Candler v. Clarke

16 S.E. 645, 90 Ga. 550
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 9, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 S.E. 645 (Candler v. Clarke) 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
Candler v. Clarke, 16 S.E. 645, 90 Ga. 550 (Ga. 1892).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

In 1871, Benjamin Burdett died intestate, leaving as Ills heirs at law his widow and the children of his deceased daughter, who were minors. The widow, Mrs. I. C., Burdett (afterwards Craig), and Elijah H. Clarke, the father of these children, were appointed administrators. In 1872 and 1873, at public sales by the administrators, under an order of the court of ordinary, the lands of the estate were bid off' in separate parcels by parties who, after taking conveyances thereto, reconveyed to the administrators individually; and the administrators, in their returns to the ordinary, reported that they were themselves the purchasers. The returns showed that Mrs. Burdett bought separately 276'acres for $3,500, that Clarke bought separately 202J acres for $1,800, and that both of them bought together 23 acres for $770, Mrs. Burdett, as appeared from the deeds put in evidence, taking 17 acres of this last mentioned quantity, at $575. The returns show also that half of the total amount realized from the sales was paid over to Clarke, as guardian for the children, as their share of the proceeds. It appears that this money was afterwards wasted by Clarke.

In July, 1890, the children (all of them having attained majority, except one who was represented by a guardian ad litem) filed their petition against Clarke and against Candler, the executor of Mrs. Craig, in which, they declared their election to avoid these sales, and prayed for a decree against both defendants for the value at that time of so much of the lands as had passed into the hands of innocent purchasers, and that as to [552]*552all the lands the title to which still remained in either of the defendants, they might recover a half-interest. They prayed also that the alleged sales by the administrators aud the deeds made in connection therewith be declared void; that they might recover the rents, that an accounting be had, etc. They charged waste and mismanagement on the part of both administrators.

Clarke filed no answer, but Candler, as executor of Mrs. Craig, answered that the property was disposed of by Clarke and Mrs. Craig as administrators, in the manner prescribed by law, and that after paying debts and expenses, half of the proceeds was paid over to Clarke as guardian for the petitioners, who had notice of every fact connected with the sales and received the full distributive share of his wards and made return thereof to the court of ordinary; that subsequently he was removed from the guardianship and another guardian appointed in his stead, at which time a judgment was rendered against him for $5,818, which iucluded the money received by Clarke as guardian.' from the sale of-this realty; that the land alleged to have been purchased by Cox and reconveyed to Mrs. Craig was not in possession of Mrs. Craig when she died, she having long previously sold and conveyed it to parties who were then in possession of it.

It appeared from the evidence that Candler, as her administrator, was still in possession of 276 acres of the land purchased by her, and that the remainder, as stated in the answer, had been sold to other persons. The land purchased by Clarke had also been sold to others, and he was then insolvent.

The verdict was in favor of the plaintiffs for a half-interest in the 276 acres, this interest being valued at $2,500; for “half of eleven acres,” $2,200; and for cash on hand, $238, with interest on the $238 for fifteen years, $285.60, the whole amounting to $5,223.60.

[553]*553The defendant Candler made a motion for a new-trial, and the court ordered that the motion be granted unless the plaintiffs would write the verdict down to $2,404.54. This the plaintiffs did. Candler then excepted to the overruling of his motion, and insisted that the verdict should have been only for the sum of $286.90, admitted to have been due. It was conceded that several of the alleged errors complained of in the motion for a new trial were cured by writing down the verdict as directed in the judge’s order.

The verdict as reduced accords substantially with one of the bases submitted by the court to the jury to guide them as to the amount of their finding. According to this basis, the extent of Mrs. Craig’s liability was the balance admitted to be due as funds retained by her as administratrix, which with the interest thereon amounted, as we have seen, to $286.90, and in addition to this, the sum of $1,040, “ advantage in value ” received by her in these purchases, with interest for fifteen years, counsel agreeing, for reasons which appear in the record, that interest should be confined to this period. The sum total is slightly in excess of the amount of the verdict as reduced. The $1,040, “ advantage in value,” appears to have been reached in the following manner: The value of the land received by her through these sales, at the prices paid by her, was $4,075 ; the aggregate value of all the land, at the prices paid, was $6,070. Treating her as entitled, by reason of her half-interest in the estate, to half of the lands sold, she received $1,040 more in value than her share, or that much of the share to which the children were entitled, and the court accordingly held her accountable to them for this amount.

It was contended in behalf the plaintiff in error, (1) that “ advantage in value ” was not a proper basis for estimating the amount of Mrs. Craig’s liability; (2) that [554]*554the children were bound by Clai'ke’s receipt as their guardian for their share of the proceeds of the sales; (8) that they were estopped by the judgment in their favor removing Clarke from the guardianship and directing him to pay over to his successor an amount which included their share of the proceeds; (4) that some of the children were barred because of their failure to sue within a reasonable time.

1. Administrators are prohibited from purchasing, either directly or indirectly, at their own sales, property of the intestate’s estate; and such purchases are voidable at the election of the heirs, if they move within a reasonable time. Shine v. Redwine, 30 Ga. 792; Grubbs v. McGlawn, 39 Ga. 674; Alexander v. Alexander, 46 Ga. 290. These plaintiffs, therefore, unless barred by lapse of time or for some other reason, had the right to avoid the purchases by Mrs. Craig and Clarke and to reclaim their share of the property, as they elected in this case to do. If entitled to reclaim their share, they were entitled to a half-interest in the 276 acres which were still in the hands of Mrs. Craig’s executor, and a proper compensation for their interest in that part of her purchase which had passed into the hands of innocent purchasers; and so the jury found by their verdict. The value of their half-interest in this property when purchased by Mrs. Craig, assuming that its true value was the- price paid by her, was $2,037.50. According to the return of the appraisers some time before, the whole amount sold was worth about $1,200 more than what was reported as paid by Mrs. Craig and Clarke. At the time of trial, their interest in the part purchased by Mrs. Craig, as found by the jury, was worth $4,700, and this did not include several acres shown by the deeds to have been purchased by her. The judge, however, in reducing the verdict, placed the liability of Mrs. Craig upon a different basis from that adopted by the [555]

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.E. 645, 90 Ga. 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candler-v-clarke-ga-1892.