17 Ga. App. 59 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1915
Mrs. M. P. Williams brought suit on open account against herself, as executrix, and B. T. McHugh, as executor, of
The sole remaining question is whether the proffered amendment of the plaintiff, striking her name as executrix, as a party defendant in the case, would cure the defects therein. “By the common law all the personal estate of a decedent passes to his executor or administrator, who is the personal representative of the decedent, and who alone has the legal title to the goods, chattels, choses in action, and all other personal property of the decedent.” 11 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), 984. In our own code it is provided: “All property, both real and personal, in this State, being assets to pay debts, no devise or legacy passes.
It is unnecessary to discuss the anomalous and incongruous position which would be occupied by a plaintiff seeking to recover a judgment binding property the title to which was vested in part in the plaintiff in his or her representative capacity as executor or executrix for the estate to which the property belonged. Suppose, after a judgment was rendered in a suit of one executor in his individual capacity against his coexecutor, the defendant co-executor should die or resign, and thereby no person be left in control of or with legal title to the estate of the deceased except the
As to what may be the remedy of one of two or more executors representing an estate who holds an individual claim against the
“Even if an administrator who has permitted a claim which he had against his intestate to become barred pending his administration may waive, in favor of himself, the right to plead the statute of limitations against the claim, and, in pursuance of this waiver, retain the amount due him from the assets of the estate, slight circumstances will be sufficient to overcome the presumption that his return setting up such retainer is correct and that the claim against the estate was a just one, where there has been no return setting up the exercise of the right of retainer until long after the statutory period of limitations has expired; and especially would this be true where the return exercising the right of retainer is made pending a suit against the administrator for an accounting.” Willis v. Sutton, 116 Ga. 283 (4) (42 S. E. 526). See also Josey v. Rogers, 13 Ga. 478 (6). In the case of Baker v. Bush, 25 Ga. 594 (71 Am. D. 193), the right of the administrator to retain a
■ From the several cases cited and from others that might be referred to, the doctrine' of retainer is clearly recognized in this State; and, so far as appears from the present petition, the plaintiff can exercise the right of retainer and thus collect her own debt in full; conceding that her claim be a valid claim against the estate and that the estate is sufficient to pay all claims of the same dignity with' hers. Still another remedy remains - to the executrix, as she could resign her trust and thereafter bring suit against the estate. Of course, the compensation to which she might be entitled as executrix might make this last course undesirable from a monetary standpoint, but nevertheless the remedy exists. If, under the particular facts and circumstances of the case, which do not appear from the simple suit now under discussion, but which may actually exist, it would be impossible to find at- law a sufficient remedy for the plaintiff, the court of equity would yet remain.
We think the trial court properly entertained the motion to dismiss, and did not err in dismissing the petition.
Judgment affirmed.