Bank of Cuthbert v. Taylor

123 S.E. 262, 158 Ga. 237, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 30, 1924
DocketNo. 4089
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 262 (Bank of Cuthbert v. Taylor) 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.

Bluebook
Bank of Cuthbert v. Taylor, 123 S.E. 262, 158 Ga. 237, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 119 (Ga. 1924).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

The cause under review is one in which a described house and lot in the city of Cuthbert was levied upon under a mortgage fi. fa. in favor of the Bank of Cuthbert and against A. C. Bridges in his representative capacity as administrator of the estate of Mrs. A. C. Bridges. The property was claimed by Myrtle Taylor, a minor represented by her guardian, Nannie M. Taylor.. It appears from the record that the house and lot was at one .time the property of one W. S. Taylor, who died intestate on September 17, 1916, leaving a widow, Mrs. W. S. Taylor, and one minor child, Myrtle Taylor, the present claimant.- At the [238]*238November term, 1918, the house and lot in question (as well as other property) was set aside as a year’s support to the widow and said minor, the claimant. On July 1, 1919, Mrs. Taylor was duly appointed as guardian of Myrtle Taylor, and qualified on September 17, 1919. On July 3, 1919, the widow, Mrs. Taylor, married A. C. Bridges; she died on June 6, 1920; and on November 6, 1920, Nannie M. Taylor qualified as the guardian of the person and property of Myrtle Taylor. On December 8, 1919, the house and lot in Cuthbert which had been set apart as a year’s support to the widow and minor daughter was mortgaged to the Bank of Cuthbert to secure a note for $2,160, signed “Mrs. A. C. Bridges.” On November 6, 1922, the mortgage was foreclosed in the name of the Bank of Cuthbert against A. 0. 'Bridges, as administrator of the estate of the deceased Mrs. A. C. Bridges, the second husband of Mrs. Taylor being A. C. Bridges, and he having qualified as her administrator on August 6, 1920. The rule absolute upon the mortgage foreclosure was granted on May 7, 1923, and directed that recovery be had and levy made upon “certain lands and tenements . . formerly owned and occupied by Mrs. A. C. Bridges, deceased, and now in possession of A. C. Bridges as her duly appointed administrator,” to wit, the house and lot in controversy, for the recovery of $1,787.65 principal, etc. It was against this mortgage fi. fa. that the claim of the guardian in behalf of the minor Myrtle Taylor was interposed; and the single question presented is whether the court erred in dismissing the levy under the agreed statement of facts and the additional testimony introduced.

When the house and lot in controversy, in November, 1918, was set aside as a year’s support, the title thereto vested in Mrs. W. S. Taylor and the claimant, her minor child Myrtle. Civil Code (1910), §4044; Howard v. Pope, 109 Ga. 259 (34 S. E. 301). A year’s support is claimed solely for the support of the beneficiaries; and if it is not used for that purpose and a beneficiary dies, the right of possession vests in the surviving beneficiaries. In Whitt v. Ketchum, 84 Ga. 128 (10 S. E. 503), this court held that “allowance from the estate of a decedent for a year’s support, if not consumed during the year, will stand over for the support of the widow and minors afterwards, so long as they are members of the family and fill this description. Children attaining ma[239]*239jority ox ceasing by marriage to be of the family, cannot, during that time, coerce partition of land thus allowed and set apart, the whole land being charged with the support of the family.” Chief Justice Bleckley, delivering the opinion of the court, said “The support contemplated by section 2571 [now § 4044] of the code is that of the widow and the minor children for twelve months. But if the allowance be set apart, not severally to each member, but to the family as a whole, and all of it is not consumed, we think the residue, whether in money or property, stands over to be used afterwards by the widow and such of the children as continue minors, until there is no longer either widow or minor in the family. If the allowance be in land, it is not subject to partition, so long as there is either a widow or minor child to be supported. The land is subject to sale by the widow for the purpose of deriving a support from it for herself and any minor child, and this right she could not exercise consistently with the right of any of the children to have partition, so long as there is a minor child to be supported. This view of the law is, we think, not only consistent with the scheme of the statute, but is harmonious with.the cases heretofore decided by this court on the general subject, some of which are: Tabb v. Collier, 68 Ga. 641; Cleghorn v. Johnson, 69 Ga. 369; Steed v. Cruise, 70 Ga. 168; Woodbridge v. Woodbridge, 70 Ga. 733; Cheney v. Cheney, 73 Ga. 66; Stewart v. Stewart, 74 Ga. 355; Cox v. Cody & Co., 75 Ga. 175; Farris v. Battle, 80 Ga. 187; Brown v. Joiner, 80 Ga. 486.”

In Dickerson v. Nash, 74 Ga. 357, this court held: “Where a widow had set apart to her as a year’s support the entire estate of her deceased husband, consisting in part of realty and in part of personalty, and, having consumed the entire personal estate, died, the title to the land vested in the minor children of the deceased husband, and was not subject to sale by the administrator of the widow.” In this connection see Roberts v. Dickerson, 95 Ga. 727 (22 S. E. 654), in which it was held, in a case where the year’s support was granted to a widow and minor son, that a minor child for whose benefit in part a year’s support was granted shared with the mother in the title, but after attaining majority the child could not, while the mother remained upon the land, coerce a partition of the land, the whole of it being charged with the support of the family; and that the administrator of the son’s [240]*240estate could not sell or otherwise administer an undivided half of the land as the estate of the son while the mother remained upon thp land. Miller v. Ennis, 107 Ga. 663 (34 S. E. 302), was a case, in which one of the children for whose benefit, together with her mother, there had been set apart a year’s support in money, sought to recover for her own separate use a part of the money set apart; and in which this court held the plaintiff not entitled to recover, though the child had married and moved to her husband’s home. In delivering the opinion of the court, Mr. Justice Little held: “The support of the widow and minor child of a decedent is one of the, highest charges against his estate. The period for which this support shall be continued is one year, unless the estate is to be kept together for a longer time than twelve months, and there are no debts to pay. . . The object of the statute is to afford to those who are dependent upon the husband and father provision for at least one year after his death. This right of support inures to the widow alone if there are no minor children, and to the minor children alone if there is no widow. . . Under the provisions made for a year’s support, it is not the object and intention of the law to divide the estate of the decedent among his widow and children, but out of the estate of the husband and father must first come a provision by which the dependent and helpless will at least be provided for during a limited period. The amount set aside to the widow and her minor child is in gross, and no specific portion can justly be claimed by either the widow or the child; they are alike entitled to a support out of the fund. It is provided by our Civil Code, § 3468 [now § 4044], that property so set apart by the appraisers shall vest in the widow and child or children.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 262, 158 Ga. 237, 1924 Ga. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-cuthbert-v-taylor-ga-1924.