Miles & Co. v. Peabody

64 Ga. 729
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 64 Ga. 729 (Miles & Co. v. Peabody) 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
Miles & Co. v. Peabody, 64 Ga. 729 (Ga. 1880).

Opinion

Jackson, Justice.

McGough, as administrator de bonis non with the will annexed on the estate of John R. Dawson, brought a bill for direction and distribution against the heirs and creditors of the estate of decedent, and the creditors of one of the heirs, John F. Dawson, who had some of them served process of attachment by garnishing .the administrator, John F. Dawson being a non-resident of the state of Georgia. The entire case, fact and law, was submitted to the chancellor without a jury by consent, he made a full decree thereon, and to that decree Mary Johnson, as one of' the creditors of the estate, and Miles & Co., as attaching credi[733]*733tors of John F. Dawson, excepted, and their exceptions bring the case before us. McGough died pending the case here, and Peabody was made a party as administrator de ionis non Gum testmnento annexo in his stead.

1. Some objection was made to the equity of the bill, but a mere statement of the facts will show that .the equity of it abounds. Questions of advancements among the heirs at law of the deceased and the amount due to each, and claims of creditors of the estate proper’' and their validity, had to be adjusled, and then claims of the attaching creditors and other creditors of one of the heirs a.nd their priorities, had to be ascertained and adjudicated before the administrator could move safely in disposing of the estate.

So that, to use the figure of my late able associate, Judge Bleckley, the cause revolved around two centres — the one, John R. Dawson, deceased, whose heirs and creditors were contesting for the spoils which were heaped in that greater centre, and attracted them; and the other, John F. Dawson, an insolvent heir, about whose smaller pile his creditors hovered, drawn thither by a like attractive force. To divide either pile so as not to involve the administrator in danger and loss, the interposition of chancery might well be invoked, and to distribute both according to law made the task more difficult, and necessitated the aid of equity, on its general jurisdiction of all matters of trusts, as well as that which arises from a state of things which would multiply suits and waste both heaps in expenses and costs. The case therefore actually abounds in equity, and was rightfully held in court and adjudicated so as to settle the conflicting interests.

First let us see how the estate was divided among the creditors, and after they were paid, among the heirs, and next how the share of John F. Dawson was divided among his creditors.

2. The claim of Mary Johnson, who petitioned for the allowance of a debt due to her father from the estate of deceased, was rejected, and she excepted thereto. She [734]*734comes in as the heir at law of her father, who rendered service to the widow in making out returns for her as former administratrix, but the father of Miss Johnson was not of counsel for the administratrix, nor was he a lawyer; and if Miss Johnson had been before the court as administratrix on her father’s estate, we hardly think she could have recovered for the mere administrative and clerical duty of making out returns. The administratrix should have paid these charges out of her perquisites or per centum of commissions, given her for this among other purposes. - We do not think that section 2546 of our Code, which allowed the administratrix to employ labor or service for the benefit of the estate, was intended to apply to any duty which devolved ordinarily upon the administratrix herself. It is codified from the act of 1865-6, and has reference mainly to laborers on farms, and the like service — certainly not to that labor or service which the law devolved on the administrator himself. Besides, Mary Johnson had no standing in court, and a decree for her would not have barred a suit for the same matter if administration were taken out on her father’s estate; nor is it claimed that this claim was ever assigned to her to prosecute under section 2536 of our Code by any regular administrator.

3. The court allowed a charge of thirty dollars for a vault in which to inter the remains of Mrs. Dawson, the life tenant of the property, the proceeds of which, sold after her death, were being distributed, and to this ruling Miles & Co. excepted. Whilst it is true that the life estate of Mrs. Dawson terminated the moment that the breath left her body, and then John F. Dawson, one of the children and heirs of her husband, had the right to enter in remainder ; yet, as that husband by will had provided for her liberally, intending her to live as his widow should, and to pass to the death-bed decently, as the relict of a man of property, and as this money was spent or labor expended to give her decent interment, we cannot think that the will of the testator was violated when her burial expenses were [735]*735paid out of the proceeds of that property which until her death she had enjoyed. Whilst as a general rule the life tenant should unquestionably provide while living out of the rents, issues and profits for burial, we do not think that the rule should embrace a case where the entire distribution turns on the will of the testator, and that will should be construed, if possible, so as to carry into effect his intentions, and it is no strain to say that his intentions were not only that his widow should live comfortably, but be buried decently. It certainly would affront all ideas of civilization, to say nothing of Christianity, to allow heirs at law, who become entitled to the remainder when the mother dies, to debar her from decent burial, if she did not chance to lay up enough from her income from the life tenancy to insure it; and we do not believe that creditors of such heirs in such cases should be permitted to occupy any ground on which their debtor could not fairly and uprightly stand. Inherently, in such a case, burial of the body of the life tenant adheres to, and is part of, the legacy for life given by husband to wife.

4. The ordinary was entitled to his fees and they were properly awarded to him.

5. Payment to Henry R. Dawson was properly awarded for a wagon and team furnished the estate during the administration of the mother, and to which the heirs at law assented. John F. Dawson having assented thereto, he cannot now complain that this amount was allowed to his brother for a wagon and team actually worn out in the service of the common estate, and thus increasing its income and enhancing its value. The creditors of John F. Dawson must stand in his shoes and take that only which he could legally claim, unless there had been some charge of fraud or collusion between him and his brother, of which there is no pretense. As he is estopped from objecting to that debt which was incurred by his mother when administratrix de bonis non by his acquiescence, his creditors are also estopped in so far as they seek to collect their claim out of his undistributed share of his father’s estate.

[736]*7366. The only heirs entitled to a share, after paying creditors, are Mrs. Gray and John F. Dawson, the insolvent heir, whose inheritance is in controversy among his creditors; Mrs. Gray’s share was awarded to her, about which there is no controversy; leaving the share of John F. Dawson to be disposed of. Three creditors contended for payment out of it; there was not enough to pay all, and the chancellor directed that each be paid pro rata; and to this decree Miles & Co.

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181 S.E. 697 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1935)
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68 Ga. 463 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1882)

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Bluebook (online)
64 Ga. 729, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miles-co-v-peabody-ga-1880.