Gairdner v. Tate

35 S.E. 697, 110 Ga. 456, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 7, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 697 (Gairdner v. Tate) 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
Gairdner v. Tate, 35 S.E. 697, 110 Ga. 456, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 460 (Ga. 1900).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

George W. Dye died leaving a large estate •consisting of lands, money, promissory notes and other choses in action. By his will Gairdner and Grogan were nominated his executors. They qualified, and Gairdner took charge of the moneys, while Grogan managed the lands of the estate. These lands were rented out for about five years before they were turned over to the life-tenants. The property was devised to certain negroes for their lives and after their deaths to their •children. The probate of the will was caveated. Thirteen suits were filed against the executors. They employed five attorneys to represent them in the litigation. Upon application to the ordinary he allowed $5,000 for the services of each of these attorneys and also $5,000 to each of the executors as extra •compensation. An equitable petition was afterward filed by the life-tenants against the executors and the attorneys, seeking to •compel the executors to pay over to them the income and profits which had arisen after the death of the testator, and seeking also to compel the attorneys to return to the estate a portion of the fees allowed by the ordinary, and to compel the executors to account for the extra compensation allowed them. This suit was settled by the parties at interest, the executors paying the life-tenants a certain amount in full of all their claims. Subsequently to this settlement Gairdner and Grogan both died. Mrs. Gairdner was appointed administratrix upon the estate of her deceased husband, and G. C. Grogan was executor of the will of his father, the other executor of Dye’s estate. Tate was appointed administrator de bonis non cum testamento annexo of the estate of Dye. After his appointment he applied to the ordinary for a citation to Mrs. Gairdner as administratrix, and Grogan as administrator, to appear before the ordinary for the purpose óf settling the estate and accounting and turning over to Tate all assets in their hands belonging to Dye’s estate. It appears that the ordinary of Elbert county was disqualified, and the ordinary of Madison county presided in his stead. On the trial before the latter, he decided that there was nothing due to Tate as administrator from the defendants. Appeal was taken [458]*458to the superior court, and on the trial in that court the jury found in favor of Tate for “ all the notes and accounts and fi. fas. belonging to Dye.estate; also seven thousand three hundred and seventy-five dollars as principal and interest cash in the hands of Airs. Lavonia Gairdner.” A motion for a new trial was made, and was overruled by the court. Airs. Gairdner excepted. Tt was said here that an agreement had been made in the court below for the case to proceed against Airs. Gairdner, administratrix, alone, but there is in the record no evidence of such agreement. We presume it was made and acted upon, as the-verdict was against Airs. Gairdner alone.

1. Tate attacked the extra compensation allowed the executors by the ordinary and the fees allowed for the employment of counsel. Counsel for the plaintiff in error insisted that the allowance by the ordinary was final and conclusive between the parties. The judge charged the jury to the contrary, and this charge was made one of the grounds of the motion for a new trial. Section 3489 of the Civil Code declares that “ in no caséis the allowance of extra compensation by the ordinary conclusive upon the parties in interest.” The judge charged this section upon this.subject, and it was not error to do so. The case of Bird v. Mitchell, 101 Ga. 46, relied upon by counsel for the plaintiff in error, does not sustain him in his contention. In that case the administrator had been sued by the distributees and final judgment obtained against him. Afterward suit was. brought in the superior court against his sureties on his bond as administrator. The sureties undertook to set up as a credit, extra compensation which should have been allowed the administrator ; and this court held that they could not do so, because no such compensation had been applied for by the administrator and allowed by the ordinary. It was further held that such a credit must originate in the court of ordinary, and that the sureties could not set it up for the first time in the superior court in a suit against them on the administrator’s bond. It was said in the opinion that until the ordinary has passed upon the question of extra compensation, no other court has jurisdiction to-take it under review. None of this is in conflict with the section of the code on which our present ruling is based. The ordi[459]*459nary passed upon the question of extra compensation, and the superior court was asked to review his decision. That this can be done is, we think, settled by the code.

2. It was claimed by Tate that Gairdner and Grogan had before their deaths paid out a part of the corpus of the estate to the life-tenants, and that he had the right to recover this from their administrators." The defendants contended that by the settlement with the life-tenants all matters pertaining to the life-estates were settled and that Tate was trying to recover property which was a portion of the life-estates. The judge, in charging the jury as to the difference between the corpus of the estate which belonged to the remaindermen and the income and profits which belonged to the life-tenants, instructed them that all interest “ upon money or other evidence of indebtedness, belonging to the estate,” accruing after the death of the testator, belonged to the life-tenants and could be paid over to them by the executors. This was excepted to, as excluding from the consideration of the jury the rents arising from the lands which had been rented out and the rents of which should have gone to the life-tenants. We think the charge was too restricted, under the facts of the case. The estate included lands as well as money and evidences of indebtedness. These lands had been managed and rented out by Grogan, one of the executors. The rents arising from these lands during the continuance of the life-estates belonged to the life-tenants as much as did the interest accruing on money and promissory notes. If the executors paid to the life-tenants the rents as well as the interest, they were justified in so doing, and could not be held responsible by Tate, the administrator. Under the charge as given, the jury could and perhaps did fail to give the executors credit for the rents of the lands.

3. For the same reason it was error to charge that in the settlement between the executors and the life-tenants the former were only authorized to pay the latter the interest accruing on the money of the estate after the death of the testator. The record shows that promissory notes and lands constituted part of the estate. If the notes had been converted into money, then the charge was correct as to them) but the charge certainly ex-[460]*460eluded the rents arising from the lands during the continuance of the life-estates, and these rents, as we have seen, belonged to the life-tenants. The settlement made binds the life-tenants and also binds Tate, the administrator, jso far as the interest of the life-tenants is concerned.

4. After the death of the testator, there was a great deal of litigation about the estate. The probate of the will was strongly-resisted. After it was set up, thirteen suits were brought against the estate, one of them a suit by the county for “back taxes” amounting to’ about $28,000.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 697, 110 Ga. 456, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gairdner-v-tate-ga-1900.