226 Pa. 448 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
This bill was filed for the purpose of having appellee declared a trustee of appellants, and for an accounting. The answer denied all the material averments of the bill including the alleged trusteeship of appellee. The learned court below sitting as a chancellor has found that appellee was not and is not a trustee for appellants or for either of them; and that he was not and is not their agent to attend to their financial matters, collect their rents, make payment of insurance, interest and dues on certain mortgages and to otherwise attend to their business affairs. If these findings be correct there is no jurisdiction in equity to decree an accounting. They come before this court with the force and effect of a verdict of a jury and will not be disturbed except for manifest error. We are not convinced that there is any error manifest or otherwise in the conclusions reached by the learned court below. The answer filed was responsive and unless overcome by the testimony of two credible witnesses, or of one witness and such corroborating facts and circumstances as to amount to another witness, a decree should not be entered. To say the least it is very doubtful whether this burden was met, and the court might have been warranted in dismissing the bill on technical grounds. This was not done, and the case was heard on its merits with the result that the bill was dismissed. The case was very intelligently considered and the facts carefully stated by the learned court below, and we find nothing in the opinion about which appellants should justly complain. It is contended that the facts upon which the third conclusion of law is based showed or tended to show the right to equitable relief and that the same were substantially proved at the trial, by reason of which it became the duty of the court under the Act of June 7, 1907, P. L. 440, to proceed to a final determination of the case with the same effect as if upon a hearing before the court without a jury upon agreement filed. It is true this act provides that when a bill in equity has been filed, if the defendant desires to question the jurisdiction of the court, upon the ground that the suit should have been brought at law, he must do so by demurrer, or answer so stating, or by praying
Assignments of error overruled and decree affirmed at the cost of appellant.