Rusk v. Hill

45 S.E. 42, 117 Ga. 722, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 25, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 42 (Rusk v. Hill) 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
Rusk v. Hill, 45 S.E. 42, 117 Ga. 722, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 319 (Ga. 1903).

Opinion

Simmons, C. J.

In the year 1882 William J. Rusk, then a resident of Habersham county, died intestate, leaving a large estate. In the following year James E. Rusk was duly appointed and qualified as the administrator of this estate. He gave a bond, payable to the ordinary of that county and his successors in office, which [724]*724was signed by A. J. Nichols and W. W. Berry as sureties. Subsequently the administrator, desiring to have Berry assist him in his duties, procured Berry to apply to the ordinary to be appointed a coadministrator, and on May 7, 1883, the ordinary passed an order granting his application. Berry thenceforth assumed to act in the capacity of a coadministrator, collected assets belonging to the estate, and joined with James E. Rusk in making annual returns to tlie ordinary. In 1893 James E. Rusk died, leaving the affairs of the estate he represented still unsettled. His two sons, W. H. Rusk and T. J. Rusk, were in the same year appointed administrators on his estate, qualified as such, and received from Berry $628 as the distributive share of their father in the estate left by William J. Rusk, whose heirs at law were: his three sisters, Nancy E., Mary A., and Ellenor J. Rusk; his brother, James E. Rusk; three children of David Rusk, a deceased brother; and seven chil-_ dren of another deceased brother. In the early part of 1900, a suit was instituted in the name of W. D. Hill, ordinary of Haber-sham county, on the administrator’s bond given by James E. Rusk, the purpose of this suit being to compel an accounting with certain heirs and representatives of heirs of William J. Rusk, who were named as usees of the plaintiff. The parties defendant to this action were W. H. and T. J. Rusk, as administrators of James E. Rusk; the sureties on a bond which they had given as such administrators; and W. W. Berry, as surety on the bond sued on. The suit was based on the theory that the appointment of Berry as'a coadministrator with James E. Rusk was a nullity, and accordingly that the estate of the latter was liable not only for all trust funds which actually came into his hands, but also for all assets of the estate of William J. Rusk which went into the possession of Berry, whose true relation to James E. Rusk was that of a mere agent. The plaintiff further sought to hold W. H. and T. J. Rusk accountable, in their capacity as the legal representatives of the estate of James E. Rusk, for all funds derived from the estate he represented which had come into their hands since his death. To this end, the plain•tiff prayed that the equitable powers of the court might be exer■cised to compel an accounting in this same suit between the persons named as his usees and W. H. and T. J. Rusk, as such administrators, with respect to these trust funds; and that said usees .might be allowed to appear in their own behalf as parties plaintiff, [725]*725so far as this branch of the litigation was concerned. In his prayer for process the plaintiff asked that “ the said W. H. Rusk and T. J. Rusk, of Cherokee county,” might be required to appear at the next term of court to answer his complaint. By an amendment allowed on February 25, 1901, the plaintiff inserted in his prayer for process, as a further designation of “the said W. H. Rusk and T. J. Rusk,” the descriptive words: “ as administrators of James E. Rusk, deceased.”

All of the defendants made answer to the petitioner’s complaint. In a separate answer filed by W. H. and T. J. Rusk they set up, among other special defenses, the following: David Rusk, whose death occurred prior to that of William J. Rusk, left a widow, Luthira Rusk, and three children. When James E. Rusk, as administrator, undertook to make distribution of that portion of-the estate of William J. Rusk which fell to the heirs of David Rusk, he (the administrator) divided the sum to which these heirs were entitled into four equal parts, and allowed the widow, Luthira, to share equally with each of her children in the distribution of this sum. They knew that “ their mother was getting an equal portion with them, and agreed and consented for the same to be paid to her,” and are therefore estopped from now claiming that the amount paid to their mother, to wit $425.00, should have been paid over to them. Furthermore, “Luthira Rusk died in possession of money and other property which her said children divided among themselves and got the benefit of, some of it being the identical proceeds of the money she received from ” the estate .of William J. Rusk, and “ it would be unjust for a court of equity not to require them to account for the funds paid to their mother” by his administrator. On the 15th of'April, 1901, his honor of the court below passed an order whereby, with the consent of all parties, the case was referred to an auditor. A hearing was had before the auditor during the month of November, of that year, and on February 4, 1902, he duly submitted his report. The same being adverse to the defendants, W. H. and T. J. Rusk, as administrators of James E. Rusk, filed exceptions both of law and of fact. At the August term, 1902, of the superior court, the presiding judge passed an order reciting that, after hearing argument upon these exceptions to the auditor’s report, it was adjudged that the exceptions of law be overruled, and that the exceptions of fact be disallowed. To this order exception was taken, [726]*726and the case was brought to this court for review by a bill of exceptions sued out in behalf of W. II. and T. J. Rusk, in .their representative capacity. In this bill of exceptions further complaint is made that his honor instructed plaintiffs counsel to submit the case to a jury, and, after counsel had offered in evidence the auditor’s report, directed the jury to return a verdict in accordance with his findings, and entered up a decree on this verdict. Error is also assigned upon the refusal of the judge to sustain a motion by counsel for the plaintiffs in error, presented after the order above referred to was passed but before the final decree was signed, whereby they sought to have the name of W. D. Hill, ordinary, stricken from the petition which had been filed in behalf of the persons therein named as usees, on the ground that he was a useless party, etc. On the call of the case in this court, a motion was made to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that “ no copy of the bill of exceptions in said case was served upon defendants in error, or their attorney, within ten days after the same was signed and certified,” there having been no waiver of service on the part of the defendants in error or their attorney.

1. From the record it appears that the bill of exceptions was certified by the judge on January 10, 1903, and that the service thereof was not completed until January 20, 1903. The motion to dismiss was predicated upon the case of Mott v. Bruns. Pub. Co., 117 Ga. 149, which was decided by this court, February 7, 1903. The defendants in error contended that the service was not “within ten days after the bill of exceptions is signed and certified,” as required by the code. The plaintiffs in error asked leave to review the Mott case, and leave was granted. After a careful search and review of all the cases decided by this court upon the method of computing time, we are satisfied that the Mott case was decided incorrectly and is in direct conflict with all the decisions dealing with cases in which certain privileges or duties were to be allowed or performed within a certain number of days.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 42, 117 Ga. 722, 1903 Ga. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rusk-v-hill-ga-1903.