Kaiser v. Kaiser

25 S.E.2d 665, 195 Ga. 774, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 293
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 13, 1943
Docket14457.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 665 (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, 25 S.E.2d 665, 195 Ga. 774, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 293 (Ga. 1943).

Opinion

Reid, Chief Justice.

A full statement of the main pleadings in this case will be found in its former appearance in this court in Kaiser v. Kaiser, 194 Ga. 658 (22 S. E. 2d, 390), where the case was here on review of the court’s refusal to grant an interlocutory injunction as prayed for by plaintiff. It was not then necessary to decide whether the case should be treated “as one against a person who is not a trustee because the purported trust is invalid,” or whether it was one seeking to recover against a trustee because of his breach of duty arising under a valid executory trust; the court holding in that decision that under the record the plaintiff was not entitled to an injunction upon either theory. But since the case now to be decided depends entirely upon the effect and construction of the pleadings, in cfrder to fully understand the rulings presently to be made, it may be necessary to take a full view of the statement of the pleadings as reported in. the other case. They will not be repeated. The brief for the defendant contains an analysis of the pleadings and the events of the case from its inception up to a final judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s actipn, to which the present exceptions are taken. We have carefully compared this analysis with the record, and in the main it may be adopted as the abbreviated history necessary to have before us to *775 determine whether error was committed in dismissing the ease. Omitting certain conclusions, the statement appears substantially as follows: (a) On January 21, 1942, the plaintiff filed his petition in which he took the position that the will of Nat Kaiser did not create an executory trust, and in which he asked possession of his property and an accounting for past income from it. (b) The defendant filed demurrers to so much of the petition as alleged that the will of Nat Kaiser did not create a valid, executory trust, (c) On February 27, 1942, the plaintiff voluntarily filed his first amendment to his petition, amending paragraph 7 thereof, and reaffirming his contention that the will of Nat Kaiser did not set up a valid trust, (d) On March 5, 1942, the plaintiff filed a second amendment to his petition, denominating it as count two, in the first eight paragraphs of which he again set forth his contention that Nat Kaiser’s will did not create a valid trust. In the remainder of this amendment, the plaintiff proceeded to make numerous averments in respect to damages he claimed, which averments obviously rested on the theory that the will in question did create a valid trust.

On April 3, 1942, the case was called for a hearing before the trial court. Defendant’s counsel at that time served counsel for plaintiff with a copy of defendant’s demurrer to count two. In this demurrer, defendant again attacked the allegations of the petition as amended, in which it was averred that no valid trust was created; and in the demurrer defendant also pointed out that plaintiff was trying to proceed on inconsistent theories, and that he should be required to elect as between them, (f) Thereafter the court proceeded to hear defendant’s demurrers to the original petition. (There was never any hearing on defendant’s demurrers to count two of the petition.) The court entered an order overruling the demurrer to the original petition, and heard evidence on the application for injunction and receiver, adjourning the' hearing to April 13. In the meantime the defendant, acceding to the ruling of the court construing the trust to have become executed upon the death of Nat Kaiser, tendered to the plaintiff what purported to be all of the property held under the purported trust. This tender was rejected by the plaintiff, and on that date before the resumption of the hearing the plaintiff filed another amendment to his petition, which struck from .his pleadings all *776 allegations, both those in the original petition and those contained in the amendments, which were to the effect that the trust set up by Nat Kaiser’s will was executed and invalid. In this situation the hearing on plaintiff’s application for injunction was resumed, and on April 33, 1943, the court entered an order denying injunction and receiver. It was that order which was reviewed in Kaiser v. Kaiser, supra, (g) On May 33, 1943, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the petition and to dismiss the amendment of April 13, 1943. In this motion defendant pointed out that plaintiff, after invoking a ruling that no valid trust was creaied by Nat Kaiser’s will, had revamped his petition so as to make it proceed on the sole theory that the trust set up in said will was valid. Defendant further pointed out that plaintiff could not be heard to contend that the trust was valid after having invoked an opposite ruling, (h) On November 4, 1943, defendant filed his second motion to dismiss plaintiff’s petition and all amendments thereto. This motion renewed all grounds of the earlier one, and in addition pointed out that certain paragraphs of counts one and two sought to add a new cause of action, different from that alleged in the original petition, (i) On November 35, 1943, the court sustained this second .motion and dismissed the action. To this order the plaintiff now excepts.

We have taken some pains, although aided by briefs of counsel in doing so, to redraw the picture, because an exact understanding of the state of the pleadings is required tó get an intelligent view of the question made. The court, by a ruling which stood unreversed and unexcepted to, had construed the item of the will on which the plaintiff’s cause depended, and the effect of this construction by the ruling on the demurrer to the original petition was to hold in accordance with the plaintiff’s contentions that the trust had been executed and that he was entitled to recover the property passing under this item of the will. The demurrer to count 3 had not been and never was passed upon; but it is to be • remembered that the plaintiff’s case, whether stated in the original petition or by amendment in "count two,” depended upon this item of the will. The trust was either executed or it was a valid, subsisting, executory trust. There was no middle ground, and no matter upon consideration of which count adjudication might have been made, the necessary effect of it was to construe .the item of the *777 will and thus adjudicate the main question in the case. A construction that it had one effect would preclude' a construction that it had the other. Let it be again borne in mind that at the time the motion to dismiss the action was sustained the plaintiff had by amendment eliminated from the case all allegations and pray'ers predicated upon the theory that the trust had become executed, and that plaintiff was entitled to the property. The defendant contends that the ruling on the demurrers had become the law of the case; that plaintiff had elected by invoking such ruling in his favor to pursue that remedy, and was estopped and bound thereby. We find it unnecessary to denominate, by way of giving a name in the technical sense, the exact field within which a ruling in these circumstances should be classified; that is, whether it became the law of the case, estoppel by judgment, estoppel by position, or by election of remedies.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 665, 195 Ga. 774, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-v-kaiser-ga-1943.