Jones v. Nisbet

142 S.E. 164, 165 Ga. 826, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 16, 1928
DocketNo. 6070
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 142 S.E. 164 (Jones v. Nisbet) 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
Jones v. Nisbet, 142 S.E. 164, 165 Ga. 826, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 71 (Ga. 1928).

Opinion

Beck, P. J.

Albert C. Jones and others brought an equitable petition against John Lord Nisbet, as executor of the last will and testament of Mrs. Cora B. Williams, et al. The allegations of the petition disclose that the plaintiffs are the kinspeople of Mrs. Williams, who died testate on or about March 22, 1924, and whose entire estate, with minor exceptions, was left to the Jesse Parker Williams Hospital, to be thereafter incorporated; and that this estate was derived from property left to Mrs. Williapis by her deceased husband, Jesse Parker Williams, who died intestate on or about August 5, 1913. The basis of the action against the executor of Mrs. Williams was an agreement alleged to have taken place between Jesse Parker Williams and his wife, whereby she promised that if he would refrain from making a will and would thus allow his estate to pass to her, there being no children, she would take possession thereof for the purpose of carrying out his known and expressed intention and his wishes, to wit: that a one-half undivided interest was to go to his own kin who would have been his heirs at law except for his marriage, and a.one-half undivided interest to those who at his wife’s death would have been her heirs at law, except her two sisters, subject to a reasonable charge for the support of each of said sisters during their natural lives. This agreement, it is alleged, was repudiated by the wife, who made no provision whatsoever for those who would have been her heirs at law, except for her two sisters. The plaintiffs prayed that the executor be required to carry out and perform the trust, promise, agreement, and contract of his intestate, and that title to half of the property of Jesse Parker Williams coming into the hands of the executor be decreed to be in the plaintiffs, subject to certain charges; with an alternative prayer for damages in the event the executor is unable to do so. The defendants filed an answer and amendments. A motion was made to refer the case to an auditor. Ponding this motion the executor filed a cross-petition in which he distinctly denied the validity of the claims of plaintiffs, but nevertheless he asked direction of the court with respect to the same. The auditor assigned the case for a hearing on January 1, 1927. Before this time the plaintiffs took an order dismissing the case. On the day set for the hearing it was insisted by the executor that under his cross-petition he had a right to proceed with the hearing for the purpose of adjudicating the validity of the claims of [828]*828the plaintiffs. A demurrer to this cross-petition was interposed, in which it was contended that it set forth no cause of action; which demurrer was overruled. The plaintiffs then moved that the auditor dismiss the entire case, which motion was overruled; and the cause proceeded upon the cross-petition. The auditor found that the plaintiffs had no claims against the estate of Cora B. Williams. Exceptions to this report were filed, and, after argument before the judge of the superior court, the cross-petition was amended. By this amendment it was claimed that the defendant executor was entitled to maintain the cross-petition as a bill of peace. The court overruled the exceptions of the plaintiffs, and the auditor’s report was made the judgment and decree of the superior court. The plaintiffs filed a bill of exceptions and brought the case to this court for review.

Counsel for defendants insist that no question is presented for decision, except the question as to the auditor’s fee. This position taken in argument is based upon the contention that the action of the court belpw in overruling the exceptions to the auditor’s report is not excepted to “in any way in the bill of exceptions;” that the sole exception in the bill of exceptions is to the final decree of the superior-court judge, by which the findings of the auditor are made the findings of the court and decree rendered in accordance therewith. The portion of the bill of exceptions involved in the consideration of the question is as follows: “To said rulings and findings of the auditor the plaintiffs filed their exceptions, both of law and fact, which exceptions came on to be heard in due course, before one of the judges of the Fulton superior court; and thereafter, to wit, on the 19th day of April, 1927, the court passed an order and decree making the findings and conclusions of the auditor, both of fact and of law, as the findings and conclusions of the court, and a final decree was therein entered by the court, in which said cause was adjudicated adversely to the plaintiffs. To this ruling, finding, and decree the plaintiffs excepted, now except, and assign the same as error upon the ground that each and all of said findings and said decree was contrary to law and against the principles of justice and equity.” It is insisted by defendants that the exception thus stated has reference only to the ruling making the findings of the auditor the judgment of the court and the decree rendered in accordance [829]*829with the findings of the auditor, and that there is nothing in the bill of exceptions showing that the plaintiffs are excepting to the action of the court in overruling their exceptions to the auditor’s report, and that consequently no question is presented to this court as to whether the findings of the auditor are correct. With this contention of the defendants we can not agree. When in the bill of exceptions it is recited that the court passed an order making the findings and conclusions of the auditor, both of fact and law, the judgment of the" court, that a final decree was entered in which the cause was adjudicated adversely to the plaintiffs, and that to this ruling and judgment the plaintiffs excepted and assign the same as error upon the ground that “each and all of said findings and said decree was contrary to law and against the principles of justice and equity,” this is a sufficient exception to the action of the court in overruling the exceptions to the auditor’s report.

The auditor properly overruled the demurrer to the cross-petition, based upon the contention that it set forth no cause of action, and properly overruled the plaintiffs’ motion to dismiss the entire case. It is conceded by the defendants that no subject can be made the basis of an answer in the nature of a cross-petition unless it would also have justified an independent original petition in equity; and it is contended that the matter set out in the cross-petition in the present case, and the relief prayed for, would have justified an independent original proceeding in equity by the executor, if he could have obtained jurisdiction of the plaintiffs (who would in that event be defendants to such original proceeding); and the defendants also claim that the only substantial advantage to which the executor is entitled under the law he has obtained by bringing the case in the nature of a cross-petition, to wit, that all questions of service of his proceedings are eliminated, as the non-residents (who are the plaintiffs and consequently defendants to the answer in the nature of a cross-petition) are before the court, having voluntarily submitted themselves to its jurisdiction, and the cross-petition having been filed before any attempts on their part to withdraw. Service of the cross-petition was acknowledged by counsel for the plaintiffs. There can be no question that the matter set up by the answer in the nature of a cross-petition is germane to the controversy disclosed and initiated by the original [830]*830suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.E. 164, 165 Ga. 826, 1928 Ga. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-nisbet-ga-1928.