, and we think can not- be construed into any modification of the jurisdiction conferred upon that court by section 4193, which gives it jurisdiction of all civil cases of contract or tort within a certain amount, save where exclusive jurisdiction is vested in the superior court. No question is presented, however, by this record, touching the jurisdiction of the county court over the subject-matter of suits against trust estates.
The above covers all the material questions presented in the bill of exceptions. They necessarily control the issues involved. The facts disclosed by the record authorized the judge to direct a verdict finding the property subject.
Judgment affirmed.