Kaiser v. Kaiser

22 S.E.2d 390, 194 Ga. 658, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 640
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 16, 1942
Docket14241.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 S.E.2d 390 (Kaiser v. Kaiser) 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
Kaiser v. Kaiser, 22 S.E.2d 390, 194 Ga. 658, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 640 (Ga. 1942).

Opinion

1. The exception is to the refusal of the judge to grant an injunction and receiver, and to require the defendant, sued as trustee, to give bond. If the case be treated as one against a person who is not a trustee because the purported trust is invalid, the plaintiff does not show that he is entitled to any of the extraordinary relief sought.

2. The same result follows if it be adjudged that the trust is a valid, executory trust, and if the plaintiff be not precluded from so insisting; the defendant averring his willingness and intention to resign as trustee, he having tendered to the plaintiff the corpus of the estate, together with a check which he avers represents the entire income therefrom in his hands; and it not being alleged or shown that the defendant intends to dispose of or encumber any of his property.

No. 14241. SEPTEMBER 16, 1942. REHEARING DENIED OCTOBER 16, 1942.
This case came to this court on exception to the order of the judge, denying the prayers for appointment of a receiver and for a temporary injunction restraining the defendant from alienating his property, and the prayer that the defendant be required to give bond, as prayed. The petition was presented to the judge on January 20, 1942. It set out the will of Nat Kaiser, and referred specifically to item 8 thereof, as follows: "I will and desire that one fifth of my estate, except as hereinbefore provided, be vested in my son Herbert Kaiser, as trustee for my son Irving R. Kaiser, and for the remaindermen as indicated in this item. I desire my son Irving R. Kaiser shall receive the net income from said one fifth of my estate as long as he shall live; but upon his death, I desire that said portion of my estate in this item referred to shall go to the person or persons designated to receive the same by the will of my said son, Irving R. Kaiser. In the event the said Irving R. Kaiser should fail to dispose of said property by his will, it shall go and belong in fee simple to my children then living and the descendants of any deceased child of mine, the descendants of a deceased child to take per stirpes. In the event said grandchild or grandchildren, or any of them, shall not be of age at the time they may become entitled to any of my estate, then I appoint the said Herbert Kaiser as their testamentary guardian hereunder, relieving him as such from having any appraisement made. Any portion of my estate which in any way may go to my son, Irving R. Kaiser, under this will shall be included within the trust provided by this item, and subject to the conditions thereof."

The petition named as defendant "Herbert Kaiser as trustee for Irving R. Kaiser, as designated under the terms of item 8 of the will of Nat Kaiser." It was alleged, that a division in kind of the property left by Nat Kaiser was ordered by the ordinary of Fulton County, pursuant to the return of appraisers appointed for said purpose upon petition of the executors of said will; that the executors, pursuant to said order, delivered to Herbert Kaiser, in trust for petitioner, 596 shares of the capital stock of the Nat Kaiser Investment Company, a corporation; that the defendant has held and managed the said stock as such trustee; that said trust became executed as soon as it became operative, because petitioner was then sui juris; that said trust was subject to be annulled by the court, because at the time of the filing of the petition the petitioner *Page 660 was not, on account of mental weakness, intemperate habits, wasteful and profligate habits, unfit to be entrusted with the right and management of property, and if there was ever any reason why the property devised to petitioner should be put in the hands of the trustee, such reason no longer existed; that the income from said property which has come into the hands of said trustee is considerably in excess of the amounts which have been paid to petitioner by said trustee; and that the defendant trustee has threatened to discontinue making monthly payments to petitioner of $115 per month, which said trustee claims to be the income from said property, in the event petitioner should seek the aid of the court in annulling said trust; that petitioner is entitled to the possession and control of said property, and to have the legal title decreed to be in his name, during his life, with full power to manage and control the same. He prayed as follows: (a) That a full accounting be had between the petitioner and the defendant; and that the defendant as trustee be required to account to petitioner for all moneys or other things of value received as trustee, and that the court by decree render judgment against the defendant for all sums improperly converted by him or retained by him in the management of said property. (b) That the court construe said will, and that it be adjudicated that item 8 of said will does not create an executory trust for Irving R. Kaiser, and does not create an executory trust for any remaindermen, that such trust as was created by item 8 became executed on the death of Nat Kaiser, that said trust be annulled, and that the petitioner is entitled to have title and possession of his share of the estate as set out in said will. (c) That the court decree that petitioner is entitled to cast the votes represented by said shares of stock at any and all stockholders meetings of the Nat Kaiser Investment Company, so long as petitioner lives. (d) That the defendant be enjoined from discontinuing payment to petitioner of $115 per month, until further order of the court; and for other relief as might be deemed proper.

The defendant demurred to paragraphs 7, 11, 13 and 14 of said petition upon the grounds, that the allegations of each of said paragraphs, to the effect that the trust was not an executory one, but an executed trust, and that petitioner was entitled thereunder to the possession and control of the property, set forth a legal conclusion; that said legal conclusion is in conflict with the provisions of *Page 661 item 8 of the will of Nat Kaiser; and, as to paragraph 7, that it affirmatively appears from item 8 of the will that the trust referred to in said paragraph is a valid, subsisting, and unexecuted trust.

The plaintiff amended paragraph 7 of the original petition, by enlarging on his contention that the trust became executed as soon as it became operative. Also, by adding count 2, its allegations being the same as in the original petition relating to the trust having become executed at the death of Nat Kaiser, and at the time of the filing of the petition, because the reasons for the trust no longer existed; and alleging that the trustee had failed to convert said stock into a legal investment; praying for damages because of such failure and the loss to petitioner and said trust estate by reason thereof; alleging insolvency of the trustee; and praying for the same relief as in the petition, with additional prayers for appointment of a receiver, removal of the trustee and appointment of a successor, temporary injunction restraining the defendant from alienating his property pending final termination of the suit; for judgment in damages, and for rule absolute requiring the defendant to give bond as trustee. The court signed an order dated February 27, 1942, restraining the defendant as prayed, and requiring him to show cause why the prayers of count 2 should not be granted. A copy of said amendment and order was served on counsel for the defendant on March 3, 1942.

On April 3, 1942, the case came on for an interlocutory hearing before Judge Davis. Defendant's counsel then served plaintiff's counsel with a copy of defendant's motion to dissolve the restraining order, and with a copy of his demurrer to count 2.

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Related

Kaiser v. Kaiser
25 S.E.2d 665 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 390, 194 Ga. 658, 1942 Ga. LEXIS 640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-v-kaiser-ga-1942.