The two cases brought to this court for review, as set forth in the.statement of facts, were argued together, and are here decided together.
1. We are of the opinion that the court properly overruled the demurrers, both general and special. We think that a petition of the nature of the one under consideration could properly be maintained for the purpose of adjudicating and decreeing the rights and interests of the parties to the action. Nor was there a misjoinder *343of parties. The parties to the action were all parties at interest, and their interests could be best settled by having them all before the court, so that their exact interest, as it might appear from the evidence, should be'fixed.
2. The main and controlling question touching the merits of the case is whether, under the provisions of item 3 of the will of Hugh F. Train, a legacy or a debt was created. The court below was of the opinion that the provisions contained in this item of the will created á legacy. And while as to this holding of the court much might be said pro and con, after careful consideration of the question we are of the opinion that the court properly construed the provisions in question. Item 3 reads as follows: “I owe one thousand pounds sterling to the estate of my sister Agnes — Mrs. Scott, now represented by her son Hugh Scott. These amounts were borrowed by me on condition that I return them when I no longer needed them. Interest was not mentioned either by them or by me. One thousand pounds to each will be satisfactory. This money business to be conducted with my nephew Hugh Scott, and with no one else.” Construing this portion of the will as creating a legacy, it may be conceded that it is unique; and as one revolves it in his mind, attempting to reach a proper construction, various objections to the construction which we have given it may arise. But then, after further considering and studying it, it becomes clearer that the intention in the mind of the testator, especially when the terms of the provisions are considered in the light of all the circumstances, was to create a legacy, and not to make provision for the payment of a debt. The statement of the amount which he had borrowed from his sister is used, it is true; but it is used rather as a measure of bounty than to fix the amount of a recognized indebtedness. While the testator in the language employed states as an amount borrowed the sum of one thousand pounds sterling, he follows this language by stating that interest was not mentioned by either the borrower or the lender, and that “one thousand pounds to each will be satisfactory.” If he created this as a debt which he was attempting to pay, when it is considered that' the accumulated interest would have multiplied the original debt several times, he could not have asserted with such perfect confidence that one thousand pounds sterling would be satisfactory. But knowing his two sisters, from each of whom he had borrowed one thousand *344pounds (the other sister is mentioned in item 2 of the will), and the spirit in which they had let him have the one thousand pounds, and the indefinite time as to when it should be repaid, and realizing their love for him and his for them, he felt that the giving of one thousand pounds as a legacy would be satisfactory. We do not think the case of Thompson v. Stephens, 138 Ga. 205 (75 S. E. 136), is so nearly identical upon its facts with the present case as to make it controlling upon the question as to whether the third item of the will created a legacy.
3. No elaboration of the'ruling made in headnote 3 is necessary.
4. As against the intervenors there was no error, in view of all the pleadings and evidence in the case, in decreeing that the legacy should be paid to Wade, the administrator of Mrs. Agnes Scott. If Hugh Scott, named in the third item of the will, and with whom “this money business is to be conducted,” had filed a petition and prayed that'the legacy be paid over to him, the court would have been required to?decide whether the money should be paid to him as trustee; or if Hugh Scott had excepted directly to the portion, of the decree directing the payment of the legacy to Wade, the administrator, it might have been proper to decide the question. But we do not find in the record any exception made by Hugh Scott to this portion of the decree; nor does he make this distinct contention in the petition, but he joined with Wade, administrator, in a petition praying that in the event the court should construe the will and that portion thereof contained in item 3 as creating a legacy instead of being an acknowledgment of a debt, the administrator with the will annexed, the defendant, “be required to perform the terms of the said will and to pay over to petitioners the amount named in said will.” This prayer is not a distinct prayer upon the part of Hugh Scott that the money be paid over to him as trustee; and if it-were, still there is no exception on his part to the direction in the decree that the legacy be paid to Wade, the administrator.
5. Even if the evidence admitted over objection, as stated in the motion for a new trial made by the plaintiffs in error in the first of the above-stated cases, was incompetent, it is not of such materiality as to require the grant of a new trial.
The assignments of error not specially dealt with above show no, cause for reversal.
Judgment affirmed in both cases.
All the Justices concur.