6 Ga. 92 | Ga. | 1849
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
2d. Whether the suit abated, by the death of Rose Demere ; and—
3d. Were the negroes levied upon, in the possession of one of the legatees under the will, with the assent of the executors, subject to be first taken, in satisfaction of the decree made against the executors, as stated in the record ?
The motion to dismiss the appeal was, in our judgment, properly overruled by the Court below. The appeal was entered before the warrant of attorney was procured from Mitchell, authorizing Mr. Cohen to act in the premises. Time was given by the Court, in accordance with the third Common Law rule of practice, to file the warrant of attorney, which was done within the time allowed. In the warrant of attorney, Mr. 'Cohen is expressly authorized to enter an appeal in the case, from the verdict rendered by the Petit Jury, and the principal expressly ratifies and confirms all that his said attorney has done, or may hereafter do in his name in the premises, without incurring costs to him. It is objected that the qualification as to the costs, in the warrant of attorney executed by Mitchell, renders the appeal entered by his attorney, Mr. Cohen, before the execution of the warrant by him, void, inasmuch as the appeal could not be entered, without the payment of costs. The appeal, however, had been already entered, when the warrant of attorney was executed, and by its express language, Mitchell ratifies and confirms what his attorney has done in his name, in the premises. One of the legal consequences which attach, on the entering an appeal, is the payment of costs. We cannot suppose, by any fair construction of this warrant of attorney, that it was the intention of Mitchell to authorize his attorney to do an act, and annex a condition in the authority given him, which would defeat its accomplishment. The construction which we give to the warrant of attorney is, that Mitchell intended to confirm and ratify the appeal entered in the case, by Mr. Cohen, his attorney, withoutincurringany other or greater amount of costs, than such as was legally incident to entering the appeal. Whatever may have been his intention,
The question made by the record before us, is not solely as to whether the decree binds the whole estate of the testator, for the payment of the complainants’ legacies, but it is as to what portion of that estate shall first be applied to the payment of that decree. The complainants in the decree are not creditors, but they are voluntary legatees, under the will of the testator. It was the duty of the executors to have retained in their hands a sufficient portion of the assets of the estate of their testator, to satisfy the legacies of the complainants in the decree, when they made distribution to the other legatees, and in the absence of all proof to the contrary, we are bound to presume they did so retain. The
The decree against the executors being an admission that they have in their hands a sufficiency of the assets of the testator, to satisfy and pay it, shall the execution be levied upon the property of the testator, in the hands of the legatee, or shall it be satisfied out of the testator’s estate, remaining in the hands of the executors, which has not been distributed? It is our judgment that the execution issued, to enforce the decree made against the executors alone, should be satisfied out of the assets of the testator, in the hands of the executors, and not out of that portion of the testator’s estate, distributed to the legatee, the more especially when such legatee was no party to that decree. We do not desire to be understood as intimating an opinion that the legatee would be a necessary party to a bill, like the one upon which this decree is founded, it being simply a bill on behalf of the complainants, against the executors, to enforce the payment of their legacies, out of the assets of the testator, in their hands. But when Riereis a deficiency of assets, to pay all the legatees, and there is to be an abatement of the several legacies under the will, in favor of a particular legatee, who claims not to have received his due proportion of the assets, and those to whom distribution has been made by the executors, are required to refund a portion of their legacies, such legatees as are required to refund, ought to be made parties, because their interest is affected by the decree. Story’s Eq. Pl. 184, sec. 203. Egberts vs. Wood, 3 Paige’s Ch. R. 520. In Luffton vs. Luffton, (2 Johns. Ch. R. 614,) it was held, that if an executor pays one legatee, and there is after-wards a deficiency of assets to pay the others, the legatee so paid, must refund a proportionable part. But if the deficiency of assets has been occasioned by the waste of the executor, the legatee who is paid nmy retain the advantage he has gained -by his le