21 Pa. Super. 200 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902
Opinion by
By his will, dated in January, 1874, and admitted to probate in June of the same year, John L. Kunkle gave certain personal chattels to his wife, and directed his executors to sell the residue of his personal property, and out of the proceeds pay his debts and funeral expenses, also to sell his house and lot in the borough of Adamsburg, and to divide the balance of the
The testator also mentioned in his will a certain twenty acre tract, but as it does not affirmatively appear in the pleadings or proofs that he died seized of this tract, we deem it unnecessary to allude to the provisions of the will relative thereto.
To his son, John L. Kunkle, Jr., he devised his farm, subject to a life estate therein in favor of his widow, “ at the appraised value of $12,000,” which he charged on the land, and directed the devisee to pay, in shares of $2,000 each, to his five daughters and the children of a deceased son. He also provided that payments were to be made in annual instalments of $1,000 each, beginning upon the death of his wife, and fixed the order in which each legatee was to be paid. In the same connection he provided as follows: “ As I have notes against my son David to the amount of two thousand dollars, he is to get no share of the twelve thousand dollars, and I direct said notes to be canceled and delivered up to him.”
The life tenant died in 1894, and under the terms of the will, above referred to, $1,000 became payable to Mrs. Helman, a daughter of the testator, on April 7, 1899, to enforce payment of which she filed her petition under the 59th section of the Act of February 24, 1834, P. L. 84. On behalf of himself and his assignees for benefit of creditors, who were made parties to the proceeding, the devisee answered, that, in accordance with a decree of the orphans’ court made in 1878, he had retained out of the legacy the sum of $374.02| with interest thereon from December 16, 1878, and that the balance, if any, he was then ready, and had at all times been ready, to pay. From the decree sustaining his claim to make this deduction the petitioner took this appeal.
The first question to be considered is as to the effect of the decree made in 1878. It appears that in 1876 the executors, David Kunkle and John L. Kunkle, Jr., filed separate accounts, and in July of the same year the court appointed an auditor “ to pass upon the exceptions and distribute the fund in the hands of the executors to and among those legally entitled to
The validity of the decree is attacked by the appellant upon the ground, amongst others, that she never received any notice of any sitting of the auditor for any purpose, that she never employed any attorney to represent her before the auditor, that she never knew that an auditor’s report had been made and confirmed until months afterwards, that she never knew her legacy had been abated, and that she never consented thereto. She contends that under the rules of the court below her ex parte affidavit alleging these facts must be taken as conclusive proof thereof. But this affidavit was not made until January 7,1901, which was after the case had been first argued on petition and answer, and Avas not actually filed until March 25,1902, Avhich was after the case had been reargued and the final decree, from which this appeal was taken, had been entered, and, indeed, after the appeal had been taken. Granting, as stated in the order of March 25, 1902, directing the affidavit to be filed nunc pro tunc as of January 10,1901, that it was “handed to the court January 10,1901, without having been marked filed,” the objection still remains that, under the rules of the orphans’
Turning then to the record of the original proceedings we find that the auditor was appointed on the motion of A. A. Stewart, Esq., that, according to the auditor’s report, “pursuant to notice, the parties in interest as also counsel of the two executors,” attended at the first hearing before the auditor, and that at that hearing “ it was agreed that Mrs. Helman (the appellant) should receive $5.00, the price of two sheep of hers which testator sold; ” that this sum was awarded her in the distribution reported by the auditor; that notices when the first report would be filed were mailed by the auditor “ to all parties interested or their counsel; ” that notices when the second report would be filed were mailed by him, ten days beforehand, to “ all the parties interested and their counsel; ” that A. A. Stewart, Esq., the attorney who moved the appointment of the auditor, filed exceptions to this report on behalf of “the legatees whose legacies are payable by John L.
We come then to the question of the power of the orphans’ court to make such a decree in the proceedings then before it. While the orphans’ court has not the general jurisdiction of a court of equity, yet within the limited sphere of its jurisdiction, it is essentially such: “ it proceeds on the same principles as a court of chancery ” (Guier v. Kelly, 2 Binn. 299) ; “ it applies the rules and principles of equity” (Willard’s Appeal, 65 Pa. 265) ; and “ has undoubtedly all the powers necessary to make its jurisdiction effective: ” Ake’s Appeal, 74 Pa. 116 ; Lowry’s Appeal, 114 Pa. 219 ; Watt’s Appeal, 158 Pa. 1. Speaking particularly of its jurisdiction to decree contribution between devisees and legatees, Chief Justice Gibson said: “ The doubt is whether an orphans’ court has power to marshal assets between legatees and devisees. If it has not, no other court has it, and there is a gap in our system. The power has not been specifically given; but as a court of equity, with jurisdiction limited to particular subjects, that tribunal has all the powers necessary to give effect to its jurisdiction within the circuit of its action. In giving general jurisdiction of a particular subject, the legislature impliedly gives every ancillary power necessary to the exercise of it: ” Barklay’s Estate, 10 Pa. 387. See also Hallowell’s Estate, 23 Pa. 223, and Armstrong’s Appeal, 63 Pa. 312. We need not cite other authorities upon this point. Unquestionably the orphans’ court has power to enforce the principles of the equitable doctrine of marshaling in the settlement of estates when the occasion requires it. This is not denied; but it is very earnestly argued
Much stress is laid on the fact that there was no petition; indeed, it is broadly asserted that the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court “ must be based upon a petition, and that its jurisdiction must be ascertained from an inquiry into the facts therein set forth.” This may be true where the statute makes a petition setting forth certain facts an essential prerequisite to the exercise of a power, as, for example, to order a sale for payment of debts. And it is not to be denied that the proceedings in this case would have been more regular if they had been based on a petition. But where the statute does not make the presentation of a formal petition an essential prerequisite to the exercise of a power, the omission thereof is not conclusive upon the question of jurisdiction raised in a collateral proceeding. In the case of Barklay’s Estate, supra, after referring to the general jurisdiction of the orphans’ court under the acts of 1832 and 1836, Chief Justice Gibson said: “ Both acts, however, require it to be exercised in the manner thereinafter provided; and in neither is there any specific provision for the marshaling of assets, except for apportionment among creditors of an insolvent estate, which is not marshaling in the legitimate sense of the word. But the grant of a power indispensable to the administration of justice is not to be defeated by an accidental omission to furnish the details. . . . . As it ivas impossible to foresee the cases that would fall within the generality of the grant, it was impossible to provide specifically for the manner in which they were to be disposed of; and it was left to the practice of courts of equity, or such practice as the orphans’ court should adopt.” It is thus seen that the objection under consideration goes to the regularity of the proceedings and not to the jurisdiction of the court.
It is urged further, that the exercise of this power in the present ease was not invoked by any one, neither by the legatees, nor by the devisee, nor by the executors, and therefore, even conceding the general power of the orphans’ court, its jurisdiction in this case was confined to the distribution of the money in the hands of the executors. True, there was no formal petition, but it is not accurate to say that the court volunteered to exercise a power that was not invoked by any
Knecht’s Appeal, 71 Pa. 333, is cited as authority for the proposition that, even if the legacj'- must be abated, the devisee is not entitled to retain interest on the amount of the abatement. But in that case the question was raised in the original proceeding. Here it was adjudicated in the decree of 1878, and, even if erroneously adjudicated, is not open to reinvestigation in this collateral proceeding. Moreover, the cases are plainly distinguishable in another very important particular: In the case cited the devisee, who as executor had paid the debts of the estate — the personal assets being insufficient for that purpose — went into immediate possession of the land, and
The decree is amended by striking out the words “prayer of petition dismissed at costs of petitioner; ” and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that interest on the amount of the abatement of the petitioner’s legacy, namely, $374.02|- be computed at the legal rate from December 16,1878, to April 7, 1894, the date of the death of the widow and life tenant; that said abatement with interest thereon thus computed be deducted from the petitioner’s legacy of $1,000 due and payable on April 7, 1899; and that the petitioner recover this balance together with interest thereon from the last mentioned date; which sum is hereby declared to be a charge on the land described in the petition and now payable out of the same. As thus amended the decree is affirmed, and the record is remitted to the orphans’ court with instructions to carry it into effect,' and to that end, to make such further orders and issue such process as may be necessary. It is further ordered that one half of the costs of the ■ appeal be paid by the appellant, and one half by the appellees.