265 Pa. 549 | Pa. | 1920
Opinion by
On December 5,1909, George H. Van Horn, the owner of real estate in Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, died intestate, leaving to survive him a widow and children. Letters of administration on his estate were granted to the widow. For the purpose of keeping alive the lien of their claim on decedent’s land, plaintiffs, on December 2, 1911, brought suit against the administratrix; on
In its opinion the court below held that if suit is brought and judgment recovered against the executor Ox administrator within the time specified for bringing suit, the lien of the debt continues only for five years after the expiration of this period, unless a scire facias with notice to the widow and heirs is issued within that time; but if suit is properly brought but judgment is not recovered until during the five-year period, then the scire facias may be issued at any time within five years after the entry of the judgment. If this conclusion is correct then the time when the scire facias must be issued, fluctuates according to the tardiness or diligence of the creditor, and may, in the second alternative, be five years later than in the first, for the creditor is not required to enter judgment on his verdict against the executor or administrator until the last day of the first five-year period; and, so also, if that conclusion is correct, the judgment would itself operate to extend the ■duration of the lien. Both of these results would be in direct antagonism to our decisions, which hold that the maxim vigilantibus non dormientibus jura subveniunt is especially applicable to this class of cases, these acts being statutes of limitation and repose for the benefit of widows, heirs and devisees and those claiming under them, as well as purchasers (Kerper v. Hoch, 1 Watts 9; Penn v. Hamilton, 2 Watts 53; Com. v. Pool, 6 Watts 32; Duncan v. Clark, 7 Watts 224; Greenough
The genesis of the rule that lands left by a decedent are assets for the payment of his debts, is: the clause in the original charter to William Penn whereby he and “the freemen of the said Province, their Delegates or Deputies, or the greater part of them, were authorized, so far as the Province of Pennsylvania was concerned, to alter the law of England in regard to the ‘descent and enjoyment of lands’” (Duke of Yorke’s Book of Laws, page 84); the laws agreed upon in England, which provided, inter alia, that all lands of a decedent shall be liable for the payment of his debts “except where there is legal issue, and then......one-third of the land only” (Ibid., page 100); the submission thereof, in accordance with the foregoing requirement of the charter, to the first general assembly, held at Upland, now Chester, on
Under those acts the lien was indefinite in point of time, even as against a bona fide purchaser (Graff v. Smith’s Administrators, 1 Dallas 481; Nokes v. Smith, 1 Yeates 238; Bruch v. Lantz, 2 Rawle 392; Trevor v. Ellenberger, supra; Steel v. Henry, supra; Konigmaker v. Brown, 14 Pa. 269; McMurray v. Hopper, 43 Pa. 468), and extended throughout the province and Commonwealth, binding all the lands of the decedent therein (Bredin v. Agnew, supra), whether or not letters testamentary or of administration were granted in the county where the lands were situated, or anywhere in the State, or even not at all. To cure this evil section 2 of the Act of April 17, 1794 (3 Smith’s Laws 143), provided that the lien should not remain “longer than seven years after the decease of such debtor unless a demand therefor shall be made, or an action for the recovery thereof commenced and duly prosecuted against his or her executors or administrators, within the said period of seven years,” and was amended by section 4 of the Act of April 4, 1797 (3 Smith’s Laws 297), by omitting the clause providing that a demand without suit would continue the lien.
The question at issue in the present case could not have arisen under the Acts of 1794 and 1797, because thereby decedent’s land might be sold on a judgment
Section 34 of the Act of 1834, which remained in force until the Act of June 7,1917, P. L. 447, was passed, provides that “In all actions against the executors or administrators of a decedent who shall have left real estate, where the plaintiff intends to charge such real estate with the payment of his debt, the widow and heirs, or devisees, and the guardians of such as are minors, shall be made parties thereto.” The question here is: When must they be “made parties thereto” ? and this brings us to the consideration of the numerous authorities bearing thereon.
A proceeding to charge land with the debt of a deceased owner is strictly in rem (Speer v. Sample, 4 Watts 367, 372; Soles v. Hickman, 29 Pa. 342, 346); as already pointed out the acts of assembly on the subject are statutes of repose and not merely of limitation, inuring in favor of the widow, heirs and devisees, as
In answering that question any one of four conclusions was possible prior to the Act of 1917. It might
The second possible alternative would have been to hold, — for precisely the reasons why the widow and heirs or devisees were not required to be made parties in the first instance, — that they need not be made parties at all until it is proposed to actually sell the land. This, however, was not adopted, because it would have continued the injustice we pointed out in Fritz v. Evans, supra, and would have defeated the very purpose of the Acts of 1834, 1893,1901 and 1909. This was well stated in Benner v. Phillips, supra, where we said: “Unless by analogy we put some limit to the time, the lien against heirs, where suit is brought against the administrator, may be indefinite; for, where the creditor commences suit and obtains judgment against the personal representatives every five years, as he may, he might, at any distance of time, issue a scire facias and call upon the
To obviate this we held that the true interpretation of the acts required the creditor to proceed against the widow and heirs or devisees within a definite time. This might have been, as the court below decided, within five years after the recovery of judgment against the executor or administrator, but the effect of so holding would have been to provide a fluctuating instead of a definite time, dependent on the diligence of the creditor, and would have given to the judgment, as a judgment, the effect of a lien; both of which results, as pointed out above, would contravene the purpose of the acts and be in violation of our repeated decisions. The only remaining alternative was to hold that the scire facias making the widow and heirs or devisees parties to the action, must be issued within five years after the expiration of the period for commencing suit, and so we decided in McMurray’s Administrators v. Hopper, 43 Pa. 468, 471-2; Hope v. Marshall, 96 Pa. 395; Allen v. Krips, 119 Pa. 1, and Allen v. Krips, 125 Pa. 504.
No decision has been pointed out to us, and we have found none, which antagonizes the above conclusion. As already stated, there are dicta upon the subject, resulting probably because the question now under consideration could not or did not arise, and hence the point was not then carefully considered. Moreover, a number of the cases relied on by appellees frankly state that the extracts relied upon are but dicta, and still others of them do not even contain dictum on the subject. They will all, however, be referred to herein, so far as to show they do not actually rule the present question.
Trevor v. Ellenberger, 2 P. & W. 94; Duncan v. Clark, 7 Watts 217, and Pry’s App., 8 Watts 253, arose under
In Fetterman v. Murphy, 4 Watts 424; Brobst v. Bright, 8 Watts 124, and Konigmaker v. Brown, 14 Pa. 269, judgment was recovered against each decedent in his lifetime, and to such judgments the acts do not apply ; and in Steel v. Henry, 9 Watts 523, this court said it was not necessary to decide the present question, because by testator’s will his debts were charged upon his real estate.
In Benner v. Phillips, 9 W. & S. 13, the decedent died July 18, 1832, before the Act of 1834 was passed, suit was brought against the personal representatives March 1, 1839 (decided to be in time because of section 70 of the Act of 1834), judgment was recovered therein November 24, 1840, and the sci. fa. to revive with notice to the widow and heirs was issued March 2, 1842. This was held to be in time, as it would have been under either act, and whether or not it had to be issued within a given time from the death or from the judgment. On the other hand, in Keenan v. Gibson, 9 Pa. 249, where the decedent died before the effective date of the Act of 1834, the lien was lost because the judgment recovered in 1833 against the personal representatives was not revived with notice to the widow and heirs or devisees until 1834, which was too late under either construction of the act.
In Bredin v. Agnew, 8 Pa. 233, suit was brought in decedent’s lifetime, he died and his administrator was substituted as defendant in 1839, judgment was recovered in 1841, and a sci. fa., with notice to the widow
.None of the above cases being adverse to the conclusion reached by us, and none others having been even suggested as antagonistic thereto, we need only add that the sci. fa. in the present case was issued too late, the lien of the debt was lost as to the lands inherited by appellants, and the judgment must, therefore, be reversed, unless, as the court below seemed to think, section 15 of the Act of 1917, which relates to this subject and puts upon the creditor still further restrictions, in some way affects the present question because it is declared to be retroactive. We do not think it does. If it is applicable, and retroactive so far as the present case is concerned, then as plaintiffs did not bring suit within one year nor issue a sci. fa. to revive with notice to the heirs within six years from the death of decedent, the lien would be lost, exactly as we have held it to be under the Act of 1909. This obviates the necessity for considering the extent to which the Act of 1917 could constitutionally be held to be retroactive as against existing creditors, in view of the alleged fact that it gives
As the rights of the parties are fixed by the record, we might, perhaps, enter final judgment for defendants under the authority given by section 2 of the Act of May 20, 1891, P. L. 101; but since they have a complete remedy under section 20 of the Act of May 14, 1915, P. L. 483, we will make the usual order on reversing a judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.
The judgment of the court below is reversed and a procedendo awarded.