The exception under review is to a judgment overruling a general demurrer to an equitable petition seeking to set aside the allowance of a year’s support for the widow by the Court of Ordinary of Coweta County.
In 1947 Jim Henry Broadwater died testate. His will established a life estate for his wife in the home place and furnishings and provided for the sale of this property upon her death or remarriage and for a division of the proceeds between three daughters. The wife, Willie Pierce Broadwater, and a daughter, Dorothy Broadwater, were nominated executrices of the will and they both qualified on June 21, 1947. On April 30, 1948, the wife, Willie Pierce Broadwater, filed an application in the Court of Ordinary, Coweta County, Georgia, for twelve months support. Appraisers were appointed and they set aside the home place and furnishings as a year’s support, and their return became the judgment of the court of ordinary on January 3, 1949. Neither executrix was ever dismissed by the court of ordinary. Willie Pierce Broadwater died on October 8, 1960. On February 27, 1961, the surviving coexecutrix, now Dorothy Broadwater Donalson, filed in her representative capacity a petition in the Superior Court of Coweta County, naming the executors of the estate of the deceased coexecutrix, Willie Pierce Broadwater, defendants, and requested that the judgment of year’s support be vacated and set aside and that such other and further relief be granted as the court might deem just and proper.
The petition alleged that Dorothy Broadwater Donalson did not receive notice of the filing of the application for year's support by her coexecutrix, Mrs. Willie Pierce Broadwater, that she was not served with any form of notice, and that she had no actual knowledge of the judgment setting aside the year’s support *526 until after the death of Willie Pierce Broadwater. The petition further alleged that this failure to give notice prevented the court of ordinary from securing jurisdiction of her person, and that this failure to give notice constituted fraud. For these reasons petitioner requested that the judgment of the year’s support be set aside.
The general demurrer of the defendants raises this question: Under the provisions of Code Ann. § 113-1002 requiring the ordinary “on the application of the widow [for an allowance of a year’s support out of the decedent’s estate] . . .on notice to the representative of the estate (if there be one, and if none, without notice), to appoint five discreet appraisers,” (italics ours), where the widow, also a coexecutrix of the estate, files an application for a year’s support, does her failure to give notice to her coexecutrix of such application render the judgment setting aside a year’s support void and of no effect?
This court in
Mackie, Beattie & Co. v.
Glendenning,
The defendants contend that the plaintiff had notice of the application for a year’s support because her coexecutrix, being the applicant, had notice in her capacity as coexecutrix, such notice being notice to the plaintiff. They assert that, under the provisions of
Code
§ 113-1504, where more than one executor qualifies “each shall be authorized to discharge the usual functions of an executor,” and under the rulings in
Hall v. Carter,
Though it be the rule that, where the widow, who is also the
*527
sole executrix of her husband’s estate, files an application for a year’s support such application is notice to her as executrix
(White v. Wright,
An executor is not only the personal representative of the decedent
(Whitworth v. Wofford,
We hold that, where there are two executrices of an estate, one of whom is the widow of the testator and applies for a year’s support out of the estate, notice of such application, as provided in Code § 113-1002, must be given to her coexecutrix, and when not so given, the subsequent allowance is void.
For sufficient cause with proper parties before it, a court of equity has jurisdiction in a direct proceeding to set aside a
*528
judgment rendered by the court of ordinary in a year’s support proceeding.
Johnson v. Bogdis,
It was not error to overrule the demurrers.
Judgment affirmed.
