SAFFOLD, Executor v. CHEATHAM, Executor, et al., 221 Ga. 155, 143 S.E.2.d 629 (1965)

Supreme Court of Georgia

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Summary


Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Duckworth, C. J., Mobley and Quillian, JJ., who dissent.

Summary


Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Duckworth, C. J., Mobley and Quillian, JJ., who dissent.

Text


Hitch, Miller, Beckmann & Simpson, R. M. Hitch, contra.Lionel E. Drew, Jr., for plaintiff in error.

The petition in the present case by two executors against their co-executor stated a cause of action for the intervention of a court of equity in the administration of an estate, and the trial judge properly denied the motion to dismiss the petition.

Frank S. Cheatham, Jr., and The Citizens & Southern National Bank, as executors of the estate of Thomas P. Saffold, brought an action against their co-executor, Joseph C. Saffold. It was alleged that: On the same date that letters testamentary were issued to the petitioners and the defendant, a fiduciary account was opened with The Citizens & Southern National Bank into which assets and income belonging to the estate were regularly deposited. The defendant has opened other bank accounts and has deposited income of the estate in these accounts, and has drawn checks on these accounts without the approval and against the instructions of the petitioners. The petitioners do not know the amount of deposits in these accounts nor the withdrawals therefrom. They have requested an accounting by the defendant but none has been made. On numerous occasions the petitioners have requested that the defendant sign checks in payment of obligations due by the estate, but he refuses to sign checks. The defendant has entered into contracts without the concurrence or approval of the petitioners. The petitioners have no adequate remedy at law, and unless a court of equity grants the relief sought, the estate represented by the petitioners will suffer irreparable injury.

The petitioners prayed that the defendant be restrained and enjoined from depositing funds of the estate in accounts other than the fiduciary account, and making disbursements from such accounts; from cashing checks representing funds belonging to the executors under the will of Thomas P. Saffold; from entering into any contract without the full written concurrence of the petitioners as co-executors; that an auditor be appointed to examine the accounts of the defendant; that the petitioners have judgment against the defendant for any sums properly paid from the defendant's account; and for other relief.

A temporary restraining order was issued. Thereafter the petitioners amended their petition and enumerated ways in which the defendant, since the issuance of the restraining order, had failed to cooperate with the petitioners in their efforts to represent the estate.

The defendant filed a written motion to dismiss the petition as amended on the ground that the matters related in the petition are within the original, exclusive, and general jurisdiction of the Court of Ordinary of Chatham County. The motion to dismiss was denied by the trial judge and the exception is to this judgment.

The petition alleges that the petitioners and the defendant jointly qualified as executors is under the will of Thomas P. Saffold. Code 113-1504 provides: "If several executors are named in the will, one or more qualifying shall be entitled to execute all the trusts confided to all, unless specially prohibited by the will; if more than one shall qualify, each shall be authorized to discharge the usual functions of an executor, but all shall join in executing special trusts, or in making contracts binding upon the estate, or in paying out funds belonging to the estate. Each executor shall be responsible for his own acts only, unless by his own act or gross negligence he shall leave enabled or permitted his coexecutor to waste the estate." Under this Code section in specified particulars joint executors must concur in their actions in order to bind the estate. Hosch Lumber Co. v. Weeks, 206 Ga. 564 (58 SE2d 145), in the hope that confusion would thereafter cease. But here we have a decision by four Justices in a case actually identical in principle with the Hamrick case which is contrary to that decision and revives the previously existing uncertainty.

It ought not to be too difficult to understand that equity will grant relief only where the operation of the general rules of law would be deficient. Code 37-102. And that where law and equity have concurrent jurisdiction, whichever first takes jurisdiction shall retain it unless good reason shall be given for the interference of equity. Code 37-122. And where there is a complete remedy at law for a plain legal right, equity will not grant relief. Code 37-120. In the instant case the administration of an estate under a duly probated will is in the court of ordinary where it belongs. Grievances of co-executors against a co-executor who is not shown to be insolvent constitute this case. The Hamrick case alleged waste, mismanagement, loss, commingling of funds and failure to account for various funds, and the instant case alleges no more. By application to the ordinary an adequate remedy for every alleged grievance can be obtained, and the estate will be handled by one court rather than two as the petitioners seek. The law should not again be tossed back into confusion from which we sought to free it by the decision in the Hamrick case.

1965

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