12 S.E.2d 345 | Ga. | 1940
1. In ordering a writ of partition to issue the court did not err for the reasons assigned, that the plaintiff failed to show any title to the property, in that no judgment of year's support was shown, and that there was no sufficient description of the personal property sought to be partitioned.
2. The title to property set aside as a year's support vests in the widow and minor children. The interest of a minor in the title is not divested upon his reaching majority; and upon the death of the widow, if she survives his majority, and the majority of any remaining children, he is entitled to his proportionate interest in such of the property as then remains unconsumed.
3. While the widow is entitled, after the child or children reach majority, to the possession of the entire property for her support and maintenance, and has the right to sell the property for such purpose, this does not include the power to give the children's share of the property to another by will.
4. A receipt given by a child to his mother upon reaching majority, in full settlement of his share in the estate of his father in her hands as his guardian, does not affect the child's interest in property set apart to him and his mother as a year's support.
5. The court did not err in ordering the writ of partition to issue in favor of the plaintiff.
2. Under the Code, § 113-1002, the widow and minor children of a deceased person are entitled to have set apart to them, "either in property or money, a sufficiency from the estate for their support and maintenance for the space of 12 months from the date of administration, in case there is administration on the estate, to be estimated according to the circumstances and standing of the family previous to the death of the testator or intestate, and keeping in view also the solvency of the estate." The statute fixes the amount in all cases at not less than $100, and not less than the entire estate if it has a value less than $500. When property is set apart to a widow and minor children under this provision, it is intended for their joint support and maintenance, and it continues after the expiration of the year, and thereafter so long as it lasts to be subject to the support of the widow during her life and the children until they are married or reach majority. The widow, as the head of the family (Code, §§ 49-102, 74-106; Fletcher v. Booth,
In the present case we are called upon to determine the ownership of an unconsumed portion of the property after it is no longer subject to the above uses; that is when there is no beneficiary to claim a support, the widow having died and the children having reached their majority. Does the property revert to the estate of the deceased husband and father? Does it belong to the beneficiary who last survived as such? Or does it belong in equal undivided shares to the children and heirs of the widow? It was not intended under the Code, § 113-1002, that the widow and minor children should be entitled to money or property which would produce an income sufficient to support them for a year but merely that the money or property should itself be sufficient for this purpose. It is fairly obvious that the General Assembly contemplated the consumption of the money or property set apart to the beneficiaries. From this consideration alone the conclusion would follow that it was intended that the entire title held by the deceased to the money or property set apart should pass absolutely to the beneficiaries; and certainly this conclusion is made inevitable by the provisions of § 113-1006, that "The property . . shall vest in the widow and child, or children; . . and the same shall not be administered as the estate of the deceased husband or father." Lowe v. Webb,
In Miller v. Crozier, supra, a creditor resisted the application of *187
a widow to have a year's support out of the property which had been set apart to her husband during his life as a homestead. In ruling in favor of the widow the court said: "The law gives her an estate in the homestead property for life or during widowhood, and an absolute estate in the year's support. She can elect either the one or the other. Her election of the one will amount to a relinquishment of the other. If the whole of the homestead estate be allowed her as a year's support, then, according toLowe v. Webb, supra, the lesser estate is merged into the greater, and she has the fee to the whole. It is argued that this would be an injustice to her husband's creditors, because, if she were not allowed to take the year's support out of the homestead property she could only have a life-estate therein and at her death or marriage the property would be subject to their claims; to allow her to take the year's support would vest the title in her and free the property forever from the debts of the husband. This may be unjust under the old dispensation of `an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth,' but according to the law now of force in this State it is not so." We consider the ruling inMoore v. Moore,
It remains to be considered whether the property belongs to the beneficiary who last survived as such, or whether it belongs in equal shares to the children and the heirs of the widow. In the present case the plaintiff, to whom the property was set apart jointly with his mother as a year's support, attained his majority some time before her death. It is argued, since the property is set apart for the support of the widow during her life and the minor children until they reach majority, that when the plaintiff reached majority the property stood over for the support of the widow, and that she took the entire title, including that of the plaintiff for this purpose. As the question first and immediately above propounded suggests, if this contention be sound, the general conclusion follows that as between the widow and minor children the last to survive as a beneficiary has complete title to the property. Since the widow remains a beneficiary as to the property until her death, her title would be divested only upon her death, and provided minor child or children survived her. The interest of a child would be subject to divestiture upon his dying, marrying, or reaching majority, whichever occurred first, before the death of the widow or the attaining of majority of the remaining children, if any. There is a striking similarity between the argument advanced in support of the contention that when the child reaches majority his title to the property vests in the widow, and that put forth in support of the view that when all of the beneficiaries cease to exist as such the property should revert to the estate of the deceased husband and father; and we think them equally untenable. It has been consistently pointed out in the decisions of this court that under the Code, § 113-1006, when property is set apart to a widow and minor children in gross, the widow and minor children become owners of the property in common. In other words, the widow and *189
the minor children share equally in the title. In Howard v.Pope, supra, it was said: "Under our Code, when a year's support is set aside for a widow and a minor child, or minor children, jointly, each of them has an equal undivided interest in the property so set aside." In Roberts v. Dickerson, supra, it was said: "The ruling of this court in Lowe v. Webb
[supra], following section 2574 of the Code [1933, § 113-1006], recognizes as sound law the proposition that a minor child for whose benefit in part a year's support is granted, shares with the mother in the title." In Miller v. Miller,
In Dickerson v. Nash,
3. In the present case the widow left a will in which she devised the property in question to the defendant. It remains to be considered whether or not this operated to divest the plaintiff's title to a half undivided interest therein. Aside from the fact that the act of 1937, supra, requires the widow, in order to convey the interest of a child or children, to secure the approval of the ordinary, and no such approval appears to have been obtained in this case (the will having been executed and the widow having died subsequently to the above act), the devise does not appear to have been a lawful exercise of the power of sale vested in her as to the entire property. The power of disposition vested in her is for the purpose of obtaining support for herself and minor children, or, after the majority of the children, for the support of herself alone. This does not include the power to give the property away. See Cochran v.Groover,
4. The receipt given by the plaintiff to his mother in full settlement of his share in the estate of his father, which had come into her hands as his guardian, constitutes no bar to his recovery of one half undivided interest in the property set apart as a year's support. As already pointed out, when the property was set apart as a year's support it ceased to be a part of the estate of the deceased. The widow, as guardian of the plaintiff, was not entitled to any of the property thus set apart, but was entitled to control it under the judgment for year's support. SeeHoward v. Pope, supra. Accordingly, a settlement by her, as guardian, for the plaintiff's interest in the estate of his father would not cover his interest in the property set apart as a year's support. In view of the above ruling the judge did not err in ordering the writ of partition to issue.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.