Cochran v. Hudson
This text of 36 S.E. 71 (Cochran v. Hudson) 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
In the year 1888 Jerry Wood died leaving a will, the portion of which necessary to the present discussion was as follows; “I give, devise, and bequeath to my beloved wife, A. M. Wood, all my property, both real, mineral, and personal, wherever it may be. I also give to her my dwelling-house and the use of all improvements, also [certain described lots of land], to have and to hold the same her natural life, and after her decease I devise, bequeath, and therefore in the follow[763]*763ing manner I desire and direct the above be equally divided between my four daughters as follows,” etc. The wife and one Cochran were appointed executrix and executor of the will. It seems that Cochran alone qualified. The wife lived until 1897. After her death, the four daughters mentioned in the will filed their equitable petition against Cochran, the executor, for an account and settlement, claiming that their mother (Mrs. Wood) had been given only a life-estate in any of the testator’s property. The executor claimed that these daughters were not entitled to recover, as legatees under the will, any of the personal property of the testator; that the will gave to the widow of the testator an absolute fee in the personal property, and a life-estate in the described realty. The case was referred to an auditor to report on the accounts of the executor. The auditor was given power to decide questions both of law and of fact which arose in the litigation. In his report on the law of the case he held that the contentions of the executor were sound, and that the will gave to the widow a life-estate in the real property only, and an absolute estate in the personalty. So far as we can understand the auditor’s report and the exceptions thereto, he seems to have refused, in the hearing before him, to admit parol evidence as to the intention of the testator in regard to the personalty and as to the value of the personalty which went into the hands of the executor. The plaintiffs filed two exceptions of law to these rulings of the auditor; first, that he had erroneously construed the will in holding that it gave the widow a life-estate in the land only, and an absolute estate in the personalty; and, second, that it was erroneous to exclude the evidence above mentioned. When the case came on for a hearing in the superior court, the judge sustained these two exceptions and ruled that the will gave the widow a life-estate only in all of the property of the testator, both real and personal, and that the daughters took the remainder in all; and also that the auditor erred in excluding the evidence above mentioned. The auditor, while he excluded the evidence as to the intention of the testator and as to the value of the personalty which went into the hands of the executor, made a calculation as to the liability of the executor in case the evidence should have been admitted. On this calculation he found that [764]*764the executor was liable, in the event the widow was entitled to a life-estate only in the real and personal property of the testator, in a certain amount. No exceptions of fact having been filed, the judge, having ruled on the questions of law as above detailed, directed a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount so found by the auditor. The only questions argued here were as to the alleged error of the judge in sustaining the two exceptions to the auditor’s report, that is, as to the construction of the will and the admissibility of the evidence.
Judgment affirmed, with direction.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
36 S.E. 71, 110 Ga. 762, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cochran-v-hudson-ga-1900.