5 Watts 205 | Pa. | 1836
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
We think there is nothing in any of the errors assigned in this case. They are so obviously untenable, that it is unnecessary to enter into a course of reasoning, in order to prove it. We are, however, notwithstanding, clearly of opinion that the judgment of the court below must be reversed, because, from the record, it appears that the plaintiffs below have no cause of action whatever against the defendant, who is the plaintiff in error. The claim appears to be founded upon a recognizance taken in the orphans’ court of Dauphin county, of Joseph Hoffer, the plaintiff in error, as the bail of Jacob Redsecker, administrator of Isabella Dimpsey deceased, conditioned for the faithful and due execution of an order, then made by the said court, authorizing Redsecker, as the administrator, to sell the land or real estate of his intestate, for the purpose of paying her debts, and maintaining her minor children; as also for a faithful appropriation of the money arising from the sale, when made. The sale was accordingly made by Redsecker; and James Wightman and Elizabeth, his wife, late Elizabeth M’Kee, surviving executrix of Sample M’Kee, claimed to be paid out of the money arising from the sale, in the hands of Redsecker, a sum of money exceeding 600 dollars, with interest thereon, due, as they allege, upon a recognizance entered into by David Dimpsey, in his lifetime, then the husband of the said'Isabella Dimpsey, who, with her brother, the said Sample M’Kee, were then the only surviving children and heirs of Robert M’Kee deceased, in order to secure to the said Sample M’Kee the payment of his proportion of the valuation money, of a part of the lands or real estate late-of the said Robert M’Kee, which the said David Dimpsey had in right of his wife, taken under a decree of the orphans’ court aforesaid. The real estate of Robert M’Kee had been divided, by the inquest, into two parts, but not being of equal value, they were also appraised by the inquest, and so returned. Sample M’Kee elected and took the less valuable part, and his brother-in-law, David Dimpsey, in right of his wife, took the other, which was valued at about 1300 dollars more than the part taken by Sample, thus making David Dimpsey debtor, upon his recognizance, to Sample, for one half of the difference in the valuation. The land, taken by and decreed to David by the orphans’ court, is
Judgment reversed.