Haddock v. Perham

70 Ga. 572
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 20, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 Ga. 572 (Haddock v. Perham) 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
Haddock v. Perham, 70 Ga. 572 (Ga. 1883).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

James Hilliard, by item eight of his will (which after his death was duly proved and admitted to record), bequeathed to Henry G. Turner, in trust for testator’s daughter, Arabella B., certain houses and other real estate situate in the town of Quitman, together with household and kitchen furniture, personal trinkets and attire, and a certain sum of money, to be held for her benefit, and “ at her death to go to her children, and if she should die without children,” then the property was to go to testator’s “ heirs at law.” The will was executed and proved in 1872. Arabella B. Hilliard married L. F. Haddock, and soon after her marriage, Turner resigned the trusteeship of the property [574]*574vested in him by this will, and Haddock was appointed by the judge of the superior court of the southern circuit, .accepted the appointment, and gave bond to the ordinary "of Brooks county and his successors in office, with A. J. .Rountree and W. H. Stanley as his sureties, in the sum of ■.itwo thousand dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance of “ all and singular the duties required as trustee agreeably to his appointment and the law; and also -well and faithfully to account of and concerning the said •.trust.” The condition of the bond recited his appointment, and specified, item by item, the property that went . from the former trustee’s into his hands.

Arabella B. Haddock died, leaving no child or children, :and a portion of the heirs of James Hilliard who survived, .and certain persons to whom a portion of the heirs had . assigned their interest in this property, held in trust for her during her life, brought suit on the equity side of Brooks superior court against L. E. Haddock for the recovery of the property thus held by him in trust. Upon the trial of this equity case, the complainants had a verdict, and on that verdict and in accordance therewith, a decree was rendered and signed on the 9th day of November, 1881, by which they recovered all the real estate mentioned in the 8th item of James Hilliard’s will and two hundred dollars, as rent accrued since the death of Arabella B. Haddock. The real property recovered by this decree was turned over to the complainants by L. E. Haddoek, the trustee, and failing to pay the money thereby found against him, execution issued for the amount, on which the sheriff returned nulla lona; and thereupon the ordinary, for the use of the plaintiffs in said execution, instituted a suit against said L. E. Haddock, then of Houston, and A. J. Rountree and William H. Stanley, of Brooks county, in the superior court of said last mentioned county, upon their bond,-executed on Haddock’s appointment as trustee, for the recovery of the unpaid portion of the said decree. The defendants to this last suit appeared at the [575]*575return term thereof and filed a demurrer in writing thereto, upon the grounds following:

(1.) The superior court of Brooks county has no jurisdiction in the case.

(2.) The superior court of Houston county has jurisdiction.

(3.) Courts of common law have no jurisdiction in such cases.

(4.) Courts of equity have jurisdiction over trustees and their bondsmen.

(5.) The laws of Georgia give no right of action against trustees and their bondsmen.

(6.) Because such bonds are given only for the benefit of the cestui que trust and her heirs.

(7.) Plaintiffs have no right of action upon the bond.

(8.) Bondsmen are not liable for rents, issues and profits after the death of life tenant.

(9.) Because, as shown by plaintiff’s declaration, said cause has been fully adjudicated.

(10.) Plaintiffs are not the heirs or successors of Arabella B. Haddock, and do not allege themselves to be such, but are the heirs of James Hilliard, as they allege.

This demurrer was overruled by the court, and the defendants filed a bill of exceptions pendente lite to the judgment overruling the same; thereupon they pleaded the general issue and a special defence on behalf of the sureties, that they were released, because, after their liability had accrued, plaintiffs turned over to Haddock divers articles of personal property embraced in the 8th item of James Hilliard’s will, and valued at seven hundred dollars. This last plea was, on motion, stricken by the court. They then went to trial upon the general issue, and certain special pleas containing the substance of the matters set forth in the demurrer which had been overruled, and a further plea was also filed, that by the terms of the 8th item of James Hilliard’s will, an estate tail was created in Arabella to the property thereby bequeathed; and this was likewise [576]*576stricken by the court. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for two hundred dollars, and interest on that sum from the date of the decree.

Judgment was entered up on this verdict, and a motion was made for a new trial upon the usual grounds, that the verdict was contrary tolaw and evidence, and that the court committed error in relation to the several rulings above specified. This motion was overruled and a new trial refused ; whereupon the defendants brought the case here by bill of exceptions.

In the argument here, several of the errors assigned were abandoned, as those relating to the jurisdiction of the superior courts of Brooks and Houston counties.

1. That courts of law have jurisdiction of this case, see 59 Ga., 755, which covers the point precisely, and shows beyond question that the laws of this state do give a right of action against trustees and their bondsmen.

2. It is a mistake to suppose that the bond in this case Avas given solely for the protection of the cestui que vie and her heirs, and that the plaintiffs who were the ultimate remaindermen, after she had died without issue living at her death, had no right to any action thereon for the protection of their interests, or that they Avere debarred from recovering the rents, issues and profits received by Haddock after his wife’s death, he having possessed himself of the property as her trustee. 48 Ga., 537; 41 Ib., 426. “ The duties of the trustee are not fully performed until he turns the property of the trust over to the beneficiaries, dividing it among them as required by the deed of trust.” 44 Ga., 644. Until this is done, the trust, so far as the accountability of the trustee for the property and its increase is concerned, is not at an end. It would be strange, if there were no power in the courts to compel a recusant trustee to perform this essential duty, or to enforce the undertaking of those who had become responsible for his discharge of the obligation. 58 Ga., 284, 285.

3. We cannot agree to the proposition that the decree, [577]*577fixing the liability of the trustee, is a bar to the right of the plaintiffs in this suit to resort to the bond given by the trustee and his sureties, to recover the money found to be due to them by the decree. It may be true that the decree is not conclusive against the securities, as to the amount found to be due from the trustee, but it is prima faoie evidence of the fact. 57 Ga., 507.

4.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ga. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haddock-v-perham-ga-1883.