(After stating the foregoing facts.)
*345
There can be no serious question as to the right of the beneficiaries of a trust to apply to a court of equity to protect the trust property upon the refusal or failure of the trustee to do so.
McGehee
v.
Pope,
167
Ga.
622 (
The trial court in rendering its judgment in this case said: *347 “I do not believe a trustee is bound to take the course of action demanded by some of the beneficiaries. For illustration, let us assume a trust of which there are four beneficiaries . . . and each demands a separate and distinct type of action. The trustee must exercise its judgment and take the risk of such liability as may result therefrom. But if the trustee pursues one course of action I do not believe the beneficiaries whose demands were not met can themselves thereupon each independently bring a separate type of action each asserts to be the better one under the circumstances. It is a matter of judgment as to which course of action should be taken and unless the trustee refuses to take any action I do1 not believe the other separate actions by the beneficiaries can be maintained. In exercising its judgment the trustee must necessarily consider the effects each course of action will have upon the trust assets. And it must be remembered that in this case the trust assets are 3,000 shares of stock in the Warren Company now in the possession of the trustee and which were the original trust corpus and these shares must be 'protected and preserved. If the successful bringing of a minority stockholders’ suit to cancel the alleged illegally issued stock would result in destroying the bank credit necessary to the successful operation of the business or otherwise bring financial disaster to the company (as it might well do in this case), such a course of action would not be sound in protecting the assets of the trust, to wit: the 3,000 shares of stock it holds as trustee. The trustee cannot ignore all else in its eagerness to follow the wishes of a portion of the beneficiaries. Indeed, it must exercise its proper judgment regardless of the wishes of the beneficiaries. . . There has been no showing that the present trustee abused its discretion in taking the course of action of bringing this suit rather than acceding to the demands of some of the beneficiaries to . . . bring a minority shareholders’ suit; and it is the opinion of the court that the petitioner as successor trustee is entitled to the interlocutory relief sought by it.”
Under the evidence in this case, we cannot hold that the trial judge abused his discretion in granting the interlocutory injunction restraining the beneficiaries from proceeding in their
*348
action, and from otherwise proceeding except in this action until further order of the court, for in
Sapp
v.
Ritch,
169
Ga.
33 (3) (
It is insisted by the plaintiffs in error that the trial court erred in ordering that “Petitioner, Trust Company of Georgia as trustee may proceed with this action for the relief sought in the original petition in this case.” The original petition sought an accounting and the recovery of a money judgment against the executors of the predecessor trustee growing out of the issuance of 4,080 shares of Class “A” stock to the predecessor trustee. The beneficiaries, in their response to the plaintiff’s petition, prayed that, should that stock not be canceled, the trustee be directed to seek a recovery of the stock in kind, rather than a money judgment, and in paragraphs 7 and 9 of their response as amended the plaintiffs in error set out the reasons why they contend this relief should be sought rather than that prayed for by the successor trustee; and in support of their contentions cite General Petroleum Corporation of California
v.
Dougherty, 117 Fed. 2d 529, 539 (7), where it is held: “Where a trustee in violation of his trust has changed the trust property or its proceeds into other property, the cestui que trust has his option, either to hold the substituted property
*349
liable to the original trust, or to hold the trustee liable for breach of the trust. United States
v.
Dunn,
The foregoing authorities have no application to the situation here presented. This is not a suit by the beneficiaries against the alleged unfaithful trustee, but is one brought against the personal representatives of the deceased predecessor trustee by a successor trustee whom the trial court has found under the evidence to be acting in good faith and according to its judgment within the discretionary power vested in it by the one creating the trust, and comes within the ruling made in the first division of this opinion that a court of equity will not interfere to control a trustee acting bona fide in the reasonable exercise of its discretion. In Hart
v.
Citizens National Bank,
Judgment affirmed.
