Estill v. Estill

94 S.E. 304, 147 Ga. 358
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 17, 1917
DocketNo. 47
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 304 (Estill v. Estill) 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
Estill v. Estill, 94 S.E. 304, 147 Ga. 358 (Ga. 1917).

Opinion

Hill, J.

John Holbrook Estill died on November 9, 1907, leaving a will, the eighth item of which, so far as material here, is as follows: “To the Citizens & Southern Bank of Savannah one sixth part, which it shall hold as trustee upon the following uses and trusts, namely: to pay the income therefrom to my son Marion W. Estill, during the term of his natural life, for the support of himself and the support and education of his children should he [359]*359leave any; and after his death, said income to be applied to the support and. education of his-children, the principal to be equally divided between them when the youngest child attains the age of twenty-one. years. In the event of the death .of either of said children during, minority and. without leaving issue, the share of the one so dying shall go to the survivor or survivors, children of a deceased child to represent the. parent. If, however, my son Marion W. Estill should depart this life leaving no child or issue of child surviving him, then the one sixth part shall be equally distributed between the distributees of the other five sixths in the manner provided in this item.” After the death of Marion W. Estill on December 27,19X5, his widow* Elizabeth Pate Estill, who had been appointed guardian of Marian Virginia Estill, the reputed minor child of Marion W. and Elizabeth Pate Estill, claimed that the minor was their child and was entitled to receive through her guardian the income of the property theretofore paid by the trustee to said Marion W. Estill until his death. ^ On refusal of the trustee, Citizens & Southern Bank, to pay over the income, the guardian brought suit against the trustee to recover it. Whereupon the trustee filed. a petition for interpleader, alleging substantially the above-recited facts; and further, that certain of the defendants had notified petitioner that' Marion W. Estill left no child, and that Marian Virginia Estill was not his child and wa's not entitled to receive any of the income in controversy. All of the parties defendant claimed to be interested in the property described and the income therefrom; and the claim of the guardian for the minor child conflicts with the claims of the other parties. The defendants John H. Estill, Holbrook T. Estill, and Walter Estill are sons of the testator. Maude M. Key is the widow of John S. Estill, another son who died since the death of his father. She has since married again and. is the guardian of the three minor children, Annie Lloyd Bazemore, Frederick Albert Estill, and Margaret Elizabeth Estill, who are the children of James S. Estill. Marian J. Estill is the-trustee for her minor child, Edward Van Estill, a son of Walter Estill. Helen Van Dyke, Clara Estill, and Stewart Anthony Estill are the children of Holbrook T. and Annie H. Estill. Petitioner as trustee is in such position that it, can not safely settle the conflicting claims, .and it is prayed that all the defendants be required to answer and interplead to the end [360]*360that the question whether Marian Virginia Estilh is the child of Marion W. Estill, and as such entitled to the income heretofore paid Marion W. Estill, 'may be adjudicated.

The court ordered the parties defendant to interplead. Elizabeth Pate Estill, guardian of Marian Virginia Estill, and Marian Virginia Estill by her guardian, filed answers setting up the claim of the minor to the trust fund, and praying that the trustee be directed to pay the income from the trust property to the guardian. M.aude Hill Scarborough, one of the defendants named, filed an answer in which she admitted some of the allegations' of the petition, and stated that she could neither admit nor deny others. By amendment, allowed over objection, she set up her claim to ah-interest in the trust fund. John H. Estill et al. filed, an answer in which they admitted all the allegations contained in each paragraph of the petition (one of which alleged that all the defendants claimed an interest in the trust fund); and afterward amended their answer to the petition for interpleader and averred, that “during the life of 'Marion W. Estill, realizing in the event he should die without issue said Elizabeth Pate Estill, his wife, would not receive any of the money or property coming from the estate of said John H. Estill, and that the same should revert in the manner mentioned and described in the petition for interpleader, the said Marion W. Estill and Elizabeth Pate Estill conspired to perpetrate a fraud by obtaining possession of a child whom they proclaimed to the world as theirs in order that the portion of the estate set apart for Marion W. Estill upon his death wduld not be entirely lost to Mrs. Elizabeth Pate Estill; that in pursuance of said fraudulent purpose said Marion -W. Estill and Elizabeth Pate Estill obtained possession of a child now known as Marian Virginia Estill, which child is not the child of said Marion W. Estill and Elizabeth Pate Estill; and the said Elizabeth Pate Estill, as the guardian of the said Marian Virginia Estill, is now seeking to claim said portion of said estate for said child. Walter Estill and Maude M. Hey (formerly Estill), as guardian of her three minor children, show to the court that it is absolutely necessary for the preservation of that portion of the estate rightfully belonging to them that an attorney should be employed to represent their interest in this litigation, and, in the event said child is -found to be not the child of Marion W. Estill and Elizabeth [361]*361Pate Estill, pray that they be allowed to draw on that portion of-said estate bequeathed to them under the terms of the will of the late John H. Estill to pay their reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in this behalf.” Counsel for Marian Virginia Estill and for Eliza-' beth Pate Estill objected to this amendment, on the grounds, that the defendants named had not filed any claim to the trust' fund which was the subject of the litigation, and therefore there was not enough to amend by; that, not having filed any claim to the' fund, they were not parties to the litigation; and that what purported to he an amendment was but an original. pleading and should have been filed at the first term. The court overruled the objection, and this ruling was excepted.to pendente lite.. Maude Hill Scarborough offered ■ an amendment alleging that she was entitled to one sixth of the money held by the trustee bank, which was allowed over objection; and this ruling’was likewise excepted to. At the-trial term counsel for Marian Virginia Estill and for Elizabeth Pate Estill, guardian, moved that the court enter a decree in favor of Marian Virginia Estill, or to direct a verdict in her favor. The motion was overruled, and they excepted. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the claim of Marian Virginia Estill. A motion for a new trial was made by John H. Estill, Holbrook T. Estill, Maude M. Key (née Estill), guardian of Annie Lloyd Bazemore (née Estill), Frederick Albert Estill, Margaret Elizabeth Estill, the three minor children just named, and Walter Estill. A motion was made by Marian Virginia Estill and Elizabeth Pate Estill, guardian, to dismiss the motion for a new trial on the ground that the movants for new trial had filed no claim to the trust fund and were not- parties to the litigation. The motion to dismiss was overruled, and this ruling was excepted' to. A new trial was granted as to all the movants therefor; and Marian Virginia Estill and Elizabeth Pate Estill, guardian, excepted.

1. There is no merit in the contention of plaintiffs in error that the.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 304, 147 Ga. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estill-v-estill-ga-1917.