Johnson v. Gordon

30 S.E. 507, 102 Ga. 350, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 508
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 10, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 S.E. 507 (Johnson v. Gordon) 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
Johnson v. Gordon, 30 S.E. 507, 102 Ga. 350, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 508 (Ga. 1897).

Opinion

Atkinson, J.

Johnson & Harris were a partnership engaged in business at Macon, Georgia. Johnson died April 14, 1893, and Harris was left as surviving partner. The partnership was insolvent; Harris was insolvent; the estate of Johnson was sufficient to pay his individual debts, but insufficient to pay both these and the firm liabilities remaining after applying to the latter the firm assets. On the death of Johnson, J. S. Rodgers as his administrator took charge of his estate. [352]*352Subsequently, he was removed and W. M. Gordon was appointed administrator de bonis non. The widow of Johnson, with'the assent of the administrator and the approval of the ordinary, on September 12,1894, elected to take in lieu of her dower an amount of money to be estimated and determined by the commissioners appointed to assign dower. She agreed to accept certain lands at the value fixed in the appraisement of the estate, in place of money, and pay to the administrator in cash any excess of appraised value over the amount awarded her in lieu of dower. The commissioners awarded her $2.0,-931.55, which was, on November 22, 1895, paid to her by the administrator in land as agreed. This sum did not include rents and profits, or interest on dower from the death of Johnson to date of payment, and all of her rights as to this were expressly reserved. It was agreed that the amounts of rents and profits, or interest on dower, were each $1,010.20 a year from the death of Johnson. The widow had occupied the mansion-house from Johnson’s death, and admitted her liability to account for its value for occupancy, which aggregated $6,500, if allowed the rents and profits or interest claimed.

At the time of Johnson’s death he was indebted to the Macon Fire Insurance Company. This indebtedness was represented by two notes, each of which was secured by a deed to a separate piece of land. These notes were each in the usual form of a note secured by collateral, and recited that it was secured by such deed, describing the deed given to secure it. Each note contained a clause stating that the collateral securing it should also secure any other debt due from Johnson to the insurance company. The firm was also largely indebted to the Exchange Bank of Macon, which indebtedness was partially secured by the pledge of certain shares of stock of the Planters Real Estate & Warehouse Co., the individual property of Johnson, delivered to the bank. After Johnson’s death, Harris as surviving partner transferred to the bank as further security for its debt nearly all of the choses in action due. to the late firm. With the approval and by order of the ordinary of Bibb county, and by direction of a decree of the superior-court, Rodgers as administrator made a settlement with Harris, the [353]*353surviving partner. By direction of this decree, in such settlement the estate of Johnson assumed the debts of the firm of Johnson & Harris and agreed to pay Harris $2,000, the administrator giving him a note as evidence of the same. Harris as surviving partner under this agreement turned over certain assets of the late firm to the administrator of Johnson, including all notes and accounts not previously transferred to the Exchange Bank.

On March 11, 1895, Gordon as administrator de bonis non and individually, with the Macon Fire Insurance Company and four other creditors of the firm of Johnson & Harris, brought an equitable suit to marshal assets, and for direction to the administrator in the payment of debts. The contentions and claims made at the trial, which are material to be here considered, were:

1st. Mrs. Johnson’s contention that the sum of $20,931.55 received by her in lieu of dower should ,be augmented by the rents and profits (or interest on the sum assigned to her) from Johnson’s death to November 22, 1895, less $6,500.00, the value for rent of the mansion.

2d. The claim of the individual creditors of Johnson that they should be fully paid out of the individual assets before the firm creditors should be paid anything; or, if this was not allowed, that they should be paid on individual debts a sum equal to the amount received by the Exchange Bank pro rata upon its claims, before firm creditors should participate.

3d. That the Exchange Bank should receive nothing from Johnson’s estate until the individual creditors had received an amount pro rata on their claim, equal to what the Exchange Bank had received from its collateral on its debts.

4th. The claim of the Macon Fire Insurance Company based upon the notes and security-deeds held by it.

The presiding judge, who by agreement tried the case without the intervention of a jury, overruled the contentions of the widow and of the individual creditors. He held that the sum allowed in lieu of dower was in full of all of the widow’s claims, and that she should receive nothing for rents and profits or interest. He decided that all of the creditors, both individual [354]*354and firm, were entitled to “share equally in the estate of Johnson, the Exchange Bank sharing for the balance due to it after crediting all sums received from the collateral held by it. The claim of the insurance company for full payment was sustained. We will now discuss the questions raised in this case by the assignments of error.

1. Is Mrs. Johnson entitled in addition to the sum of money found in lieu of dower, or the land taken by her instead of cash, to one third of the rents and profits of ^üíe lands of the estate from the time of Johnson’s death to the time she received such cash or land? The court below held that, in estimating the amount to be allowed in lieu of dower, the value of the lands at the time of the assignment in lieu of dower, and Mrs. Johnson’s age at the time of Johnson’s death, were to be taken into consideration. This was unquestionably correct. The law contemplates that the value of the lands at the time of the assignment shall be the value taken by the commissioners in determining the sum to be set aside absolutely. The statute contemplates that the lands shall be sold by the representative of the estate, and that out of the proceeds the absolute sum shall be set aside. This court has held that the price realized at such sale determines the value of such lands, and is conclusive as to such value. Smith v. Smith, 39 Ga. 226, 230. In the case at bar, by consent of all parties and under a consent decree, land was received in lieu of money. By analogy, the value of such land at the time the assignment in lieu of dower was made is to be taken as the basis for appraising the sum to be allowed instead of dower. Mrs. Johnson’s age at the time of her husband’s death should be taken in estimating the value of her dower-estate. The widow’s right to dower accrued instantly upon the husband’s death. Truett v. Funderburk, 93 Ga. 686, 690. Marriage, seizin, and death of the husband while seized complete the right. Chapman v. Schroeder, 10 Ga. 321. When she receives possession, it is of an estate to which she has had the right of possession since the death of the husband. It is an estate from widowhood, and embraces as well that part immediately succeeding the husband’s death as any later period. And this being so, when assigned, her right to [355]*355•one third the income which has accrued between the death of the husband and the assignment of dower is well settled. Austell v. Swann, 74 Ga. 278, and authorities therein cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.E. 507, 102 Ga. 350, 1897 Ga. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-gordon-ga-1897.