Cunningham v. Schley

68 Ga. 105
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 Ga. 105 (Cunningham v. Schley) 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
Cunningham v. Schley, 68 Ga. 105 (Ga. 1881).

Opinion

Speer, Justice

Defendants in error filed their bill in the court below in 1879, alleging that they were the children of George Schley, deceased, who died testate in 1866, reciting in his will that he owed a certain sum to his children under a marnage settlement by the terms of which the property therein conveyed was settled upon his wife, the mother of said defendants in error, for life, with remainder to her children. Said settlement was recorded in Jefferson county, but the records were destroyed and the original lost.

The original property covered by said settlement was [106]*106sold by their father, and other property subsequently bought by him, including a plantation of three hundred and twenty-five acres, immediately east of and adjoining the city of Augusta, known as Eldorado, the title to which he took in his individual name.

As soon after their father’s death as the law permitted, the defendants in error filed their bill against his executors for the purpose of tracing their trust funds into property purchased by their father in his individual name.

About the time the Schley children filed their bill aforesaid, the Cunningham children, plaintiffs in error, also filed their bill against the executors of George Schley to recover a large balance claimed to be due them by said George Schley as their guardian.

Both of these cases were consolidated by consent and tried as one before Judge Andrews, who on-day of -- — — 187 — , rendered a decree giving Eldorado to the Schley children, and holding the balance of the estate to be the individual property of the said George Schley, and subject to the payment of some $200,000.00, found by said decree to be due the Cunningham children by George Schley as their guardian. Said decree was afterwards affirmed by the supreme court. See 41 Ga., 426.

Pending said litigation Robt. and Wm. Schley, executors of George Schley, resigned their trust, and C. A. Rowland was - appointed administrator de bonis non, and made a party in said consolidated case. Soon after the affirmance by the supreme court of the decree above mentioned, the Schley children demanded o.f said administrator the possession of Eldorado. In the meantime a general creditor of - George Schley had obtained a judgment against his estate and levied the fi. fa. on Eldorado, and for this reason said administrator refused to comply with said demand, and filed a bill of interpleader against the Schley children and general creditors of the estate, which was insolvent, and said Cunningham children, calling upon them to interplead and settle the priority of their claims [107]*107as to Eldorado, said Cunninghams had the bill dismissed-as to them.

The case under said bill of interpleader was referred to-a referee to decide whether Eldorado was assets in .the hands of the administrator to pay general creditors or. the property of the Schley children. The referee reported the property was assets in hands of • administrator to pay debts due general creditors, to which report the Schley children filed exceptions. Pending these exceptions, the Schley and Cunningham children entered into a written agreement, whereby the Schley children engaged to surrender for the benefit of the Cunningham children, in such form as the latter might select, all their claims against Eldorado which they had by the aforesaid decree rendered by Judge Andrews. In consideration of which, the Cunningham children agreed that, if it should be decided they were entitled to the proceeds of Eldorado under their judgment against the estate they, the Cunningham children, would cause to be paid to the Schley children, out of the proceeds of said place, the sum of $2,500.00 with interest from date, and would also cause to be paid to said Schley children the sum of ten per cent, on the net proceeds of a cotton claim of said Schley’s estate against the United States, if said claim should be recovered, and it be held the Cunningham children were entitled to the same on their judgment.

The Cunningham children selected, as the mode by which said surrender should be made, an order on the minutes of the court, setting aside the decree of Judge Andrews giving the Schley children Eldorado and a retraxit entered by the Schley children on the minutes of the court, both of which were done.

At same time said entry was made and. entered on the minutes, the Cunningham children were reinstated as parties to said bill of interpleader, and at the following term entered a judgment nunc pro tunc on said retraxit', declar[108]*108ing Eldorado to be assets in the hands of the, administrator de bonis of George Schley for payment of debts according to their priority, and that the Cunningham children will be first paid in full over all other claims.

This decree was rendered in 1875. Rowland resigned as administrator, and R. E Cunningham was appointed. Prior to Rowland’s resignation, R. E. Cunningham had rented Eldorado from Rowland for several years, and had given his notes for the same, to the amount of more than $9,000.00, which were unpaid. Rowland turned over to Cunningham, as administrator, all the unadministered assets in his hands. Executions were issued in favor of the Cunningham children upon the judgments against the estate of George Schley, and were placed in the hands of their counsel, W. W. Montgomery, Esq. He ordered them levied upon the Eldorado property, for the purpose of collecting fees he claimed due hirn by the Cunningham children.

They filed a bill to restrain the levy, complaining that Montgomery had grossly mismanaged their case, and especially, of the compromise above referred to.

The Cunningham children having failed to comply with their agreement, the Schley children fiied their bill against Rowland, administrator, and against the Cunning-hams, to compel compliance with said agreement, pending which R. E. Cunningham became administrator in place of Rowland, as above stated, and in his answer stated that Montgomery had recorded an attorney’s lien on Eldorado, and it would be inequitable to force a sale of Eldorado under the circumstances. He admitted having received, on the cotton claim against the government referred to in the contract, the sum of $8,351.42.

A decree on this bill was taken by agreement, that the Schley children should recover cf the Cunningham children $835.00, less five per cent., with interest since August, 1876, to be paid at once; also that the Schley [109]*109children should recover of the Cunningham children $2,500.00, with interest,, to be paid out of the proceeds of Eldorado. That the sale of said place should be made as soon as possible after the final decision between the Cunningham children and Montgomery was had. And if said sale was not made in sixty days after said decision, then the complainants should have execution against the Cunningham children individually, and R. E. Cunningham administrator of George Schley, for the amounts.

A final decision was made in the case between the Cunningham children and said Montgomery at the April term, 1878, and though nearly twelve months have elapsed, the Cunningham children have taken no steps to have Eldorado sold; nor have they paid complainants any part of the $2,500.00 decreed to them.

They allege that to issue execution on their judgment against the Cunningham children would be unavailable since they have no property to levy on, and especially is this true of R. E.

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2 S.E.2d 622 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1939)
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Bluebook (online)
68 Ga. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-schley-ga-1881.