Bearden v. Baldwin

162 S.E. 802, 174 Ga. 191, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 22, 1931
DocketNo. 8359
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 162 S.E. 802 (Bearden v. Baldwin) 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
Bearden v. Baldwin, 162 S.E. 802, 174 Ga. 191, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 21 (Ga. 1931).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) The application of C. H. Baldwin to be appointed administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo is based upon the request of parties [195]*195alleged to be interested in the estate of the deceased Barton Thrasher, and is made in his capacity as clerk of the superior court of Morgan County. The caveats are based upon the ground that there is no estate of Barton Thrasher to be administered.

There were two caveats to C. H. Baldwin’s application to be appointed administrator. In the caveat filed by Bearden as executor of the will of Josephine Y. Overby (formerly Josephine Y. Thrasher) it is alleged that “The application should be refused for the following reasons: That, regardless of the construction placed on the deed of October 14, 1865, the title to said land would not vest in the heirs of said Barton Thrasher, because on October 14, 1865, he made his last will and testament, which went into effect at his death during the year 1867, and a copy of which is hereto attached, marked Exhibit B; and the caveator shows that even if the said Barton Thrasher had any reversionary interest in said land under the deed to Josephine Y. Thrasher, that this reversionary interest passed to said Josephine Y. Thrasher by virtue of said will, . . and that therefore, if there is any necessity for administration of said-land in this court, it should be administered as a part of the estate of the said Josephine Y. Overby.” A further ground of the caveat set up “that there is no property now in existence, so far as he is advised, belonging to the estate of Barton Thrasher; and if administration be granted, 'it would operate as a cloud on the title of this caveator to the land described in the application for administration.” The court had before it, therefore, on the hearing upon demurrer, both the deed to Josephine Y. Thrasher and the will of Barton Thrasher. Both instruments were executed by Barton Thrasher on the same day, October 14, 1865. It appears from the will that on the same day on which Barton. Thrasher executed the deed to Josephine Y. Thrasher (later Overby) he made in his will a general distribution of his entire estate, and referred expressly to his gift to Josephine Y. Thrasher. The judge evidently took the view that from the language used in the deed all of the rights of the children of Maude Overby, the daughter of Josephine Y. Thrasher, were extinguished, because Maude Overby predeceased her mother.

The first question raised 'in the caveats is as to the jurisdiction; that is to say, that the court of ordinary of Morgan County has no. jurisdiction to appoint an administrator de bonis [196]*196non cmn testamento annexo of the estate of Barton Thrasher, inasmuch as Barton Thrasher was a resident of Clarke County at the time of his death, and the estate sought to be administered in this proceeding was then in Clarke County and is now within the limits of Oconee County, and in either event without the limits of Morgan County. By an act passed in 1875 (Ga. L. 1875, p. 109) the territory now embraced in Oconee County was taken from Clarke County and the 830-1/2 acres of land alleged to belong to the estate of Barton Thrasher and subject to administration is in Oconee County. There is a provision in our laws for the transfer of jurisdiction as to administrators, guardians, etc., upon the creation of a new county. The Civil Code of 1910, § 836, provides that a trustee, executor, administrator, or guardian, where a new county is created, has the option to change the jurisdiction of himself as such fiduciary to the court of ordinary of the new county; but if he does not exercise the option, the jurisdiction remains as it was. As related to a guardian, this court so held in Malloy v. Malloy, 131 Ga. 579 (62 S. E. 991). This section was taken from the act of 1905 (Ga. L. 1905, pp. 46-52); and by an act passed in 1914 (Ga. L. 1914, p. 48) the provisions of §§ 829 to 848 of the Civil Code, inclusive, were made applicable to all new counties “which are or may be subsequently created by constitutional amendment.” However, it will be seen that the legislation referred to does not embrace counties which may have been created as Oconee was, by a legislative act in 1875, prior to the constitution of 1877, and prior to the creation of the new counties to which the act of 1905, supra, has reference. So far as we are informed, there is no rule, except it be drawn by analogy, to determine the question of the priority between the courts of ordinary of Clarke County and Oconee County. But conceding (following the policy adopted by the General Assembly above stated) that Oconee County, now embracing the territory in which the testator lived and where the property at issue is located, is entitled to the appointment — if an administrator for Barton Thrasher’s estate must be named, we are met with another more difficult proposition. Under the provisions of § 4096 of the Code, which was taken from the act of 1812 (Cobb’s Dig. 318), it is provided that “whenever, from any change of residence, or other cause, an administrator may desire to remove the jurisdiction of [197]*197his trust from the court of ordinary of the county of the residence of testator of intestate to that of his own residence, the same may be done by complying with the following requisitions: 1. By obtaining a copy of all the records of the ordinary relative to his trust, and causing the same to be recorded by the ordinary of the county of his residence. 2. By giving to the ordinary of his county new bond, with good security, for the discharge of his duty as administrator, in the same manner as if the administration were originally granted there. 3. By filing, with the ordinary of the county having original jurisdiction, a certificate, under the seal of the ordinary of the county to which the trust is to be removed, that the foregoing provisions have been complied with. 4. The ordinary having jurisdiction shall then pass an order transferring the trust to the ordinary of the other county.” The order of the ordinary of Clarke County in December, 1867, changing the jurisdiction, was a transfer to the court of ordinary of Morgan'County for all purposes connected with the administration of the entire estate of the testator. The Code provides no other way than that prescribed by § 4096 for the removal of a trust from one county to another. Under the terms of that section, to remove an administration from one county to another the removal can be effected only upon the motion of the representative of the estate. So we conclude that the trial judge did not err in holding that the application for letters of administration was properly within the jurisdiction of the court of ordinary of Morgan County.

We come then to consider the second ground of the caveats, which set up, in effect, that an administrator should not be appointed, because there is no estate to be administered. This objection has been considered in some prior adjudications of this court, and, under the circumstances then involved, held to be without merit. Perhaps the first case ruling distinctly upon the point was that of Augusta & Summerville Railroad Co. v. Peacock, 56 Ga. 146, but that was a ease in which the railroad company contested the application for administration of the estate of an infant two years old, whose death occurred in a railway accident, upon the apprehension that the sole purpose of the applicant for administration was to be qualified to bring suit against the railroad for damages growing out of the tortious homicide of his intestate. This court held that the caveat was without merit, because the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 S.E. 802, 174 Ga. 191, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bearden-v-baldwin-ga-1931.