228 Pa. 546 | Pa. | 1910
Opinion by
The appeal in this case brings up the record of a partition proceeding in equity. Several errors are presented, at least one of which is fundamental. Instead of a trial
In a partition proceeding in equity, if the case is not sent to a referee under rule 69, the equity rules require that the court, and not a master, shall find all the relevant facts concerning the properties involved and the interests of the various parties, and that an adjudication shall be filed in the usual form containing these findings and the conclusions of law thereon, with a decree for partition: Palethorp v. Palethorp, supra. The proper procedure is shown in Palethorp v. Palethorp, 194 Pa. 408. Since the adoption of the new rules, the master merely executes the decree of the court after the rights of the parties have been judicially determined; before a master may be appointed to make partition the court must ascertain the interests and titles of the parties, and enter a' decree that partition be made. The decree for partition must, rest upon the findings and conclusions of the court;
The master held a meeting at which the appellants were not present, and proceeded to make findings of fact and reach conclusions of law from the insufficient averments of the bill. In his report he finds that the properties embraced in the bill had been owned by Andrew Hefner; that at his death Hefner directed by will that his real estate be sold by his executors and the proceeds divided among his children; that by mutual consent and agreement among the beneficiaries under this will the real estate was accepted and held by them as tenants in common as if there had been no direction to sell, and “thereby each of said beneficiaries became entitled to and was the holder of an undivided one-sixth interest in said lands;” that the appellant, Jane Miller, intermarried with William Miller; that she by a parol agreement sold her undivided one-sixth interest to certain of her brothers and sisters for a price only part of which had been paid; that this interest had since become vested by purchase in the plaintiffs, the appellees, and Jane Miller was simply the holder of an
The record shows that the amended bill was filed about four months after the original bill had been taken pro confesso and on the very day that the master filed his report of partition. Apparently no notice of the motion to amend was served upon the appellant, and the service of the amended bill was accepted by T. W. My ton, Esq., as her attorney. There is nothing upon the record to show that Mr. Myton ever entered his appearance as attorney for Mrs. Miller, and she denies his authority to bind her by the acceptance of service. If the plaintiffs desired to rest upon the decree pro confesso, they should not have filed the amended bill but should have taken proper proceedings to amend the original record; and if they desired to fix the appellant with notice of the amendment, the service should have been a personal one or should have been made upon an attorney whose appearance was duly entered upon the record.
We cannot sustain the contention that the appeal taken March 26, 1909, was not in time. The decree of September 21, 1908, was only nisi, and no attempt was made to enter a definitive decree on the report of the master until November 4, 1908. The report of the master returning a scheme of partition is like the return of the inquest in the orphans’ court, and must be followed by a decree of confirmation before further proceedings are had. “ The decree then made .... is definitive and final... . . It precedes any order of sale or any allotment of the purparts. From this final decree any person aggrieved may appeal:” Christy’s Appeal, 110 Pa. 538. In the present instance the court below made the order of sale without
Since the appellant is entitled to stand upon the firm ground that all the decrees complained of are void for the reason that they rest upon a fatally defective antecedent record, it is not necessary to discuss the various assignments covering the several refusals to permit her to enter a defense on the merits. When this record is again in the court below she will have an opportunity to present her defense if she so desires.
“We were compelled to treat a decree as a nullity because of the violation of the equity rules in the case of the Chester Traction Co. v. P. W. & B. R. R. Co., 180 Pa. 432, and to lay down the rule that where an equity case has been tried in violation of the equity rules of January 15, 1894, the Supreme Court will upon appeal set aside the decree together with all proceedings in the cause after the case was put at issue, .... and will direct that each party shall pay its own costs made since the cause was at issue:” Palethorp v. Palethorp, 184 Pa. 585. In the present case, considering all the circumstances as shown by this record, we conclude that the ends of justice, will be best served by this order: All the proceedings since the filing of the original bill are set aside, the plaintiffs to pay the costs made by them, including the master’s fee, the defendants to pay their own costs. The record is remitted to the court below with a procedendo.