237 Pa. 269 | Pa. | 1912
Opinion by
In asking that this appeal be quashed, counsel for appellees seem to think that it is from the decree directing an account to be filed by the testamentary trustee of the appellant. If it were from that decree, and the appellant had been heard in the proceedings in the court below leading up to it, the motion to quash would have to prevail, for a decree citing an executor or testamentary trustee to file an account is interlocutory, from Avhich no appeal lies: Palethorp’s Est., 160 Pa. 316. The appeal is not from the decree to file the account, but from the refusal to allow the appellant to intervene in the proceedings instituted to compel her trustee to file it. To her petition, asking leave to intervene and show cause why an account should not be filed at the instance of the appellees, no answer was filed, and its averments are, therefore, to be taken as true. One of them is that, through losses not chargeable to the trustee, the principal of the trust fund has-been reduced and
While, as a rule, an appeal will not lie from an order refusing leave to intervene, because such order is not a final one, cases may arise where a denial of a petition to intervene would be a practical denial of relief to which the petitioner for intervention is entitled and can obtain in no other way; and in such cases the refusal to permit an intervention is a final order or decree as to the petitioner: Henry v. Travelers’ Insurance Company, 16 Colo. 179; Credits Commutation Company v. United States, 91 Fed. Repr. 570. The order denying the appellant the right to intervene was, as