Fleming v. Hughes

27 S.E. 791, 99 Ga. 444
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 27 S.E. 791 (Fleming v. Hughes) 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
Fleming v. Hughes, 27 S.E. 791, 99 Ga. 444 (Ga. 1896).

Opinion

Simmons, Chief Justice.

Charles DeLaigle, of Bichmond county, Georgia, executed his last will on December 29, 1865, and it was duly probated after hise death on May 3, 1866. By the 9th item he made the following devise: “To my son Louis I give, devise and bequeath three other such parte [meaning three fourths of his estate after the payment of his debts] to be held by him in trust for the sole and separate use of my daughters, Martha, Mary and Emma, one part to each respectively for and during the terms of their respective lives, with remainders to such child or children of my said daughters respectively as may be living at the [445]*445time of their respective deaths, and in default of such child or children, then to the right heirs of each of my said daughters respectively.”

After paying the testator’s debts, his executors, on April 17th, 1867, assented to the above devise, and allotted the property, now in dispute to said Louis DeLaigle as trustee for the said Emma DeLaigle during her natural life, with the remainder and executory devise over, as mentioned above. At that time Emma DeLaigle, the life-tenant, was a minor and unmarried. Louis DeLaigle, the original trustee, died in 1867 after the division of the testator’s estate, and on October 14, 1868, while said Emma De-Laigle was still a minor and unmarried, Andrew W. "Walton, upon her application, was appointed as trustee for her •alone by the judge of the superior court of Richmond county. She attained her majority on January 9, 1869, being still single. Walton resigned his trust on March 5, 1869, and on the next day E. E. Yerdery was appointed trustee for her alone, upon her application, by the judge of said court, at 'chambers. No bond was required of Yerdery, and none was given by him.

In 1870, while the said Emma DeLaigle was yet unmarried, and, as above stated, over the age of twenty-one years, upon the joint petition of herself and said Yerdery, the judge of the superior court of said county of Richmond, at chambers, granted an order authorizing said Yerdery to sell the fee in said property for reinvestment, and it was sold by him under said order in that year. The said Emma DeLaigle, the life-tenant, married in 1872, and died January 13, 1894, leaving one child then living by said marriage, who attained her majority‘March 17, 1893, and who is the plaintiff in this case, and the defendant in error in this court. The suit for the land in dispute was commenced by this child and sole remainderman on March 15, 1894, or less than two months after the death of the life-tenant. A verdict was rendered for the plaintiff. The [446]*446defendant moved for a new trial, which, was refused by the court below. Whereupon the defendant excepted, and brought his case to this court.

1. The quantity of estate held by the original trustee, Louis DeLaigle, is not material to a correct decision of this case; and yet we think, aside from this conclusion, that such estate only extended over the life-tenancy, and was liable to cease, by the purposes of the trust ceasing, before the life-tenant’s death. The extent of a trustee’s estate is measured by the purposes of the trust, whether the estate is granted or devised to the trustee alone, or to him and his heirs. This is a principle of law sustained by all authorities. Accordingly, in either event, the trustee may hold a chattel interest, an estate for the life of a life-tenant, or a fee. There being no need of a trustee to preserve the contingent interests in this case, as will be hereinafter fully explained, it follows that the purposes of the trust in this case were, first, to protect the estate of the life-tenant during her minority, «and, secondly, from the marital rights of any husband with whom she might intermarry. For these purposes the trust, when created in the year 1865, was good. Code of 1882, §2306, 2307, which is the same law embodied in the Codes of 1863, 1868 and 1873; Fears v. Brooks, 12 Ga. 195-197. But when those objects ceased by the life-tenant arriving at the age of twenty-one years, after the married woman’s act of December 13, 1866, without marrying, the estate of -the original trustee, were he then in life, would have become wholly passive and executed, and the life-tenant and contingent beneficiaries would have then held legal estates, just the same as if the testator had originally devised the property to “Emma DeLaigle during her natural life, with remainder to such child or children as she might leave living at the time of her death, and in the event of no such child or children, then to her «own right heirs.” Code of 1882, §2314; Liptrot v. Holmes, 1 Ga. 381-389-391; Wiley v. Smith, 3 Ga. [447]*447559-560; Adams v. Guerard, 29 Ga. 651, 672, 677; Milledge v. Bryan, 49 Ga. 397, 409, 410; Rogers v. Cunningham, 51 Ga. 40(1); Glover v. Stamps, 73 Ga. 209; Knorr v. Raymond, 73 Ga. 751 (11 c and d); Kile v. Fleming, 78 Ga. 1 (1 and 3), 4; Harrold v. Westbrook, 78 Ga. 5, 11; Blalock v. Newhill, 78 Ga. 245; Carswell v. Lovett, 80 Ga. 36, 41, 42; East Rome Town Co. v. Cothran, 81 Ga. 361 et seq.; DeVoughn v. McLeroy, 82 Ga. 696, 698; Baxter v. Wolfe, 93 Ga. 334. See also, Payne v. Sale, 2 Dev. & Bat. Eq. (N. C.) Rep. 455; Ellis v. Fisher, 3 Sneed (Tenn.), 231, 65 Am. Dec. 52; Ware v. Richardson, 3 Md. 505, 56 Am. Dec. 762, 769, 775; Schaffer v. Lavretta, 57 Ala. 14, 18, 19; Ward v. Amory, 1 Curtis (U. S. C. C.), 427, 428; Webster v. Cooper, 14 How. (U. S.) 488, 499, 500; Fearne on Contingent Remainders, 57-59; 3 Jarman on Wills (R. & T.’s ed.) 70-81. And but for the fact that the decisions of this court hold that a naked trust for a minor is executory during the minority of the beneficiary, under §2306 of our code, the statute of uses would have passed the legal estate imtanter to the first taker under the devise in this case. Walker v. Watson, 32 Ga. 264; Bowman v. Long, 26 Ga. 142, 146, 147; Pope v. Tucker, 23 Ga. 484; Ramsay v. Marsh, 2 McCord S. C. 252, 13 Am. Dec. 717, and note 721; Snelling v. Lamar, 32 S. C. 72, 17 Am. State Reports, 835, 837, 838.

As shown by the decisions of this court first above mentioned, and the authorities cited therein, our married woman’s act of 1866 terminates a trust far quicker than the statute of uses. Bnder the latter statute, a trust for a woman, married or single, became executed only by the death of herself or her husband in her lifetime; while under our act first mentioned, the trust, if created before, terminates at the date of the act, if the cestui que trust was then twenty-one years of age, and if afterwards, upon like condition, it became a legal estate insta/nter, from the [448]*448■date of the deed, or the death of the testate, whether the estate be solely for such beneficiary, or there is a limitation over in trust, or not. Therefore, the cases of Askew v. Patterson, 53 Ga. 209, Ford v. Cook, 73 Ga. 215, Knorr v. Raymond, 73 Ga. 764, Cushman v. Coleman, 92 Ga.

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27 S.E. 791, 99 Ga. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-hughes-ga-1896.