20 Ga. 783 | Ga. | 1856
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
After careful examination, and with but little legal light from the books to guide us, we have come to the conclusion-
The executors are directed to sell all the land and one-slave. It is then left to their discretion whether or not the negroes shall be hired out or other lands be bought and they kept thereon, so as tó be treated with humanity, and raised so as to benefit the heirs of his estate — meaning, doubtless, his grandchildren. Whether the twenty-one slaves bequeathed to the grandchildren, in the absence of any provision respecting them in the will, should be hired out and kept together, and worked on land to be purchased for that purpose, would be a matter to be decided by the Ordinary and the guardian. But Mr. Garrett saw fit to withdraw this power from their control and vest it in his friends, Mr. Spiers and Mr. Bentley. Had he not the right to do so ? And should he not be allowed his MU in this respect, contravening, as it does, no rule of the law 1
But, it is argued, the election once made by the executors, there is no reason why they should not withdraw or abdicate in favor of the guardian. But we apprehend the discretion given to the executors was continuing until the trust should terminate by the marriage or coming of age of one of the cestui que trusts. If the executors decided to hire the slaves, they were clothed with authority to place them with such persons and in such parcels as humanity might dictate; ■ and thereby, as the testator very properly believed, best subserve the interest of his grandchildren. Or they might try, first, the experiment of hiring; and if that failed to work well, resort to the other alternative allowed by the will.
Should one of the executors die, this being a personal trust which could be performed only by both, it would be determined. The same result wrould follow should the executors, or either, fail or refuse to act. It is not such a trust as that a Court of Equity would lay hold of and execute it.