Mitchell v. Turner

44 S.E. 17, 117 Ga. 958, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 400
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 44 S.E. 17 (Mitchell v. Turner) 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
Mitchell v. Turner, 44 S.E. 17, 117 Ga. 958, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 400 (Ga. 1903).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This case turns mainly upon the proper construction to be placed upon a deed, the material portions of which are as follows: “ This indenture made on the 9th day of February, A. D. 1875, between Methvin S. Thomson, of the county of Bibb, of the one part, and Isaac Johnston, for the benefit of, and to belong to all of his children that may survive him and his wife, of the county of Bibb, of the other part, witnesseth that the said M. S. Thomson, for and in consideration of the sum of two hundred dollars ($200.00) in hand paid at and before the sealing and delivery of these presents, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, has granted, bargained, sold, aliened, conveyed, and confirmed unto the said Isaac Johnston, for his children, as aforesaid, [a described lot [959]*959of land]. To have and to hold the said lot of land' . . to the only proper use, benefit, and behoof of the said Johnston and wife and children at their death, their heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns, in fee simple. And the said M. S. Thomson the said bargained premises unto the said Isaac Johnston, wife and children, their heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns, against the said M. S. Thomson, his heirs, executors, and administrators, . . shall and will warrant and forever defend.” Immediately preceding the signatures of the witnesses is the following: “ Erasures and interling, so as to give the use to the wife during life, made before signing.” The settled rule in this State is, that, disregarding all technical rules of construction, effect shall-be given to the intention of the maker of the instrument, as far as the same is lawful and can be gathered from its contents. See, íd this connection, Heath v. Miller, 117 Ga. 854; Crumpler v. Barfield, 114 Ga. 570. Construing this deed as a whole,-it seems to be clear that the grantor intended to create an estate for Johnston and his wife during their joint lives, with a life-estate to the survivor, and a remainder to their children. It is unnecessary to more definitely determine the exact character of the interest in the property each of these persons took. The question is whether the estates created were legal or equitable estates ; or, in other words, whether a trust was created for the estate taken by the wife or that taken by the children. There was no legal difficulty to be encountered in creating a legal estate in Johnston and his wife during their lives and a legal remainder in their children, whether vested or contingent. If there were no children in life at the time the deed was executed, which seems from the record to be the fact, there was no legal obstacle to be encountered in the creation of a legal estate in remainder, contingent upon both their birth and their survivorship of their parents. In other words, every estate which was created by the deed could have been a legal estate, and some of them could have been equitable estates. It was not necessary, either for the creation or preservation of any of the estates; that resort should have been had to' a trust .Such being the case, it is simply to be determined whether, from all the language of the instrument, it can be inferred that it was the intention of the parties that a trust estate was to be created, either for the life-estate of the wife, or the remainder estate of the children, as it was competent for the parties to create a trust for a mar[960]*960ried woman, if at the same time a limitation over was provided for. See, in this connection, Sinnott v. Moore, 113 Ga. 908 (4).

The only language in the paper that can be resorted to as indicating a purpose to create a trust estate is the words, “for the benefit of,” in the first clause, and the words, “ to the only proper use, benefit, and behoof of,” etc., in the habendum and tenendum clause. The words last quoted can not be looked to in order to determine this question, for the simple reason that they are usually to be found in that clause in all deeds. The case is therefore within narrow limits. Do the words “for the benefit of,” in the first clause of the deed, convert what would have been otherwise legal estates into equitable estates? While no form of words is necessary to the creation of a trust, the instrument, to have this effect, must set forth the intention clearly and definitely. It must, among other things, indicate the nature and terms of the trust and the manner in which the trust is to be administered. “ If the language is any degree equivocal, or if it is so vague and indefinite as to leave any of the essential elements of the trust in uncertainty, there is a failure of the trust.” 1 Beach, Trusts, § 40, pp. 51-2. See also Underhill, Trusts (Am. ed.), 19. The words “for the benefit of ” are, to say the least, equivocal; legal estates are created for the benefit of those for whom they are created, and so are equitable estates. It certainly can not be said that the use of these words clearly and definitely indicated a purpose to create a trust. On the contrary, when the whole instrument is looked at, they seem merely to have reference to the beneficiaries of the legal estates created in the children of Isaac Johnston and his wife. We think, on the whole, that all of the estates created by the deed were legal estates, and that no trust was intended for any of them.

It appears from the record that two applications were made at different times to the judge of the superior court to sell portions of the property conveyed in the deed under consideration, and that in each instance the judge granted, in vacation, an order authorizing the sale. The title of the defendant in the court below (the plaintiff in error here) depended upon the validity of these orders. The power of a judge of the superior court to authorize, in vacation, a sale of the legal estate of a minor can be derived only from a statute. As no trust estate was created by the deed, the power of the chancellor to order, in vacation, a sale of the trust estates of [961]*961minors can not be relied on to sustain the orders to sell involved in the present case. It is said that the authority to grant the orders was conferred by the law now contained in the Civil.Code, §§4863, 4864, as follows: “§4863. AH proceedings ex parte, •or in the execution of the protective powers of chancery over trust estates, or the estates of the wards of chancery, may be presented to the court by petition only, and such other proceedings be had therein as the necessity of each cause shall demand.” “§ 4864. A court of equity is always open, and hence any judge in vacation and at chambers may receive and act upon such petitions, always transmitting the entire proceedings to the clerk to be entered on the minutes or other records of the court.”

Among the subjects embraced within the “ protective powers of chancery over trust estates, or the estates of the wards of chancery,” as used in'the Civil Code, § 4863, and determined by this court, is the power, upon petition, to appoint trustees to fill a vacancy (White v. McKeon, 92 Ga. 344); to order the sale of a part of the trust property to relieve the rest from an indebtedness on all (Iverson v. Saulsbury, 65 Ga. 724 (5), 728, 729); to order the mortgaging of trust property to protect and preserve the corpus (Iverson v. Saulsbury, 68 Ga. 801, per Jackson, J., followed in Weems v. Coker, 70 Ga. 746; Bolles v. Munnerlyn, 83 Ga. 727; Pease v. Wagnon, 93 Ga. 363, and Wagnon v. Pease, 104 Ga.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E. 17, 117 Ga. 958, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-turner-ga-1903.