Whiddon v. Williams & Co.

24 S.E. 437, 98 Ga. 310
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 13, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 S.E. 437 (Whiddon v. Williams & Co.) 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
Whiddon v. Williams & Co., 24 S.E. 437, 98 Ga. 310 (Ga. 1896).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

Mrs. Annie E. Whiddon, as administratrix, and T. J. Buchan, as administrator, of the estate of W. B. Whiddon, deceased, filed an equitable petition to marshal the assets of his estate. The case was tried by the presiding judge, upon all the issues involved, without the intervention of a jury. Among the creditors who were made parties defendant were J. P. Williams & Co.) who had previously ob[312]*312tained a judgment against the plaintiffs in tbeir representative capacity in an action in response to wbicb there bad been no plea of a want of assets. Tbe evidence shows that, by tbe exercise of ordinary and reasonable diligence, tbe defendants to that action might without serious difficulty have ascertained tbe real condition of tbe estate before tbe judgment was rendered, but that they failed to do so. To tbe plaintiffs’ petition, Williams & Co. filed a plea in tbe nature of a cross-action, in which they set up all tbe material facts relating to tbe rendition of tbeir judgment, against tbe administratrix arid administrator, and prayed for, and obtained, a judgment binding tbeir personal estates. Williams & Co. also sought to make tbe sureties upon tbe bonds given by Mrs. Whiddon as administratrix, and Buchan as administrator, parties to tbe case, and to obtain judgments against them, but upon demurrer tbe court expressly dismissed so much of tbe cross-petition of Williams & Co. as sought a recovery against these sureties. To. this ruling of the court no exception was taken, and therefore tbe latter are not to be considered, nor treated, as parties to the case..

It appears from tbe record that tbe intestate, before bis death, bad purchased a tract of land, taking bond for titles, and that be died in possession of tbe premises. While in life, be made permanent improvements upon the property, wbicb very greatly enhanced its value, and in consequence of wbicb it became, beyond doubt, worth considerably more than tbe amount of tbe purchase money debt, upon wbicb, however, be bad never paid anything. Before tbe petition to marshal assets bad been filed, Mrs.. Whiddon, abandoning tbe estate’s equity in tbe land, and contracting in her own name and right, bad paid off this purchase money debt with money belonging to herself, and bad taken a deed from tbe vendor conveying tbe land, with all the. improvements thereon, to herself individually. It would seem that, she was aided in this; transaction by Buchan, tbe adminis[313]*313trator. There was ample evidence to warrant a finding that he participated in the negotiations by which she procured the deed above mentioned; and it also.appears that when this land was afterwards levied on under the execution in favor of AVilliams & Co., Buchan, as the agent of Mrs. AVhiddon, filed a claim alleging that the. property belonged to her.

Among others who were parties defendant to. the petition was W. J. Henderson, who was the guardian of certain minor children of whom the intestate had formerly been guardian. The defendant filed an answer in which he set up a large indebtedness by the intestate on account of the former guardianship, and also in his answer alleged that C. B. Murrell and AV. P. Eastman, deceased, were sureties upon the bond given by AV. B. AVhiddon as guardian, and that Mrs. Caro C. E. Ogden was the-executrix of Eastman’s estate. This answer proceeded further to allege that Mrs. Ogden had “already been .named as a party defendant in this cause, concerning some other matters; but whether she [had] been served or not, this defendant [was] not informed.” In point of fact, Mrs. Ogden, in her representative capacity, was a -party to the case., having been made so originally with reference to certain transactions between her testator and the deceased AVhiddon, in no- way connected, however, with the latter’s liability to the minors of whom he had been guardian. Henderson’s answer contained no prayer that Murrell be made a party, nor did it pray for process against Mrs. Ogden for the purpose of requiring her to answer his complaint with respect to the alleged liability of her testator upon the guardian’s bond.

There appears in the record a transcript of the declaration, demurrer and pleas in a pending action brought by M. Newman, ordinary of AVashington county, for the use of Henderson, guardian, against AVhiddon’s representatives and Murrell and Mrs. Ogden, as executrix, upon this identical bond. This transcript was not attached to any of the [314]*314pleadings in the present action as an exhibit, and how it got into the record of this case at all is not disclosed, though it seems to have been treated at the trial as a part of the pleadings. At any rate, a judgment was rendered in favor of M. Newman, ordinary, against the administratrix and administrator of Whiddon, and against Murrell and Mrs. Ogden individually; and it was further adjudged “that the sureties on the guardian’s bond of W. B. Whiddon are chargeable with the liabilities of said W. B. Whiddon, guardian, as aforesaid.”

Before the case came on for a final hearing, the plaintiffs’ action was dismissed as to a number of the original defendants thereto; and consequently, the judgment rendered deals only with such matters of controversy as were in issue between those actually parties when it was rendered. The bill of exceptions assigns error upon numerous rulings made by the judge and to various portions of the final judgment. Many of the exceptions are of minor importance, and deal with matters immaterial to a proper determination of the case upon its substantial merits. The nature of those exceptions which are of real consequence will appear from what has been above stated, read in connection with the following brief discussion of the points of law involved.

1, 2. In the case of Gibson v. Robinson, 90 Ga. 156, this court again recognized the doctrine, which had already been established by numerous adjudications, that where an administrator is sued upon an alleged debt of his intestate and fails to plead a want of assets, a judgment rendered against him in- such suit is conclusive upon him as to his having, at the time of its rendition, a sufficiency of assets in his hands belonging to. the estate with which to pay the debt. The case cited was an action at law upon an administrator’s bond, and the rule in question was directly applicable to it and to cases of like character.

In Gause v. Walker, 55 Ga. 129, however, it was held, in effect, that in equity this rule was subject to some relax[315]*315ation in a case where, upon equitable principles, the administrator, although he had failed to- plead plene ad/nwivistravit prceter before judgment against him was rendered, might be entitled to relief from personal or individual liability. ■ Such a case would arise where the administrator showed a reasonable and satisfactory excuse for failing to file this plea at the proper time; but in the absence of such excuse, the rule of law above stated would obtain in all its rigor. The case of Gause v. Walker was decided upon its own peculiar facts, and is not controlling in the case at bar. The only excuse presented by the representatives of Whiddon’s estate for a failure to plead a want of assets in defense to the action brought by Williams & Co. was, in effect, -that neither of them knew, when this action was pending, the real condition of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E. 437, 98 Ga. 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiddon-v-williams-co-ga-1896.