(After stating the foregoing facts.) Where the title to property is put in one person for the benefit of others, the latter take cum onere. The skill, ability, and solvency of tbe trustee operate to their advantage. But as to acts within the scope of his express or implied powers, they must suffer the consequences when they ultimately prove detrimental to the beneficiaries. The remedy in such a case is not to undo what has lawfully been done, but to proceed against the trustee (Clark v. Flannery, 99 Ga. 239), whose personal and financial fitness were passed upon by *760the grantor when giving the land. The very instrument^ which created the estate put forward the trustee as the person who was to represent those interested therein when it became necessary to deal with third persons. On this principle cestuis que trust are bound by his non-action for a time long enough for him to be barred by the statute (Civil Code, § 3773); they are bound by his loss of a loan made iii good faith to a person then solvent (Walker v. Walker, 42 Ga. 135); by his receipt of funds which other prudent men then, took as currency (Campbell v. Miller, 38 Ga. 304); by a compromise honestly and in good faith made by him (Maynard v. Cleveland, 76 Ga. 53 (6)). They are likewise bound by the results of suits instituted or defended by him for the benefit of the estate (Gunn v. James, 120 Ga. 482); and this is so even if the judgment is rendered by default. Sanders v. Houston, 107 Ga. 59 (4). See Ferris v. VanIngen, 110 Ga. 102 (6, 7), where the minor was held bound by the conduct of the mother to whom a year’s, support for herself and child had been set apart.
In proceedings by a trustee to get a benefit personal to himself •or to secure the right to exercise a power not granted by the trust deed or not implied by law, cestuis que trust must be made parties. Meyer v. Butt, 44 Ga. 468; Snelling v. American Freehold Co., 107 Ga. 854. But it required neither express power iii the deed nor an order from the chancellor to authorize or require the trustee to defend and preserve the estate committed to his care. That was a prime duty imposed by his appointment. Schley v. Lyon & Ga. 535; Bourquin v. Bourquin, 120 Ga. 115. The beneficiaries under this deed were, therefore, not necessary parties to the suit brought by the trustee to preserve the corpus as against the claim asserted by Butler. In the absence of fraud or collusion they were bound by the decree that the title of Butler was superior to that created for them by the deed of settlement. Sanders v. Houston Co., 107 Ga. 55, 56; Snelling v. American Freehold Co., 107 Ga. 854; Knorr v. Raymond, 73 Ga. 750 (10 a); Smith v. Cook, 71 Ga. 705.
But the plaintiffs in error contend, that even if the decree in the former suit would ordinarily have bound them, it has no such effect here, because of the allegation in the bill that it was the result of fraud on the part of Butler. Where litigation is pending, *761•and by the fraud of one party the other is prevented from making his defense, or induced to withdraw his plea, appeal, or motion for a new trial, or where by reason of fraud a judgment apparently •conclusive is rendered, relief therefrom may be had by appropriate proceedings. Everett v. Tabor, 119 Ga. 130. If a consent judgment is taken under an agreement that it is to be used only in a particular way, after a certain time, or only against designated property, the party will be held to his contract, and equity will enjoin against another or different use being, made of the judgment. Markham v. Angier, 57 Ga. 43. But it will be noticed that in these classes of cases the judgment was either originally void because fraudulently obtained, or its enforcement was enjoined because it was being used contrary to the terms of the very .agreement on which it had been entered. In the present case the contract calls for exactly the form of decree which was taken, as well as for the exact use which was to be made under it. There is no allegation that at the time of making the contract Butler fraudulently intended not to pay the price for the decree operating as a- quasi conveyance to the land already held by him under the sheriff’s deed. There is therefore nothing to bring the case even within the analogy of the principle of the Civil Code, § 3531.
In pleadings, epithets and hard words are not sufficient to make out a case of fraud when relief is asked because of its existence. While a demurrer admits facts properly pleaded, it “ does not admit a fraud charged, except so far as the facts establish or constitute a fraud. A merely pro forma statement . . will not do. The fact must be stated, that the court may judge whether they amount to fraud or not.” Bellamy v. Woodson, 4 Ga. 175; Shaifer v. Baker, 38 Ga. 135; Castleberry, Ib. 512 (3); Powell v. Parker, Ib. 634 (1). Fraud is subtle and slight circumstances may be sufficient to establish its existence. But the pleadings should at least indicate some of the slight circumstances intended to be proved. Some issuable and specific fact should be stated, so as to put the defendant on notice, even if it be only a charge that he fraudulently intended, while insolvent, not to pay. In the present case there is an utter absence of such allegation, and the only fact relied on to constitute fraud in 1895, when the judgment was taken, is Butler’s failure, on demand in 1900, to comply with the former promise. But while a subsequent breach *762of a contract affords ground for relief, it does not constitute fraud infecting and vitiating the validity of the original agreement. This is particularly so in the present case, where the very contract required that the execution under the decree now attacked for fraud was to be levied on certain land, which was thereupon to be bought in by Butl.er, and the property should then be conveyed by him by absolute deed to H. W. Miller and his wife. The original petition, therefore, set out no cause of action based upon the allegations of fraud.
Nor did the amendment save the case. It may be, that, as indicated in the speaking demurrer, the land passing under the trust deed is now in the hands of bona fide purchasers; that either for this reason, or because the plaintiffs apprehend that the deed from Willis Miller to H. W. Miller, trustee, might be successfully attacked by Butler, they ask in the alternative for damages for the breach of the contract under which the consent verdict was taken. The. amendment does not attack the contract as void because the consideration moved to H. W. Miller and wife, instead of to H. W. Miller, trustee. Instead of treating it as void, the amendment treats the contract as valid. But if so, the cause of action thereon was not in the cestuis que trust. They were not promisees. Hawkins v. Central R. Co., 119 Ga. 159. The right to enforce the contract was not in the trustee or the beneficiaries, but in H. W. Miller and wife. Thet demurrer to the petition as amended was therefore properly sustained. If a part of the plaintiffs have one cause of action and the rest another, they must assert the same in separate suits. If all or a part of the beneficiaries have a cause of action against Butler alone, or against Butler and the trustee, they must institute a different form of action. Whatever may be the rights of the parties in another suit, there was no error in sustaining the demurrer to the present proceeding; and the judgment is
Affirmed.
All the Justices concur.