Hamilton v. First National Bank

180 S.E. 840, 180 Ga. 820, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 22, 1935
DocketNo. 10536
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 180 S.E. 840 (Hamilton v. First National Bank) 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
Hamilton v. First National Bank, 180 S.E. 840, 180 Ga. 820, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 570 (Ga. 1935).

Opinion

Bell, Justice.

On March 20, 1934, Hiles Hamilton, as guardian of Charles C. White, filed in the superior court of Floyd Gounty a trover suit against the First National Bank of Rome to recover 87 bales of cotton as well as the warehouse receipts therefor, as held by the bank. On August 13, 1934, the bank filed in [821]*821the superior court of Chattooga County the present suit in equity against Hiles Hamilton as guardian and as an individual, Mrs. Julia May White as former guardian and as an individual, and Charles 0. White, praying for an injunction against the further prosecution of the trover suit, and for other relief. Hiles Hamilton, as guardian and individually, filed a general and special demurrer to this petition. The court overruled the demurrer on all grounds, and, after hearing evidence which was in substantial accord with the allegations of the petition, granted an interlocutory injunction. ■ To these judgments Hiles Hamilton, as guardian and as an individual, excepted.

One ground of the demurrer was that the plaintiff had a full, adequate, and complete remedy by pleading to the trover action pending in the superior court of Floyd County. Having reached the conclusion that this ground of the demurrer should have been sustained, we will limit our decision to that question, and will state only such facts as are pertinent thereto. The petition alleged the following: On November 12, 1930, the plaintiff loaned to Charles C. White $2500, taking as collateral security the warehouse receipts referred to in the trover suit. There is now due to the plaintiff upwards of $2500 on account of this loan. The amount borrowed by Charles C. White was immediately applied by him as a part of the purchase-price of described real estate situated in the city of Home. Charles C. White went at once into possession of such real estate and remained in such possession until the purported appointment of Hiles Hamilton as guardian on July 6, 1932. From that date until the filing of the present suit Hiles Hamilton, as guardian, has held possession of such property, receiving the rents and profits therefrom. It is now claimed by Hiles Hamilton, as purported guardian, that the said Charles C. White had been adjudged incompetent in the court of ordinary of Chattooga County, Georgia, in the year 1925, and that Mrs. Julia May White, the wife of Charles C. White, had been appointed as guardian at that time; but that Mrs.- Julia May White was later removed as such alleged guardian, and Hiles Hamilton claims to have been appointed guardian by the same court of ordinary on June 6, 1932, as stated above. Petitioner charges that both of these appointments were void for jurisdictional defects specifically alleged in the petition. At the time the plaintiff made the loan [822]*822to Charles C. White it had no knowledge, suggestion, or intimation of the proceedings in the court of ordinary in Chattooga County by which Charles C. White had been held to be incompetent and by which his wife had been appointed guardian for him, nor did the plaintiff have any knowledge or cause to suspect that Charles C. White was not a man of normal mentality. On the contrary, the plaintiff contracted with him in the usual and ordinary course of business, and in doing so acted in the utmost good faith. The appointment of Hiles Hamilton as guardian was subsequent to this transaction, and, according to the record of file in the court of ordinary of Chattooga County, was made after the court had, on April 7, 1932, revoked the appointment of Mrs. Julia May White because she had been unable to execute a bond with a solvent surety company as security, and for other reasons stated in the present petition. Before the filing of the suit in trover, Hiles Hamilton as guardian made a written demand upon the plaintiff for the cotton receipts and the cotton represented thereby, in which demand it was admitted that said cotton and the warehouse receipts therefor were held by the plaintiff as collateral security for an alleged indebtedness due by said White in approximately the sum of $2500 principal. The demand further recited, however, that at the time of this pledge White was mentally incompetent and had been so adjudged, and a guardian had been appointed for him in the court of ordinary of Chattooga County in the year 1925.

In view of the facts that Hiles Hamilton as purported guardian has held continuous possession of the property purchased by Charles C. White in part with the money loaned to him by the plaintiff and has received the rents and profits from said property, the suit in trover to recover the collateral can not now be maintained, and in good conscience and equity ought not to be permitted to proceed until the guardian has' first made an accounting to the plaintiff by paying to it the balance due upon such loan. The plaintiff makes such contention regardless of the validity or invalidity of the appointments of the guardians respectively. By reason of these and other facts stated, each of the purported guardians should be held to have ratified the transaction between the plaintiff and Charles C. White. The petitioner further alleges a ratification by White himself during a lucid interval. . But even if this and its other contentions should be denied, “then petitioner insists that the prop[823]*823erty purchased wholly or in part with its money so loaned to the said Charles C. White should be sold, and that its debt should be paid out of the proceeds arising from a sale thereof, or else that a trust should be imposed upon said property for the benefit of petitioner to the extent of the amount now owing to it by said Charles C. White by reason of the transactions hereinbefore referred to.” Under all the circumstances hereinbefore referred to, the plaintiff “insists that it can not protect all of its rights, and can not properly and efficiently set up all of its contentions in an answer and defense in said trover suit; that it has no adequate and complete remedy at law; and in order to avoid a multiplicity of suits and to protect and assert all of its rights, it is necessary to appeal to a court of equity for relief.” The following were the prayers: “That petitioner have and recover judgment against said Charles C. White for the sum of $25-16.98 principal, with interest thereon at the rate of 8% per annum from and after January 1, 1932, and that petitioner be declared to have a first and special lien upon said cotton and cotton receipts. . . That the order of the ordinary of said county, dated July 6, 1925, purporting to appoint Mrs. Julia May White as guardian of the- person and property of said Charles C. White, be declaxed to be null, void, and of no effect. . . That the order of the ordinary of said county, dated June 6, 1932, purporting to appoint Hiles Hamilton as guardian of the property of said Charles C. White, be declared to be null, void, and of no effect.” The petition also prayed for injunction against further prosecution of the trover action by Hiles Hamilton as guardian; that a receiver be appointed to take charge of and sell the cotton and to hold the proceeds subject to the further order of the court; that the receiver be required to pay to the plaintiff the sum now due to it on the loan made to Charles C. White; that the receiver be further authorized to take charge of the real estate referred to in the petition, and, if the indebtedness to the plaintiff is not paid out of the proceeds of the cotton, then that such real estate be sold and the proceeds thereof be applied upon such indebtedness; and that petitioner have such other and further relief as the court may deem proper in the premises.

In Northeastern Railroad Co. v. Barrett, 65 Ga.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.E. 840, 180 Ga. 820, 1935 Ga. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-first-national-bank-ga-1935.