Gray v. Obear

54 Ga. 231
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 54 Ga. 231 (Gray v. Obear) 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
Gray v. Obear, 54 Ga. 231 (Ga. 1875).

Opinion

Warner, Chief Justice.

This was a bill filed by the complainant against the defendant as the executor of William Gray, deceased, calling upon him to account for and pay to him the amount of his legacy specified in the testator’s will. On the trial of the case, the jury, under the charge of the court, found a verdict for the defendant. The complainant made a motion for a new trial, on the several grounds sSt forth in the record, which was overruled by the court, and the complainant excepted.

1, 2, 3. The clause of the testator’s will under which the legacy is claimed is in the following words: “I give and bequeath, at my death, to George S. Obear, in trust, for the use and benefit of my son, Edwin T. Gray, the following negroes, (naming them.) I also give to the said George S. Obear, in trust as aforesaid, one-fourth of all the money, bonds, stocks, land, and personal property of every description, negroes excepted, of which I may die possessed, after deducting the bonds hereinafter given to the children of Benjamin Patterson Jenkins, deceased. I will and direct that the property so given to the said George S. Obear, in trust for my said son, Edwin T., shall be managed and controlled by said trustee for the use and benefit of my said son, who is to be restricted in his expenses to the income arising from said property. The said trustee shall have authority to sell or exchange any or all of said property and reinvest the proceeds thereof, if he shall deem it best for the interest of my said son; but said property shall not be liable for the debts or contracts of my said son, except when'made and entered into by the written consent of my said trustee.” The will was executed in July, 1864; the testator died in 1870. The complainant requested [233]*233the court to charge the jury “that the trust here set up by Obear was what the law defines to be an executed trust; was so at the time of its creation, and if not so originally, if the propf shows that Obear has received the property of Gray, rendering his interest certain, and has reduced it to possession or control, that then the trust became executed, and the title and the right of possession vested in Gray, the beneficiary,” which request to charge the court refused, but charged the contrary thereof, that the trust was executory, and not an executed trust; that the testator had the legal right to create it, notwithstanding his son was sui juris; that it was a good trust and must stand; that the testator had the right to put such terms and restrietidns upon the property bequeathed to his son as he saw fit.

The' main controlling question in this case is, whether the trust created by the testator’s will was a legal, valid trust, according to its legal effect and operation under the law of this state, which would entitle the defendant to retain the property in his possession as trustee, and to refuse to account to the complainant as executor of the testator therefor ? In a legal sense, uses and trusts mean exactly the same thing. That the statute of 27th of Henry the VIII-, concerning uses and wills, commonly called the statute of uses, is of force'here as apart of the law of this state, there can be no doubt. One of the -evils that stalute was intended to remedy was that the property of the cestui que use could not be reached by legal process for his debts. The statute therefore executed the use — > that is, it conveyed the possession to the use, and transferred the use into possession, and thereby made the cestui que use complete owner of the property, as well at law as in equity. By the statute of this state, trust estates may be created for the benefit of any female, or minor, or person non compos mentis : Code, sec. 2306. In other words, the testator in this case could have created a trust estate in favor of his son, if he was a minor, during his minority, or if he had been non compos mentis, and the trust would have been a legal, valid, trust. But it is insisted that the act of 1863, which repealed that [234]*234portion of the 2287th section of the Code which declared “ that trust estates cannot be created in any property for any male person of sane mind,” was intended to change the law in relation to that class of persons. We are inclined to think that it was the intention of the legislature, in passing the act of 1863, only to repeal so much of the section of the Code referred to -in the act as prohibited the creation of trusts, express or implied, in any property for any male person of sane mind, and not to repeal that portion of the Code which declared that a trust estate could not be created in any property for any male person of sane mind. The caption of the act and the words in the body of it only refer to the creation of trusts, and not to the creation of trust estates. But be that as it may, that section of the Code which declared that a trust estate could not be created in any property for any male person of sane mind, was only declaratory of what was the common law of force in this state at the time of the adoption of the Code, and the repeal of that declaratory statute, without more, left the common law applicable to that question in full forcé and operation. In our judgment, a trust estate cannot be created in property in this state for the sole benefit of a full grown man, who is sui juris, and be conveyed to a trustee for the purpose of protecting it against his creditors, or for the purpose of depriving him of the free use and enjoyment of such property as the owner thereof. By the act of 1821, (the provisions of "which are substantially embodied in the Code,) all bequests and devises of property, real or personal, shall be held .and construed to vest in the person to whom the same are made, .an absolute, unconditional, fee simple estate, unless it be otherwise expressed, and a less estate mentioned and limited in such bequest or devise: Cobb’s Dig., 169. The testator, by his will, bequeathed and devised the property therein mentioned to ■Obear, in trust, for the use and benefit of his son, Edwin T., without any limitation or restriction as to the extent of his interest in the property conveyed. In other words, Obear, the trustee, was a mere conduit, through which the estate conveyed by the testator passed to Edwin T., the complainant. [235]*235All the trustee had to do, by the terms of the will, was to restrict the cestui que trust from the free use and enjoyment of his own property, and to protect it from the payment of his debts, which is contrary to the policy of the state. There being nothing for the trustee to do, by the terms of the testator’s will, except to restrain the cestui que trust from the free use and enjoyment of his own property and to protect it from the payment of his debts, the statute of uses executed the trust, and transferred the use into possession, and made Edwin T., the cestui que trust, the complete owner of the property, both in law and equity. In an executed trust for the benefit of a person capable of taking and managing property in his own right, the legal title is merged immediately into the equitable interest, and the perfect title vests in the beneficiary according to the terms and limitations of the trust: Code, sec. 2314. It is true that a testator, by his will, may make any disposition of his property he pleases which is not inconsistent with the laws or contrary to the policy of the state: Code, sec. 2399.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Ga. 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-obear-ga-1875.