Amis v. Cameron
This text of 55 Ga. 449 (Amis v. Cameron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Executors were sued in 1869, upon a note made by their testator in 1859. The will was probated in October, 1859, and the executors qualified. They, with others, were residuary legatees — one of them personally, and the other as trustee for his wife. The will directed the payment of all just debts. It provided for the equal division of the residuum [451]*451by commissioners, and the executors were instructed to have commissioners appointed for that purpose. The residuary legatees were of full age, and prior to the probate of the will they entered into a written contract in these terms: “ We agree to waive the usual legal requirements, forms and ceremonies, in bringing to sale the property of said estate, and hereby authorize and request the executors to close up the affairs of said deceased without the delay usually attendant upon, the orders, judgments, and decisions of the court.” Under this agreement, which was signed by the executors as well as the other residuary legatees, the executors proceeded, and wound up the estate, which consisted of land, slaves, railroad stock, and other personal property. The personalty, exclusive of the slaves, was ample to .pay all the debts, and all were paid .except this now in suit. Funds sufficient to pay this were, for a long while, kept on hand. The executors, in due time, advertised according to law, for six weeks, calling upon creditors to render in their claims, and this claim was not presented nor any notice given of it till 1867, before which time the whole estate had been distributed. The distribution was not completed within tw.elve months after qualification and the grant of letters testamentary. Ample means to pay this debt were retained until after that lapse of time. In the distribution, one of the executors received the testator’s land and, still has it. He also received slaves and money. The other executor, as trustee for his wife, received his equal share in money or personal property.
There is no doubt that this creditor could follow the assets, and compel payment of his demand by the legatees,pro rata, out of the effects which they received from the estate of his debtor; but the question is, can he recover a judgment against the executors, as such, over their plea of plene administravit.
The charge in relation to positive and negative evidence was not error in itself, and to one point presented at the trial it seems to have been applicable.
What the court stated to the jury as to the complication and difficulty of the case cannot be harmonized with the views which we have presented, but to pronounce it error in law would be to treat it with a seriousness out of proportion with its importance. Such remarks are usually intended to tone the minds of jurors to a sufficient pitch of gravity; and perhaps the only effect is to make them investigate the facts more carefully, and form their verdict with greater deliberation. If so, they are harmless.
The assignments of error are numerous, and we have not [454]*454dealt with them all separately, but the principles laid down will be found to control them substantially.
Judgment reversed.
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55 Ga. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amis-v-cameron-ga-1875.