Groves v. Williams

68 Ga. 598
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 Ga. 598 (Groves v. Williams) 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
Groves v. Williams, 68 Ga. 598 (Ga. 1882).

Opinion

Speer, Justice.

This was a suit brought in White superior court in favor of the ordinary for the use of A. J. Nichols, assignee, against the defendants on an administrator’s bond, given by the defendants, one as principal and the other as surety on the estate of Moses Horshaw, late of Habersham county, deceased. The declaration contained two counts. The first alleging a breach of said bond, because the principal administrator had failed to pay the amount of a decree recovered against him by M. M. Horshaw, and alleging the issuance of a fi. fa. and a return of nulla bona thereon, and which had been duly assigned to Nichols, the usee of plaintiff; said decree amounting to $484.41, dated 20th of April, 1867, and fi. fa. issuing dated 28th of November, 1874. The second count alleged a general devastavit, charging Williams, as administrator, with having taken possession of the estate of his intestate, sold and converted proceeds to his own use, and his failure to pay over to plaintiff the amount due M. M. Horshaw, under said decree, and which had been assigned to plaintiff.

The defendants filed pleas of the general issue and certain special pleas in defence. On the trial of said cause, the jury, under the evidence and charge of the court, returned a verdict for the defendants. Whereupon the plaintiff made a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and he excepted. The grounds of the motion were :

(1.) The court erred in not striking defendants’ special plea.

(2.) The court erred in admitting in evidence the fi.fa. in the case of E. P. Williams, administrator, vs. Sarah McClure, widow and heir of A. C. Horshaw.

[600]*600(3.) That the court erred in charging the jury as follows: “ That if more than seven years had run from the time of the rendition of the decree in the case of E. P. Williams vs. the heirs of Moses Horshaw, rendered in Habersham superior court, the same was dormant, and could not be set up or enforced in this way without being first renewed by motion or scire facias.”

The special plea which the court refused to strike on motion of plaintiff, in substance, alleged : That the defendant as administrator, obtained a decree in Habersham superior court in the year 1867 against said plaintiff, and the other heirs at law and distributees of said Moses Horsha.w, deceased, for the sum of $5,315.64, one-eighth part of which the said plaintiff’s assignee was and is liable for and due to this defendant as administrator aforesaid, which decree and all other proceedings connected with the same is now here in court shown and legally certified, and by the terms of said decree it was provided that in the event said Alonzo L. Horshaw’s estate (he being one of the deceased heirs of M. Horshaw) should be insufficient to pay off to this defendant as administrator of M. Horshaw said sum of money in full, as mentioned in said decree, then and in that event said plaintiff’s assignee should account and pay over his pro rata share of said deficit. Further defendant averred, that in November, 1877, in the superior court of White county, he, as administrator, obtained a judgment against Sarah McClure, the former wife and widow of said Alonzo Horshaw, for the sum of $3,925.00, and $66.00 for costs, and sold out all the property of said Alonzo M. Horshaw, deceased, for the sum of $2000.00, leaving a balance of $2,000.00 or other large sum of money due and owing by said plaintiff’s assignee to this defendant as administrator of M. Horshaw, and which sum he pleads as a set-off, and prays the same may be allowed.”

Did the court err in refusing to strike this special plea,— is the first error assigned in the motion. The record dis[601]*601closes that Moses Horshaw, defendant’s intestate died in 1859, that defendant became his administrator, and as such in 1866 filed his bill against the heirs at law to settle said estate, and by a decree under that bill some of the heirs were indebted to the administrator, and that the administrator was indebted to some of the heirs, and among them to Melvin M. Horshaw $484.49. That in the decree settling said estate it was provided “ that if the estate of Alonzo L. Horshaw, one of the heirs at law (but now deceased) should prove insolvent, that then the other heirs of Moses Horshaw should contribute pro rata to make up said deficiency.” Afterwards defendant, as administrator of Moses Horshaw, recovered a judgment against the estate of Alonzo L. Horshaw, and after selling out the whole estate there , was a deficiency and balance due on the judgment of about $2,000.00 unpaid, and insolvent, and for his pro rata share of said sum it was claimed Melvin M. Horshaw and his assignee were liable to the administrator, and it was to set-off this liability the plea was filed.

The decree under which this assignee sought to recover of this administrator and his surety on his bond did find an amount due Melvin M. Horshaw by the administrator, of $484.49; but the same decree provided that if the estate of Alonzo L. Horshaw should fail to respond to its indebtedness in full, each heir at law, including the plaintiff, should respond pro rata to pay this deficiency. We see no good reason why, under the plea filed, this proof could not be made at law, and thus the claim sought to be recovered by plaintiff might not be abated or reduced by the pro rata share of the deficiency, for which, by the terms of the decree, he was liable to the administrator. We infer this decree of $484.49 in favor of plaintiff vs. the administrator was based upon the presumption that the estate of Alonzo L. Horshaw was solvent and would pay in full the debt due by it to the estate of Moses Horshaw; but in the event it failed so to do, then in effect [602]*602the recovery had against the administrator was to be reduced to the extent of said deficiency, to be charged against each heir ratably. It is true this deficiency might have been ascertained by a supplemental proceeding, and an amendment of the decree in which it is now left uncertain and contingent; but when suit is brought to recover the amount due on this decree against the administrator and his securities, why may not a court of law, by way of plea, ascertain and apportion this deficiency and thus settle these issues by one trial between these parties?

We see no error, therefore, in the court overruling the demurrer to this special plea, and this also disposes of the error assigned in the second ground of the motion ; for if the plea was maintainable at law, then it follows the evidence offered under it was admissible that went to show the deficiency for which the plaintiff was ratably liable.

2, 3. Did the court err in holding and charging the jury as complained of in the third ground of the motion, “that the decree of the plaintiff vs. the defendant as adminis. trator, if rendered in April, 1867, and no fi. fa. issued thereon until November, 1874, the same was dormant and could not be enforced unless revived ?”

It will be noted that this suit to recover on this administrator’s bond rested upon a devastavit alleged to have been committed by failing to pay this decree upon which a return of nulla bona was made.

Section 2914 of the Code declares, “no judgment hereafter obtained in the courts of this state shall be enforced after the expiration of seven years from the time of its rendition when no execution has issued upon it.”

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Bluebook (online)
68 Ga. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groves-v-williams-ga-1882.