Printup v. Hill

107 F. 789, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4656

This text of 107 F. 789 (Printup v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Printup v. Hill, 107 F. 789, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4656 (circtndga 1901).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill filed to remove an alleged cloud upon the title to certain lands in the city of Rome, in Ployd cotínty, in this state. The cloud grows out of a claim on the part of the defendants, who are brothers and sisters of Mary A. E. R. Hill, that they are remainder-men, and that after the death of the said Mary A. E. R. Hill the property in question will belong to them. Complainants claim that said defendants have no interest in the land, either now or in the future. The bill is demurred to, and a statement, therefore, of the facts contained in the bill, will show how the questions to be determined arise.

[790]*790On the 23d day of January, 1857, William E. Smith, of Floyd county, Ga., made and executed a certain deed of conveyance whereby, for the love and affection which he entertained for Mary A. E. B. Perkins, daughter of James P. Perkins, the son by marriage of said grantor, and of five dollars, the said Smith conveyed to James P. Perkins, as trustee for his oldest daughter, Mary Ann Elizabeth Beubena Perkins, the tract of land in controversy. The language of the deed which gives rise to this contest is as follows:

“The said William E. Smith hath bargained, sold, given, and conveyed, and doth hereby bargain, sell, give, and convey, nnto the said James P. Perkins, trustee as. aforesaid, for the sole use of the said Mary A. E. E. Perkins, daughter of said James P. Perkins, and her heirs, and, in default of issue on the death of said Mary A. E. E. Perkins, then the other children of said Perkins in common, if any, to share and share alike. If none, then in trust, to said James P. Perkins. The trustee to be appointed by the court of law, never to he subject to his (the said James P. Perkins’) debts or liabilities in any manner whatsoever, and, in case of the death of all the heirs hereinbefore mentioned, to revert to said-William E. Smith forever.”

Mary A. E. R. Perkins is the same person wbo is named as a defendant herein under the name of Mrs. Mary A. E. R. Hill, she having many years ago intermarried with one H. B. Hill, who is now dead, and the said Mary A. E. R. Hill is a widow. At the January term, 1861, of the superior court of Floyd county, James B. Perkins obtained an order upon a petition filed by him for the purpose, authorizing the sale of the property in dispute. To this proceeding Mary A. E. R. Hill (then Perkins) was not made a party, nor in any manner brought before the court, nor were there any other parties thereto except the trustee. At this time the said Mary was a minor. On the 25th of August, 1865, James P. Perkins, as trustee for the said Mary A. E. R. Perkins, made and executed a deed of conveyance to Daniel S. Printup, of Floyd county, wherein, by virtue of the decree of Floyd . superior court granted upon the proceedings aforesaid, he undertook to sell and convey to Printup, his heirs and assigns, in fee simple, the property in question, and the said Mary A. E. B. Perkins indorsed on this deed her full and free consent for the sale of the property above set forth, and obligated herself to confirm the sale whenever necessary, executing tin's consent and affirmance under her hand and seal before two witnesses, one of them being the ordinary of Fulton county. Beport of this sale was made to the January term, 1866, of the superior court of Floyd county, and thereupon, by consent of all parties, as evidenced by their signatures, said deed was approved and confirmed by the court, and was entered upon the minutes of the court, and Printup thereupon went into possession of the property by virtue of this conveyance. In May, 1871, Mary A. E. B. Hill and her husbánd, H. B. -Hill, filed their bill in the superior court of Floyd county against Daniel S. Printup to set aside this sale of said property, made by Perkins, trustee. The bill set up the proceedings in the superior court of Floyd county at the January term, 1861, and the order of confirmation, and alleged that, at the time of granting each of these orders and making the consent to the deed, the said Mary was a minor; that she was not made a party in any manner [791]*791to the proceedings had before the court, and that Printup had purchased with full notice of all these facts; and that the proceeds of the sale of the property -were squandered by the trustee, and not applied to the use and benefit of the- cestui que trust By amendment to this hill, at: the January temí, 1874, the plaintiffs alleged that Printup had allowed the property to be sold for city taxes due the city of Rome for the year-1873, and had bought in the same, and taken a marshal’s deed to the property, and tendered the taxes and offered to redeem the property therefrom, alleging that Printup had caused the assessment of the property against him to he changed to an assessment against said Perkins, trustee, and had purchased the property as the property of Perkins, trustee. After demurring to the hill, Printup answered the same, setting up the validity of his title acquired under the proceedings in the superior court of Floyd county, and the deed made by Perkins, trustee, in pursuance of the order of court, alleging that the decree was properly made, and was to the interest of the trust estate, in that the property was unproductive. He denied all collusion between the trustee and himself, denied that: the proceeds were used and squandered by the trustee himself, but alleged that the same were reinvested and used for the benefit of the cestui que trust, and set up that the cestui que trust had received other property in lieu thereof and in full satisfaction of the property then held by Printup. He denied all knowledge of intemperance, etc., on the part of the trustee, or that he used the money received from the property for his own purpose, hut that the same was used for the benefit of the cestui que trust. Printup amended his answer, and alleged that it was true-that the property had been sold for taxes due the city of Rome, and that a marshal’s deed had been made to him at said sale. He denied that he caused the property to he sold, or changed the assessment, but alleged that if the title had never been legally devested from Perkins, trustee, it was now in him by virtue of this tax sale, and that, if complainants’ claim for the property was sound, the complainant should have paid all taxes on the property from the time of the purchase by defendant to the present time, hut, on the contrary, he (Printup) had paid all of the taxes, and, if he should now he decreed not to he the owner of the property, he was entitled to recover the same, with interest. The case thus made went to trial, and on the 21st day of July, 1876, a verdict was rendered, as follows:

“We, the jury, find that the sale of the property in dispute by Jas. P. Perkins, trustee, to D. S. Printup, the deft., was unauthorized, and that the deed of said trustee to the deft, be annulled and set aside, and that the deft, convey said property to a trustee to be appointed by the court in the stead of said Jas. P. Perkins, to be held subject to the trusts specified in said deed of Wm. K. Smith, and free from all claim of the defendant. We also find in favor of the defendant the sum of one thousand dollars, to be paid by the first day of Dec. next, with interest, and, in default of payment by said date, that execution then issue for said sum against said trust property in favor of said deft.”

On this verdict, on the same day, a judgment was entered, as follows:

[792]*792“Whereupon it is adjudged and decreed by the court that the said deed of Jas. P. Perkins, trustee, to the defendant, D. S.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. 789, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/printup-v-hill-circtndga-1901.