1 Ga. 324 | Ga. | 1846
By the Court
The facts in this case are as follows: James H. Wright departed this life, testate, leaving his wife, Elizabeth Wright, and two other persons, his executors; Mrs. Wright alone qualified. The testator in his will directed that his notes and accounts be applied to the payment of his debts, and should they prove insufficient, he declares it to be his will and desire, “that a sufficient portion of my estate, real or personal, as my executors shall deem most advisable, be sold to pay my debts.” The notes and accounts proving insufficient to pay the debts of the testator, she sold a parcel of the negroes at private sale to Bond and Murdock, to pay his debts.
It was not exactly regular to attack this title thus collaterally ; it was competent for the creditors, in a different form of proceeding, to have made a direct issue upon its validity. But waiving this point, we adjust ourselves to the consideration of the questions made in the assignment. They are of great practical importance in this community ; questions upon which executors and guardians, very generally, no doubt, are willing to receive the instructions of this court. The main question made in this case, is this: do the purchasers acquire a good title to the property, as against the creditors of James II. Wright, deceased ? This question depends altogether upon the previous question, viz : had the executrix the power, under the will of her testator, and by the laws of Georgia, to sell, as she did sell, at private sale ?
It is proper to remark, that the learned counsel for the defendants in error, admitted in argument the power and right of the executrix to sell, contending, however, that she could not sell at private sale, but must sell at public sale, and in the manner pointed out by the acts of our own Legislature. This admission narrows somewhat the inquiry; yet, to a fair elucidation of the points in controversy, we find it necessary, briefly and rapidly, to review the common law doctrine, as to the power of an executor over the estate of his testator, and as to the rights of purchasers setting up title under an executor. In England, it is a general rule, that an executor has an absolute power of disposal over the whole personal estate of the testator. The realty descends there to the heir; and as real and personal estates are by statute upon the same footing here, we might say that this power extends in Georgia to lands.
Another general rule of the common law is, that the effects cannot be followed in the hands of purchasers by creditors or legatees; nor are
are general rules, are not exceptions. Exceptions to the general power of an executor to dispose of the estate of his testator, will be found in those cases only where collusion exists between the representative and the purchaser. That an executor may waste the trust estate, is not sufficient to invalidate the sale ; it must further appear that the purchaser participated in the devastavit. Fraud and covin will vitiate any transaction ; and if the purchaser concerts with an executor, by obtaining the testator’s effects at a nominal value, or at a fraudulent undervalue, or by applying the value to the purchase of other effects for the behoof of the executor; or if he knows, that, from the face of the transaction, the executor is applying the assets to the payment of his own debts;' in all such cases, and all others falling within the reason of these, not only will the executor be liable over for a devastavit, but the purchaser buys at his peril — gets no title, and holds thcj property encumbered with the trust. — See the whole doctrine reviewed by Chancellor Kent in Field vs. Schieffelin, 7 Johns. Ch. R. 150. It is, as I have already stated, not necessary, in general, that the purchaser should look to the application of the purchase-money ; where, however, a trust is created for the payment of specific debts, or for a special object, the purchaser is bound to look to the application of the purchase-money. — Story's Eq. sec. 1127-1130: 3 Mason, 218.
Now, as in this case there was no fraud, or collusion, or covin, between the executrix and the purchasers, according to these general common law principles, they acquired a good title.
The power to sell is an incident to the office of an executor, without directions to that effect in the will; if the will authorizes or directs a sale, a fortiori, he is empowered to sell: indeed, he has no discretion ; he is bound to sell. The will is the law of the trust, and the measure of his obligations. He may not depart from its requirements, unless, indeed, they be in violation of the laws of the State. Whatever title the testator himself has to his effects, his executor under a power in the will may convey. These are principles so familiar, that I deem it useless to cite authorities to them. By the will of Mr. Wright, his executors are expressly authorized to sell his real or personal estate, “ as they may deem most expedient,” to pay his debts, upon the contingency That his notes and accounts would not be sufficient to pay them ; that contingency occurred,
.But, conceding the power and the obligation in this case to sell, it is contended, that, inasmuch as the will is silent as to the manner of the sale, it was the duty of the executrix to have sold in the manner pointed out by the laws of Georgia, regulating the sale of slaves by executors ; not having sold according to this manner, the sale is therefore void. It is, to bo more definite, contended, that the executrix should first have applied to the Court of Ordinary, and obtained an order for the sale of these negroes ; that the sale should have been at public auction, on the first Tuesday in the month, at the place of public sales, in the county where the letters testamentary were granted ; having given sixty days’ notice thereof in one of the gazettes of this State, and at the door of the courthouse, in the county where the sale was intended to be held. These are substantially the requirements of the act of 21st December, 1829.— Prince, 254. The defendants in error also rest their case upon the act of February 29th, 1764, which requires “ all intended sales of goods and chattels belonging to testators or intestates, to be published in two or more public places in the parish where such effects are to be sold, and in the gazette at least forty days before the day of such intended sale.- — Prince, 223.
Wo are of opinion that the act of 1764, for reasons which we shall presently give, has no relevancy to this case ; and the first remark we
The Legislature never intended to interfere with the right of the citizen to direct the manner in which his estate should be administered ; a right as sacred and as necessary as the right of testamentary disposition itself. They only intended to authorize a sale, in cases where the will, making a general disposition of the estate, is silent as to sales. Cases do often occur, where such-sales would benefit the heirs and creditors, without interfering with the dispositions of the testator. These comments on the act of 1829 are made to introduce the following remarks, to wit: in our opinion, the will of Mr. Wright does not alone direct the sale of his negroes, but, by necessary legal construction, also directs the manner of the sale ; and if it does, then the provisions of the act of 1829 do not apply to it. There are two ways of selling; two modes, public and private. We say nothing of degrees of publicity and privacy. Legally, and in the view of common sense, these are the modes of effecting a sale. Now, because the testator did not specify the one or the other, he meant to leave it to the discretion of his executors, to adopt the one or the other, according as they might believe the one or the other would best promote the interests of his estate. And when the executor has elected, that is the mode which the testator meant. In other words, the discretion placed in the hands of the executor is-part of the meaning and intent of the will, and it is not competent to strain the construction of a statute, to control the intent of the testator. Such a construction of this will is sustained by authority, and is in accordance with reason. In cases where a power is conferred, and the manner of executing it is not prescribed, and
There are good reasons for such a rule of construction. The testator is presumed to have left the mode of the sale undetermined, because ho could not foresee whether, in the event it should become necessary to sell his lands'or negroes to pay his debts, it would be more to the interest of the estate to sell at public or private sale. In some conditions of the estate, and in some states of the market, a private sale might be most judicious ; at others, a public sale. It might not be the interest of the estate to sell the negroes in one, and only one, county, as the statute directs. It might be to the interest of the estate, with a view to a better price, to take the negroes out of the State to a better market. Considerations of this kind might, and in this case, doubtless, did, enter into the mind of the testator, and, therefore, all these things are left to the discretion of his chosen fiduciary agent. It is a personal trust, both the sale and the discretion as to the manner, with which the Court of Ordinary has no right to interfere. Again : if the testator intended his executors to be subject to the ordinary, under the act of 1829, why make any provision at all, as to the sale of his negroes? The power to sell would have existed without any authority under the will. The discretion, therefore, as to the manner, we think, was intentionally devolved, in this case, upon the executors, and the will having thus regulated the manner of the sale, this is not one of the cases contemplated by the act of 1829.
This act, moreover, does not declare that no sale of negroes by an executor shall be made, unless according to its provisions; it is not inhibitory. It makes it lawful for the Court of Ordinary, on the application of the executor, to grant an order for sale, if it is made plainly and fully to appear, that the same will be for the benefit of the heirs and creditors. Upon such application being made, the court may, or may not, take, with the executor, the responsibility of a sale, and extend to him the benefit, legal and moral, of the prima facie protection which its order will afford. If, upon the application being made, the court grants the order, then the statute prescribes the place and manner of the sale. If no application be made, then the executor is left to the rights and responsibilities which appertain to him under the general laws of the land; to these he is amenable, under all circumstances and at all events, for the proper execution of his trust. Bo we, then, by this construction, make void the act of 1829 ? By no means. Its precautionary protection to the rights of minors, legatees and creditors, in all cases to which it applies, as well as its prima facie protection to executors, administrators and guardians, continues. The act of 1764, we think, applies alone to the perishable property of the decedent. “ Goods and chattels ” do not here mean slaves. If they did, this act, so far as slaves are concerned, is repealed by the act of 1829 ; for that relates to slaves, exclusively, and some of its provisions are in conflict with the act of 1764. It was also claimed, in argument, that the act of 1805 applied to this case. We think not: for its provisions embrace administrators only, and cannot, therefore, be extended to executors. Upon the best consideration we have been able to give to this subject, we are constrained to believe that the court below erred in its judgment, in the questions submitted to us, and, therefore, we reverse it.