Wheeler v. Wheeler

62 S.E.2d 579, 82 Ga. App. 831, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
Docket33164, 33165
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 S.E.2d 579 (Wheeler v. Wheeler) 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
Wheeler v. Wheeler, 62 S.E.2d 579, 82 Ga. App. 831, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1219 (Ga. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

MacIntyre, P.J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.) “The right to offer a will for probate shall belong to the executor, if one is named.” Code, § 113-614. “The executor shall offer the will for probate as soon as practicable after the death of the testator, and shall qualify . . within 12 months after the same is admitted to record.” § 113-615. “As soon as the probate of the will is made in common form, in vacation, and before it is admitted to record, and before qualification, the executor named therein may exercise all the powers of a temporary administrator as to the collecting and preserving of the estate.” § 113-1501. “An executor who has either formally or by operation of law, voluntarily renounced his trust, may not afterwards relieve himself from the effect of renunciation.” § 113-1228.

It seems to us that the part of the second amendment which states that J. Roy Wheeler, having renounced his nomination as one of the executors named in the will of Mrs. Rebecca Wheeler, and the part of the third amendment which states that the will of Mrs. Rebecca Wheeler had been probated in common form, and that, since the filing of the first amendment on January 18, 1950 (the same day on which the second and third amendments were filed), J. Roy Wheeler had renounced his nomi *834 nation as executor of the estate of Mrs. Rebecca Wheeler, pleads nothing but facts as they really existed or by legal presumption are deemed to exist. The act of renunciation as pleaded in the second and third amendments is to be understood as intending a real renunciation, something that the law would recognize as such. Draper, Moore & Co. v. Macon Dry Goods Co., 103 Ga. 661, 665 (30 S. E. 566). Having alleged the fact of the renunciation, “the plaintiff is not obliged to spread out his proof upon the record. If the rule was otherwise, the defendant by his demurrer, might cut off the plaintiff’s testimony, however sufficient it might be to make out his case.” Gilmer v. Allen, 9 Ga. 208, 209. And as an illegal act is not to be presumed, it is not to be presumed that the renunciation was one which the law would not recognize as such on account of some illegal act of J. Roy Wheeler or the ordinary, the presumption being that neither Wheeler nor the ordinary did any illegal act in effecting the renunciation.

It might be noted that “The legal presumption is, that the ordinary performed his duty in regard to the protection of the assets of the state [estate?] before accepting the renunciation of one of the executors nominated in the will.” Deupree v. Deupree, 45 Ga. 414. The executor is not required to file his renunciation with the ordinary in term time. Nor does the ordinary have to act upon the matter in term time. It is otherwise when the executor has qualified and functioned and wishes to resign or asks dismissal because he has duly administered the estate as directed by the will and the law. The law does not require an executor to qualify at once upon the probate of the will in common form. It nowhere appears on the face of the petition that J. Roy Wheeler ever qualified as executor of his mother’s will. “A renunciation is an act whereby a person, named in a will as executor, declines to take on himself the burthen of that office. The act is, therefore, predicated of an existing office. It presupposes the existence of the will. If no will has been made, there is no executorship to renounce. Nor until it is shown that there is a will, can it appear that there is a renunciable executorship.” In the matter of the application of John S. Maxwell for letters, etc., 3 N. J. Equity Reports, 611, 614 (2 H. W. Green). In the probate of the will in common form, *835 the executors, J. Roy and Harley Wheeler, were exercising their right. Code, §§ 113-614, 113-615, supra. This showed that there was a will, and for the first time it appeared that there was an executorship which Roy Wheeler could renounce, and he renounced the nomination as executor of the will at not more than ten days from the time of the probation of the will in common form, for, under the allegations of the petition, Mrs. Wheeler died on the 8th of January, 1950, and the will was probated some time between the 8th of January, 1950, and the 18th day of the same month; and on the 18th of January, 1950, J. Roy Wheeler, according to his allegation, renounced the nomination as executor under the said will. Thus it does not appear on the face of the petition that the renunciation was made at an illegal time.

Notwithstanding the error in overruling the demurrer to the petition as first amended, making Roy and Harley Wheeler as coexecutors parties plaintiff (Williams v. McHugh, 17 Ga. App. 59, 86 S. E. 272; MacDougall v. National Bank of Columbus, 150 Ga. 579, 104 S. E. 630), when thereafter during the trial of the case on the same day the plaintiff voluntarily, by his second and third amendments, struck the objectionable matter contained in the first amendment to the petition, in which the defendant, in his capacity as executor, had been made a party plaintiff, the defect was cured, and the petition as so amended was not subject to such demurrer. See Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. McElmurray Bros., 14 Ga. App. 196(1) (80 S. E. 680).

Applying the rule that a demurrer to a plea (or petition) admits that the facts set out therein can be legally proved unless the contrary appears on the face of the record, the court did not err in allowing the second and third amendments.

An amendment to paragraph 8 of the petition was allowed on December 16, 1949. The petition as thus amended alleged that the plaintiff, Mrs. Rebecca Wheeler, had paid and become liable for certain bills totaling $2843.75 as necessary expenses as a result of the injuries in question. These itemized bills, for which the defendant advanced the money, as well as a note for the same amount, dated September 20, 1949, signed by Harley Wheeler as his mother’s authorized agent, were introduced in evidence. Harley Wheeler testified that these bills or items *836 were made to Roy Wheeler, and he assumed the responsibility of paying these expenses; that someone had to pay them; and that he thought Roy Wheeler probably felt responsible and went ahead and paid them. In this connection Harley Wheeler testified further: “She [Mrs. Wheeler] wanted Roy to be reimbursed. As to whether she wanted to sue Roy, then get the money and pay it back to Roy—well, yes, she expected Roy to be reimbursed for his expense. As to whether she was going to sue Roy and then pay Roy—well, yes, she expected to. . . Now when I signed this note, that’s right, I told my mother about it. As to whether or not my mother agreed, that she owed Roy, on September 20, 1949, $2843.75—well, that’s right. As to whether she didn’t claim that Roy owed her anything or she wouldn’t have authorized me to sign this note, would she— well, she said he ought to be reimbursed. When she authorized me to sign this note, as to whether or not she told me that she owed Roy this amount of money—well, she thought Roy ought to be reimbursed. Yes, she told me she owed Roy this much money.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.E.2d 579, 82 Ga. App. 831, 1950 Ga. App. LEXIS 1219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-wheeler-gactapp-1950.