Colley v. Duncan

47 Ga. 668
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Ga. 668 (Colley v. Duncan) 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
Colley v. Duncan, 47 Ga. 668 (Ga. 1873).

Opinion

Trippe, Judge.

James Eh Daniel died in the year 1851 testate. By one clause of his will he gave certain property to his wife, and in another clause directed other property — a plantation and all the property thereon — to be kept together, and as each one of his children attained majority his or her share should be advanced, and so on until the youngest became of age, his wife having an equal share therein. His wife, who was appointed executrix, afterwards intermarried with John P. Duncan, and her lettei’s testamentary abating, he took out letters as administrator de bonis non, etc. Mrs. Duncan afterwards dies testate, and by her will, after other legacies, gave of her interest in her first husband’s estate 1,000 00 to each of her children of the first marriage, some of them being yet minors, and the balance of said interest to her children by the second marriage. In 1869, one of the Daniel children having become of age and his share received by him, and another, Lucy, being also of age and having received her portion of the land, said Lucy and James Eh Daniel, the only minor child of that set of children, commenced suit in equity in Sumter Superior Court against Duncan, as administrator, etc., of said Daniel, deceased, charging waste, etc., asking for an account and settlement and for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the estate.

In October, 1871, a decree was rendered appointing a receiver and directing the sale of the land and personal property of the estate of said Daniel, deceased, and that the proceeds should be brought into Court and divided between the minor Duncan children and James Eh Daniel, after payment of certain costs, etc. The land then remaining and to be sold by said decree [670]*670was one thousand two hundred acres lying in Calhoun county, and which constituted the shares so far as the land was concerned that went to the minor, James K. Daniel and to Mrs. Duncan (formerly Daniel.) Previous to this decree John P. Duncan, as guardian of the two minor children of the Duncan set (Madge and Sallie) had applied to the Ordinary of Calhoun county and had a homestead, etc., set apart for said minors out of said land and personal property, to-wit: six hundred and eight acres thereof. The receiver appointed in the decree was proceeding to make sale as therein directed, when Madge and Sallie Duncan, by their next friends, C. W. Duncan and G. W. Kidd, filed a bill against John P. Duncan, James K. and Lucy Daniel and the receiver, to enjoin the sale, attacking said decree, asking its modification, etc., and asserting their rights to said homestead, etc. John P. Duncan was not served with this bill. A temporary restraining order was granted by the Chancellor. Subsequently, at Chambers, by consent of counsel, it was agreed and approved by the Judge, that the sale should proceed and said decree remain undisturbed. The receiver proceeded to sell the land and the personal property, and John Colley, the plaintiff in error, became the purchaser of the land and most of the personal property — some one thous- and two hundred acres, at the price of $2,295 00. Colley paid the purchase money, which was, by order of the Court, after payment of costs and receiver’s commissions, paid out to the attorneys of John P. Duncan, administrator, etc., of Daniel, Sallie and Madge Duncan and Lucy and James K. Daniel. It does not appear that Duncan, the guardian, or' the next friends of the Duncan minors received the money. Colley was proceeding to take possession of the land, etc., from Charles W. Duncan, who had previously been placed in possession of the same as the homestead of the Duncan children by John P. Duncan, their guardian, and Charles Duncan had attorned to Colley as the owner of the land.

Madge and Sallie Duncan, by their guardian, John P. Duncan, filed their bill against Colley, charging that the decree under which said sale was had, was void, so far as it concerns [671]*671said minors, asserting their rights under the homestead assignment, and praying an injunction restraining C.olley from taking possession, etc.

The Chancellor granted a temporary injunction, and on a hearing, made the same permanent. ' At said hearing all the pleadings in the suits above referred to, with many exhibits and affidavits, were heard by the Judge granting the injunction. Some of these affidavits state that the attorneys had no right to make the compromise or consent that was made on the bill filed by the next friends of the minor Duncan children; that it was against the authority and consent of the next friends — one of them swearing that he did not know it only a day or two before the sale; that at the sale both of the next friends, at the suggestion of Colley, gave notice of the claim of the minors, and at Colley’s suggestion, also made out a claim bond with Colley as security, which the receiver refused to take, saying he could not receive a bond. One affidavit states that affiant heard Colley, on the day of the sale, say “it would not do for a man to buy a law suit; ” that the land was worth five dollars per acre, and that affiant would have given more for it than was bid but for the claim set up by the minor children, under the homestead law. Charles ~W. Duncan states in his affidavit, that Colley, on the day of sale, “informed him that the attorneys had compromised the interests of the children.” John P. Duncan swears he had no notice of the sale or the decree, or the proceedings on the bill by the next friends, etc. Defendant Colley excepts to the order granting the injunction, and that is the error complained of. In the argument many points were made, that there was no equity in the bill; that the Duncan children could not take the homestead which was allowed, and that the same was void; that the claim of the Daniel children under Mrs. Duncan’s will, would absorb every thing, and these minors would get nothing; that the decree appointing a receiver and ordering a sale, and the subsepuent ratification thereof in the proceedings instituted by the Duncan children, the sale and distribution as stated, were conclusive and barred this application.

[672]*672"We do not think that either of these objections or any other that was urged or which occurs to us, should prevent these children from the investigation they ask, and that until it is had they may be protected by matters remaining as they are now, so far as concerns the possession of the property claimed by them, as a homestead, or which might come to them under their mother’s will. Whether their claim as a homestead be valid or not, they have rights in their mother’s share in this property. As regards the point that they would eventually get nothing, because all would be taken up by the claim of the Daniel children, that may be a question when that issue is made. It cannot be determined in an application for injunction. The have a right to a hearing on it when the issue is made.

With reference to the decree appointing a receiver and di-. recting a sale and distribution of all the property which was unadministered of the estate of James X. Daniel, we would say, it is a serious question, whether or not the same is valid, so far as the interest of Mrs. Duncan is concerned, or so far as it affects the interests of the minor Duncan children; Her representative was not a party, nor was any one a party as the representative of these minors. All but one of the Daniel children had drawn his or her share of the land. The remaining portion, in any view of the case, constituted the shares of the other minor, James K. Daniel, and of Mrs. Duncan, and yet, in a bill filed by Lucy and James X. Daniel, against the administrator

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Related

Gober v. Richards
128 S.E. 668 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Ga. 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-duncan-ga-1873.