Rogers v. Cunningham

51 Ga. 40
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 51 Ga. 40 (Rogers v. Cunningham) 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
Rogers v. Cunningham, 51 Ga. 40 (Ga. 1874).

Opinion

Warner, Chief Justice.

The bill in this cause was filed by John Cunningham, executor of the will of John B. Gallie, against William Rogers, trustee under the marriage settlement of Joseph Carruthers and Jane A., his wife, and against Joseph 8. Carruthers, Elizabeth Carruthers, Ella Carruthers, and Janet Carruthers, a minor, returnable to the January term, 1873, of the Superior Court of Chatham county.

The bill alleged in substance as follows: That on Decem 23, 1815, a marriage settlement was made and entered into between Joseph Carruthers and Jane A. Stutz, both of said county of Chatham, whereby certain property of said Jane A. was conveyed to trustees therein named for the sole and separate use of the said Jane A., until the marriage, and after the marriage for her sole and separate use during her life, and thereafter for the use, benefit and behoof of any child or children that she, the said 'Jane A., might have by the said Joseph Carruthers, share aud share alike, their heirs and assigns forever; that the said marriage took place, and that the-said Joseph Carruthers afterwards died, leaving him surviving his widow, the said Jane A., and three children of said marriage viz.: the said Joseph S. Carruthers, and James Carruthers and Janet Carruthers, the two latter now deceased ; that the said James Carruthers died July 29,18.54, leaving a widow, the said Elizabeth Carruthers, one of the defendants, and two daughters, viz.: the said Ella and Janet, also defendants in the said' cause; that the said Janet Carruthers, the daughter of the said Jane A., was married, without a settlement, to John B.. [42]*42Gallie, July 5, 1849, and died childless, September 17, 1854, the said Gallie surviving her; that the said Gallie died February 1, 1863, leaving two children of a marriage previous to his marriage with the said Janet, viz.: Mary, now the wife of Robert A. Trippe, and Julia, now the wife of Thomas P. Bond; also a widow, Charlotte M. E., married after the death of the said Janet, and two minor children by the said Charlotte, viz.: Lucy Christina and Charles R. Gallie, and leaving also a will, which was duly admitted to probate and record in said county of Chatham, whereby, after certain specific legacies and bequests, he gave and bequeathed all the remainder of his estate, of every description, of which he was possessed, or might become entitled to, by will, inheritance or otherwise, to his executors named in the said will, and the survivor of them, etc., in trust for the benefit of his said surviving widow and all his children, by that or any other marriage, in a certain manner in the said will set forth; that the complainant, John Cunningham, is the only surviving executor of the said will, and has been duly qualified, and that the defendant, William Rogers, was substituted as trustee under the marriage settlement aforesaid, in lieu of the trustees therein named, who had long previously died, by order of the Superior Court of Chatham county .aforesaid, on the 3d day of June, 1863, upon proceedings duly instituted for that purpose; that the said Jaue A. Carruthers, the life tenant under the marriage settlement aforesaid, died on the 17th day of July, 1872.

Upon these allegations the complainant claims that Janet, the wife of John B. Gallie, was entitled, at the time of her marriage with him, to a vested estate in remainder in fee in an undivided third of the property conveyed in trust by her mother’s marriage settlement, which estate in remainder passed to the said G-allie upon his marriage, and devolved upon his executors at his death as part of the residuum of his estate, for the trusts specified in his will; and that upon the termination of the life-estate of Mrs. Jane A. Carruthers, he was entitled to receive one-third of all that remained of the property [43]*43mentioned in the marriage settlement upon the trusts specified in Gallie’s will; and, describing the remaining property, he avers that he has applied to the defendants for a distribution and partition, which the defendants, denying his right, as Gallie’s executor, to any part of the property, had refused. And the bill prays that commissioners may be appointed to make a partition, with power to sell, etc., for that purpose, and that one-third of the property may be allotted to him, as executor, as aforesaid, upon the trusts specified in the will.

Answers were duly filed, one by the trustee, the other by the remaining defendant, Mrs. Elizabeth Carruthers having first been appointed guardian ad litem of her minor daughter, Janet. The defendant Rogers, the trustee, admits the facts stated in the bill to be true, and submits himself to the decree of the court as to the rights of the parties, praying only to be reimbursed certain monies expended by him for the trust estate.

The other defendants also admit the facts stated to be true, but allege these additional facts, viz: That Janet Carruthers, before her marriage with Gallie, and on October 29th, 1844, was married to one Francis S. Porcher, and on that day, in consideration of the marriage, made and entered into a marriage settlement with him, whereby she conveyed to certain trustees, therein named, “all her estate, right, title, interest, property, claim and demand whatsoever, at law and in equity, being a remainder in fee in a certain proportionate share ” of, in and to, the property mentioned in her mother’s marriage settlement aforesaid, to have and to hold the said proportionate share, “ to commence in possessiori immediately after the determination of the life-estate of the said Jane A. Carruthers therein,” in trust “for the sole and separate use of the said Janet until the marriage, and then for her sole and separate use during her life, not subject to the control, management, debts or liabilities” of Porcher, “and after the death of the said Janet, then in,trust for the sole use of such children of the said marriage as should be living at the time of her death; and in ease there should be no child or children living as afore[44]*44said-, then to such person or persons as the said Janet should, during her lifetime, (notwithstanding her coverture,) order, devise, limit or appoint; and in case no such order, devise, limitation or appointment should be made, then to the heirs-at-law and next of kin to the said Janet, according to the provisions of the laws of the State of Georgia regulating the distribution of the estates of intestates dying without issue;” that the said Porcher died, leaving no issue of the said marriage; and that the said Janet did not, at any time during her life, order, devise, limit or appoint any person or persons, in any manner whatsoever, to take her said proportionate share of the property after her death. And upon these new facts, the defendants insist that the heirs-at-law and next of kin to the said Janet, at the time of her death, who were .entitled to her aforesaid estate in remainder, were her mother and her two brothers, above named; and that, upon the death of Mrs. Carruthers, the said Joseph S. became entitled to one-half of the said property in fee, and the said Elizabeth and her two daughters to one-third thereof in fee as tenants in common, and the said two daughters to one-sixth thereof in fee as tenants in common; and that Gallie acquired no interest at all in any of the said properly by his marriage with his wife, Janet. And the defendants, with this denial of any right in Gallie’s executor to participate, concur in the prayer for a partition, but only among themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Ga. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-cunningham-ga-1874.