Manry v. Manry

26 S.E.2d 706, 196 Ga. 365, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 8, 1943
Docket14592.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 26 S.E.2d 706 (Manry v. Manry) 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
Manry v. Manry, 26 S.E.2d 706, 196 Ga. 365, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 354 (Ga. 1943).

Opinions

1. The jurisdiction of a court of ordinary and a court of equity, in respect to bringing proceedings against an executor or administrator for an accounting and settlement, is concurrent.

2. Where a testator directed that the executors reduce the residue of his estate into money for the purpose of paying debts and making distribution *Page 366 among legatees, without designating any time limit so to do, and where the executors held the residue for fifteen years before reducing it to money, a suit filed by one of the legatees within six years after the residue had been reduced to money was not barred by the statute of limitations.

3. Where the executors collected rents accruing while the residue was so held, they became accountable in such suit to the legatees for such rents.

4. There is no absolute rule as to what constitutes laches or staleness of demand, and no one decision constitutes a precedent in the strict sense for another. Each case has to be determined according to its own particular circumstances. A suit of the character indicated in headnote 2 does not on its face show that the plaintiff was guilty of laches.

5. An advancement differs from a debt, in that there is no enforceable liability on the part of the child to repay an advancement during the lifetime of the donor, or after his death, except in the way of suffering a deduction in the child's portion of the estate. Therefore, in a suit against executors for accounting, it was not necessary to allege that the plaintiff had accounted for the advancement made to him.

6. The petition alleged a cause of action for accounting and settlement. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and in dismissing the action.

No. 14592. JULY 8, 1943.
This is a suit by a legatee seeking an equitable accounting for his distributive share of the estate of his father. On September 14, 1942, R. W. Manry filed in Randolph superior court, against J. B. Manry and Walter L. Allen as executors, a petition which as amended alleged substantially the following: J. H. Manry executed a will on September 10, 1915, in which he named the defendants as executors. He died on January 28, 1922, leaving an estate valued at about $75,000. The defendants probated the will and qualified as executors on February 6, 1922. The estate consisted of farm land, tools, supplies, and live stock, which was inventoried by the executors in 1942 at $59,451.10, with a total indebtedness thereon of $42,912.33. The executors held the estate from the time they qualified on February 6, 1922, until November 3, 1936, at which time the property was sold for a consideration of $30,000. Theretofore the executors had received $6000 as proceeds from the sale of timber. They collected also $6000 per year as rent, aggregating $90,000 for the fifteen years they held the property. The total indebtedness against the estate, including interest and taxes for the period it was in their custody, did not exceed *Page 367 $75,000. Petitioner is one of the twelve heirs to whom a share in the estate was given in the will of his father, and he was charged in the will with an advancement of $4000, while other heirs were charged with some advancements. He admitted that the other eleven distributive shares in the estate would be entitled to approximately $42,000 before he received anything. He alleged: "According to the foregoing facts, and after deducting all sums to which said executors are entitled to credit as against this petitioner, said executors are chargeable with a total balance of $38,451.10; and plaintiff is entitled to recover of them jointly and severally one twelfth of said sum as his distributive share in said estate." He alleged that the executors had not been discharged, and had never rendered to the court of ordinary any accounting on the estate, and had never had any settlement and accounting with petitioner. A copy of the will was attached to the petition as an exhibit. The plaintiff prayed, that the executors be required to make an accounting and settlement; and that he recover of them his distributive share of the estate; and for service of process.

The defendants interposed a demurrer on the following grounds: The petition sets forth no legal or equitable cause of action; in so far as the plaintiff seeks to recover rents from defendants in their representative capacity, the petition sets forth no cause of action; it shows on its face that the alleged cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations, that plaintiff is guilty of laches; that the difference between the alleged value of the estate and the alleged indebtedness thereon is insufficient to pay each of the other heirs at law an amount which would be equivalent to the advancement charged to the plaintiff in the will; the petition fails to show that plaintiff has accounted for the advancement made to him, or any other fact sufficient to show that he has a right of action against defendants in the absence of such accounting; it fails to show what, if any, disposition was made of the property of the Manry estate, or that the debts of the estate have been paid, or any other facts sufficient to show that the plaintiff has any cause of action against the defendants; the petition does not set forth a copy of the will of the testator, or a sufficient portion thereof to enable the court to determine what rights, if any, the plaintiff has under such will; and paragraph 12 of the petition sets forth a conclusion of the pleader, without setting forth sufficient facts to authorize such *Page 368 conclusion. The exception is to the sustaining of the demurrer and dismissal of the action. 1. The demurrer on the ground that the plaintiff should have brought his action in the court of ordinary, instead of bringing the same in a court of equity, is without merit. Upon application of any person interested in the estate, where there is danger of loss or other injury to his interest, under the Code, § 37-403, a court of equity will entertain jurisdiction. This section must be construed with § 113-2203, which declares that "a court of equity shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the ordinary over the settlement of accounts of administrators." The same rule has been applied to executors, as will appear from citations to follow. The jurisdiction of a court of ordinary and a court of equity in respect to bringing proceedings against an executor or administrator for an accounting and settlement is co-ordinate and equal. If the court of ordinary has first taken jurisdiction of such proceeding, that court will retain it, unless good reason can be given for the interference of equity. Terry v.Chandler, 172 Ga. 715 (3) (158 S.E. 572); Clements v.Fletcher, 154 Ga. 386 (114 S.E. 637); Howard v. Boone,170 Ga. 156 (152 S.E. 462); Darby v. Green, 174 Ga. 146 (162 S.E. 493); Stroup v. Imes, 185 Ga. 422 (195 S.E. 411); Robinson v. Georgia Savings Bank Trust Co., 185 Ga. 688 (196 S.E. 395). It does not appear from the allegations of the petition in the instant case that the court of ordinary had assumed jurisdiction as to any relief for which the petition prayed. Accordingly the suit was properly in a court of equity.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.E.2d 706, 196 Ga. 365, 1943 Ga. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manry-v-manry-ga-1943.