Erskine v. Klein

126 S.E.2d 755, 218 Ga. 112, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 448
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 26, 1962
Docket21610
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 126 S.E.2d 755 (Erskine v. Klein) 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
Erskine v. Klein, 126 S.E.2d 755, 218 Ga. 112, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 448 (Ga. 1962).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

The issue here is whether a testatrix, at her death, had a devisable interest in certain real property.

Leading up to this litigation were a series of events which may be summarized as follows.,

James Lynch’s will, probated in 1899, devised two tracts of real estate in the City of Atlanta to his daughter Mary Ann Erskine, for life, with remainder to her children who survived her and the descendants of any of her children who predeceased her, per stirpes.

In 1911, Mary Ann Erskine and her eight children, one of whom, Vincentia M. Erskine, was testatrix of the will here, executed an instrument purporting to convey that property to trustees for a period of 50 years. Two of the children were minors. The instrument recited that the real estate was very *113 valuable and likely to greatly increase in value and would be more valuable if kept together rather than disposed of severally and that the life tenant and the remaindermen believed it would be in the best interest of all concerned to convey their interests to trustees. The conveyance was upon the following conditions, limitations and uses: The net income from the property or any reinvestment to be paid to Mary Ann Erskine during her lifetime, and after her death, in equal amounts to her children as long as all of them were in life; upon the death of any of her children subsequent to her death, leaving a child or children surviving, the share of income that would have gone to the deceased parent had he or she continued in life to be paid to the surviving child or children, the property share being held and disposed of as though the parent had continued in life; upon the death of any of the life tenant’s children subsequent to her death, leaving no children surviving, but leaving a husband or wife surviving, so much of the share of income as the deceased by will designated, to be paid to the surviving husband or wife for life, the property share itself to go to brothers and sisters of the deceased, or if no will such share both of income and property to go to the brothers and sisters of the deceased, share and share alike, the child or children of a deceased brother or sister to stand in the place of a deceased parent; and at the end of 50 years the trustees to sell the property, if not previously disposed of, and distribute the net proceeds “to parties of first part [grantors] or their descendants entitled thereto at that time under said Will [James Lynch’s] and the rules of law governing inheritance from such descendants.” It recited that, during the 50 years “. . . no sale to be made of the property or any part of it unless it can be sold for a sum which put at interest of 4% will yield an income double the lease or rental value of the property sold, but provided, that by unanimous consent in writing of all [grantors] it may be sold at a price fixed by them.”

The 1911 agreement also provided that, if any of the life tenant’s children should predecease her, leaving a child or children surviving, or if her minor children should refuse to ratify the agreement upon reaching their majority, this conveyance to trus *114 tees would be affected only as to their interests and would continue binding as to all the other parties. In the event of the life tenant’s children predeceasing her, leaving a child or children surviving, it authorized the trastees to purchase or make settlement for such interest “in such way and manner as may be authorized by a court of competent jurisdiction.”

In 1922 Mary Ann Erskine died, leaving surviving her eight children who were parties to1 the 1911 agreement. Subsequently several of those children died and each, except Vincentia Erskine, the testatrix in the instant case, left one or more descendants.

In 1960 Vincentia Erskine died and her will purported to devise her share of the Lynch property to her sister, Elizabeth Erskine, for life, with remainder to her nephew, Robert Erskine Cline.

In 1961 these two devisees under Vincentia Erskine’s will filed a petition in the Superior Court of Fulton County against the beneficiaries and the trustees of the 1911 agreement seeking a declaratory judgment as to whether that agreement violated the rule against perpetuities and, if so, whether it was valid for the first 21 years of its existence or was void from its beginning, and a declaratory judgment as to the present interests of those entitled to take under the will of James Lynch. Their petition also prayed that the trustees be enjoined from dividing or selling the property encompassed by the agreement and for general relief.

Answers were filed by the defendants. Jury trial was waived by all parties and certain stipulations were made. Upon the trial, judgment and decree favorable to the defendants was entered. Reciting that “The evidence was not in dispute and was fully set forth in the petition and the exhibits attached thereto,” it held that the 1911 agreement was “a valid instrument conveying title to the real property therein described and that the grantors had the legal right to enter into the . . . [agreement] and that [it] should be carried out in accordance with the terms, conditions and provisions thereof, and that the said property should be sold as provided therein and the proceeds of said sales be distributed . . . among the bene *115 ficiaries entitled to receive the same.” It further held “that under the terms, conditions and provisions of said instrument . . . Vincentia Erskine did not have the right, at the time of her death, to dispose of any interest in the real property, as provided in [the instrument], and that no interest in the real property . . . passed under [her] will . . . and that her one-eighth (Vs) interest in the real property or the proceeds of the sale of the same, in accordance with the terms, conditions and provisions of said instrument . . . passed, at the time of her death, to the remaining living children of Mary Ann Erskine in accordance with the provisions of said [instrument] . . .” The judgment then directed the share to be distributed to each of Mary Ann Erskine’s living children and descendants of deceased children.

This judgment is assigned as error.

The ultimate question here is whether Vincentia Erskine, at the time of her death in 1960, had a devisable interest in the real property which James Lynch had willed to his daughter Mary Ann Erskine and her children. The 1911 agreement executed by Mary Ann Erskine and her children holds the answer to that question and we must, therefore, determine the effect of that agreement.

1. The first step in that determination must be a finding as to the precise interests James Lynch’s will gave Mary Ann Erskine and her children, parties to the 1911 agreement, in the property which was the subject matter of the agreement.

The devise was to “my daughter, Mary Ann Erskine . . . for the period of her natural life” and “. . . at her death . . . to go to and become the property in fee simple, of her children who survive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.E.2d 755, 218 Ga. 112, 1962 Ga. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erskine-v-klein-ga-1962.