Walraven v. Walraven

47 S.E.2d 148, 76 Ga. App. 713, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 448
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 18, 1948
Docket31789.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 47 S.E.2d 148 (Walraven v. Walraven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walraven v. Walraven, 47 S.E.2d 148, 76 Ga. App. 713, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 448 (Ga. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

MacIntyre, P. J.

The applicant filed demurrers to the caveat as amended. The trial judge sustained the demurrers and struck paragraphs three, four, and five of the caveat. The caveators excepted pendente lite. Later the caveators amended their caveat to meet the order sustaining the demurrers to paragraphs three and four. The caveators now assign as error the ruling of the trial judge on the demurrers.

“Where a party submits to a ruling sustaining a demurrer to his pleading, by filing an amendment to meet the grounds of demurrer, he can not afterwards insist upon an assignment of error on exceptions pendente lite to the ruling on the demurrer. , . The plaintiffs in error, having filed an amendment to their answer in order to meet the order sustaining a demurrer to certain paragraphs, can not now complain that the order was erroneous.” Stainback v. Dunn, 53 Ga. App. 464 (3) (186 S. E. 220). See Rivers v. Key, 189 Ga. 832 (1) (7 S. E. 2d, 732); Norton v. Brown, 173 Ga. 146 (3) (159 S. E. 702); Fuller v. Fuller, 41 Ga. App. 24 (152 S. E. 122).

Under the above authorities, the caveators, plaintiffs in error, cannot now complain that the order in the instant case was erroneous as it relates to paragraphs three and four.

Relative to paragraph five of the caveat, the allegations were as follows: “5th. That the said application for year’s support is proceeding illegally, in that no administrator or executor has been appointed or qualified, but on the contrary the same is proceeding according to a scheme or plan between the said Mrs. Eva Walraven and D. B. Walraven which amounts to *715 and is collusion between them to the disadvantage and hurt of the other children and heirs at law of the said W. R. Walraven, deceased.” This paragraph was thereafter amended on August 28, 1946, by adding the following: “That the said Mrs. Eva Walraven and D. B. Walraven are colluding and conspiring to defeat the rights of the other heirs at law of W. R. Walraven, deceased, in that the said Mrs. Walraven is not the real applicant for year’s support in said case but is being used by the said D. B. Walraven, as such only to have said farm and life’s earnings of the said W. R. Walraven, deceased, set apart to her so that he may obtain control of the same through her and in order to sell and dispose of same and use the money for himself; that the said D. B. Walraven has boasted that he was going to get the property himself one way-or another; that the said D. B. Walraven and Mrs. Eva Walraven have collected money due the estate and have not accounted for same and refuse to inform other heirs how the money was spent or give them any information as to the condition of the estate in order to keep caveators ignorant of the true condition of the estate.”

The demurrer raises the question of whether the caveator’s conclusion as to the existence of such a conspiracy between Mrs. Eva Walraven and D. B. Walraven in paragraph five as amended is good in law.

Whatever the first preliminary allegation of fact—“that the said Mrs. Walraven is not the real applicant for year’s support in said case, but is being used by the said D. B. Walraven as such only to have said farm and life’s earnings of the said W. R. Walraven, deceased, set apart to her so that he may obtain control-of the same through her and in order to sell and dispose of the-same and use the money for himself”—may show with reference-to the intention of D. B. Walraven, it does not show that Mrs. Walraven had any like intention or that she was conspiring to defraud.

The second preliminary fact alleged—that D. B. Walraven had boasted, not in the presence of Mrs. Mary Eva Walraven, that he was going to get the property for himself one way or another—• would not be binding on Mrs. Walraven until the alleged conspiracy was prima facie shown.

The third preliminary fact alleged is that the said D. B. Wal *716 raven and Mrs. Eva Walraven have collected money due the estate, and have not accounted for the same and refuse to inform other heirs how the money was spent or give them any information as to the condition of the estate, in order to keep the caveators ignorant of the true condition of the estate.

This third preliminary fact, as alleged, would not, singly or in connection with either or both of the above-mentioned preliminary facts, make out a prima facie case that Mrs. Walraven engaged in a conspiracy to defraud the estate or, as contended by the caveators in their brief, that she was conspiring and colluding to do something that was unlawful, oppressive or immoral, or to do something not unlawful, oppressive or immoral by unlawful, oppressive or immoral means.

Paragraph five of the caveat, as first amended on August 28, 1946, which is now under consideration, did not merely undertake to 'ask that what the widow consumed be applied on the award of her year’s support, but undertook to establish a conspiracy that damaged the other heirs. “What is the object of the law setting apart a year’s support for the widow and minor children of the deceased? The law explains itself. It is to prevent a family being turned away houseless—a widow and children—and cast upon the world in their forlorn condition. Hence, it provides that, whether the deceased departed this life testate or intestate, solvent or insolvent, still the family should have a year’s support, under all circumstances.” Blassingame v. Rose, 34 Ga. 418, 421. “Where an executor advances a support to the family of the deceased, although not specifically set apart by appraisers, he is entitled to be credited with it in accounting with the creditors and heirs, the burden being on him to show that it was a proper and necessary amount.” Simmons v. Byrd, 49 Ga. 285 (2). Whenever the widow applies for an assignment of the year’s support, “she must be held chargeable with the value of what she had previously consumed” of her deceased husband’s estate. Wells v. Wilder, 36 Ga. 194, 198. And thus it seems to us that the preliminary or evidentiary facts alleged, when construed most strongly against the pleader, would only authorize a conclusion that the widow was chargeable with the value of anything which she may have previously consumed of her deceased husband’s estate; or that she had been aided to obtain an ad *717 vanee of a portion of the deceased husband’s estate toward her year’s support, which, without an allegation that the amount advanced was more than a proper and necessary amount for the purpose of a year’s support, would not show that the widow had obtained anything more than that to which she was entitled, or that the other heirs had been damaged, which damage is a necessary element of a civil conspiracy. See Woodruff v. Hughes, 2 Ga. App. 361 (58 S. E. 551).

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.E.2d 148, 76 Ga. App. 713, 1948 Ga. App. LEXIS 448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walraven-v-walraven-gactapp-1948.