Carswell v. Lovett

4 S.E. 866, 80 Ga. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 4 S.E. 866 (Carswell v. Lovett) 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
Carswell v. Lovett, 4 S.E. 866, 80 Ga. 36 (Ga. 1888).

Opinion

Simmons, Justice.

R. W. Carswell filed- his bill in Burke superior court against Robert O. Lovett, administrator of Mary S. Taylor, Wilhelmina J. Steiner and Sarah C. Heyward, in which he alleged that, on the 9th of December, 1869, he was appointed trustee for Mary S. Taylor; that the trust estate then consisted of two thousand acres of land in Burke county, and certain personal property, mules, corn, fodder, farming utensils, household and kitchen furniture; that the personal property was the accumulation of the trust estate. Said plantation was bequeathed to Mary S. Taylor by her grandfather, Thomas Street, who died in the year 1848. By the 12th and 15th items of the will of Thomas Street, he gave the plantation to her for her own separate use and benefit, free from the debts, contracts and Habilites of her present or any future husband, and after her death to be divided among her children. He appointed her father, Patrick B. Connelly, as trustee of the same. He further alleges that the trustee had died, and that the trust estate was without a trustee .until 1869, when he was appointed by the court on the application of the said Mary S. Taylor; that after he was appointed he [38]*38took charge and control of all the property of said trust estate, and managed, directed and controlled the same in person, for the use and benefit of his cest,ui que trust; that he managed said property during the years 1870,1871? 1872, 1873 and 1871, and applied the income derived therefrom to the payment of the current expenses of said plantation, and the support and maintenance of the cestui que trust; that during these years he purchased and furnished to said trust estate three mules and one horse at a cost of $731, and an ox-cart and wagon at a cost of $190; built corn-cribs and laborers’ houses, and repaired the dwelling at considerable expense; that he furnished the said Mary S. Taylor other large sums of money for the support of herself and her two daughters, who were at expensive boarding-schools, all of which advances for the benefit of the trust estate and for the support of Mrs. Taylor and her two daughters, with interest thereon, amounts to $2,100 or other large sum; that at the close of the year 1871, Mrs. Taylor determined to reside permanently on the plantation, and her daughter, Sarah O. Heyward, and James O. Heyward, the latter’s husband, determined to reside with her; and the complainant turned over to said Mary S. Taylor the immediate management and control of said plantation and planting interests, which she continued to exercise until the time of her death in April, 1886; that at the time of her death, the personal property on said plantation consisted of two mules and wagons, carts, plantation tools, household and kitchen furniture, and certain rent notes which had been taken for rent of part of the plantation for the year 1886. This property, he alleges, was the accumulation from the income derived from said plantation, and is subject to the payment of the debts of said trust estate; and he claims it to be his duty as trustee to sell said property, and to collect said rent notes and apply the proceeds thereof to the payment of the just debts of said trust estate. He claims also the right to rent out said plantation until a sufficient amount [39]*39has been realized to pay said' indebtedness, and then to turn over the real estate to the remaindermen, to-wit, Mrs. Steiner and Mrs. Heyward. He further alleges that Robert O. Lovett, under some pretended claim of right and authority, had claimed possession of certain rent notes and other personal property, and declared it his purpose to collect the notes, and refused to turn over said personal property to the complainant, who claims the legal right as trustee to control the same. He prays for an inj unction to restrain said Lovett from the collection of said notes, and from interfering with the property of said trust estate, and for an order compelling said Lovett to deliver the same over to him that he might sell the same and collect the notes and apply the proceeds to the payment of his debt.

Lovett answered this bill, and set up in his answer that he had been appointed by the ordinary of Burke county temporary administrator on the estate of Mary S. Taylor, and as administrator had made an inventory or appraisment of the personal property belbnging to the said estate ; he admitted that he had the property set out in the bill in his possession, and claimed to hold it as such administrator. He also alleged that the complainant, as trustee, was not entitled to interfere with his administration ; that said trust which is set up in said bill had long since been executed, and the legal title to said land had been in Mary S. Taylor since the year 1866, with remainder over to her children; and that if the complainant had any demand against his cestui que trust, the said Mary S. Taylor, the cause of action thereon accrued in 1874, and the same was barred by the statute of limitations.

Mrs. Steiner and Mrs. Heyward filed their joint answer, in which they admitted that it was true that, by the will of their grandfather, Thomas Street, the land described in the bill was given in trust to their mother during her life, but they deny that they ever were beneficiaries of said trust estate, but on the contrary, asserted that said trust [40]*40estate by its terms ceased at the death of Mary S. Taylor, and said land after her death passed to them in fee-simple. They also alleged that, although said trust estate was created for the benefit of said Mary S. Taylor, the same did not so continue, but that by the act of 1866, the trust was executed, and the legal as well as the equitable title to said property united in said Mary S. Taylor, and she became absolute owner of said property during her life; also that her husband, Ira Taylor, died in 1867; and that though the said Carswell may have been, by order of the chancellor in 1869, appointed as trustee of said property, said order had no force or authority to convert the legal title at that time held by Mary S. Taylor into a beneficial or trust estate; that upon the death of the husband of Mary S. Taylor, the trust became executed, and no other trustee was necessary to manage or control said property; that therefore the personal property upon said plantation, at the time of the death of their mother, belonged to her, and now rightly belongs to her legally appointed administrator. They also claim that if the trust was not executed upon the passage of the act of 1866, or at the death of their father, Ira J. Taylor, it was executed when they became of age; that they became of age in 1872 and 1876. They deny the indebtedness set up by Carswell against the estate, and claim that if he has any debt, it is not against them, but against their mother individually, and is barred by the statute of limitations.

The twelfth and fifteenth items of the will of Thomas Street, as far as concern this property, read as follows :

12th. “.After the death of my wife, Mary S., I give and bequeath all my estate, both real and personal, to the children of my stepson, Patrick B. Connelly, and those born and that may hereafter be born to him in wedlock......
15th. “ I direct that my executor shall, in parceling out that portion of my estate which shall be the share of his female children, . . hold the same in trust for the sole and separate use of said female child, and that in no event shall it be subject to the debts, liabilities or contracts of any husband to whom they shall be married, but that said female child shall have the use of said property during their [41]

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.E. 866, 80 Ga. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carswell-v-lovett-ga-1888.