Weems v. Harrold, Johnson & Co.
Weems v. Harrold, Johnson & Co.
Opinion of the Court
[Mrs. Ella R. Weems, on behalf of herself and. her minor daughter, Ella B. Weems, and her imbecile sister, Miss Emma Ingraham, filed a bill in Lee superior court against Harrold, Johnson & Co. et al. The bill and exhibits showed, in brief, the following facts: On June 3,1862, Mrs. Weems, then Miss Ingraham, entered into an anti-nuptial settlement with Walter H. Weems, vdio subsequently became her husband, and Henry Hurt and George T. Hurt, as trustees under such settlement. By the terms of this contract, all the property belonging to her was conveyed to the trustees on the following uses and trusts: That the corpus of the property should be for the sole use and benefit of the wife, as her separate estate, during her natural life, and should not be liable in any manner to the debts- or contracts of her husband; that after the marriage, the* 4trustees should permit the husband and wife to have possession and control of the property, and that they should! be authorized to use the same and .the income thereof for the support, comfort and benefit of themselves and their family; that the trustees should reduce to possession the propertj'' in which the wife was interested as soon as practicable, and deliver possession to the husband and wife; that the trustees might sell and re-invest on the same uses and trusts, on the written consent of the wife, manifested by joining them in the conveyance ; that the wife should
In 1S78, the mother of Miss Ingraham petitioned the judge of the superior court to appoint W. H. Weems, as trustee, in place of Hudson, who had died, alleging that petitioner’s daughter was more than twenty-one years of age, but was imbecile. The judge granted the petition, and the proceedings were entered of record in Lee county. In 1381, Weems, as trustee for his wife and Miss Ingraham, petitioned the chancellor at chambers to permit him to mortgage the trust property. He alleged that a debt had been incurred to Harrold, Johnson & Company in carrying on the farm and supporting the cestuis que tru4; that he had executed a mortgage to them, which was due and unpaid; that he had no funds to pay it, but by making'a mortgage to F. M. Coker, he could obtain funds to pay off the mortgage held by Harrold, Johnson & Company, and prevent a sacrifice of the property. Endorsed on this petition was an acknowledgment of service and a consent to its granting, signed by Mrs. Weems and the mother of Miss Ingraham. The chancellor granted the petition at chambers; the mortgage was made to Coker, who has since transferred it to Harrold, Johnson & Company, and the original evidences of indebtedness have been cancelled, but no money was actually advanced by Coker to the trustee. Ini 882, Coker proceeded to foreclose the mortgage, but it is alleged that no service was perfected on Mrs. Weems or her daughter,
The answers' insisted that the trust estate was bound for the debts which were proceeding against it; that the entire matter had been adjudicated in a former decision ; that there was no collusion or fraud of any sort; but that the consent decree was rendered in accordance with the best interest of the trust estate and with the concurrence of Weems, trustee, after it became evident that the mortgage could not be defeated; that there was a bill pending in Lee superior court to set aside the sale of the land under certain other Ji./as., and that to dispose of the entire matter and to accommodate the trustee and for the benefit of the trust estate, the agreed decree was made; that all the parties were properly before the court, and what was done was done with notice to all the parties in interest.
On the hearing, the chancellor refused the injunction, and the complainants excepted.]
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Weems v. Harrold, Johnson & Company
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- Published