Ehrhart's Estate

31 Pa. Super. 120, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 168
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 23, 1906
DocketAppeal, No. 11
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 Pa. Super. 120 (Ehrhart's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ehrhart's Estate, 31 Pa. Super. 120, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 168 (Pa. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Opinion by

Head, J.,

It is clear that the first distribution made by the auditor and the decree of the orphans’ court finally confirming the same were radically and seriously wrong. They resulted in depriving the appellees of the one-half of the entire personal estate of their deceased sister, Priscilla Lenhart, to which they were plainly entitled under the law, and in giving the same to the appellant, the surviving husband of the deceased, who was also [122]*122her administrator, and who had no legal right whatever to that poi’tion of the fund.

Of such a result, even when brought about under forms of law, we may properly say, in the language of Mr. Justice Paxson in Johnson’s Appeal, 114 Pa. 132, “it was so gross a mistake as to amount to a legal fraud.” As soon as the facts pointing out the existence of such mistake in its former decree were brought to the attention of the court below, it promptly instituted proceedings to correct .the same, and, after hearing, entered a final decree making the distribution as it should have been made in the first instance. From this decree this appeal has been taken by the husband of the deceased, the sole beneficiary of the error in the first decree. Inasmuch as orphans’ courts are, within their proper sphere, courts of equitable jurisdiction whose proceedings and decrees, generally speaking, aim at giving such relief as justice and equity may require, it would seem manifest that the decree appealed from should meet with our approval, unless the appellant can rely on some statute taking away the inherent power, possessed by all courts, of correcting errors in their own judgments where no rights of third parties have intervened; or limiting the time within which such a power might be exercised to a period that had fully elapsed before any relief was sought. A brief statement of the facts and the application to them of well-settled legal principles will show that this appeal cannot be sustained on either ground.

Priscilla Lenhart died in January, 1899, at her home in Baltimore county, Maryland, intestate and without issue, leaving to survive her a husband, the appellant, and a number of brothers and sisters, the appellees. Letters of administration on her estate were granted to her husband there, and this administration, under the laws of the state of her domicile, would be the primary or principal one for the settlement of her affairs. As a portion of her estate consisted of money due her from the estate of her father who was a resident of York county, Pennsylvania, at the time of his death, it was necessary to raise an ancillary administration in that jurisdiction and letters for that purpose were granted to her surviving husband, who thus became both principal and ancillary administrator. In due time he settled a partial and then a final account, both of which were confirmed without objection from any source. They showed a balance [123]*123in his hands, after payment of all debts and costs, of $979 for distribution to and among those legally entitled to share therein. Although seven of the appellees were then living in York county they were given no actual notice of the proceedings and no one appeared before the auditor but the appellant and his counsel. The fund for distribution was personal estate. The a-uditor was not informed by the administrator that the laws of Maryland, the state of the domicile of the intestate, were different from those of Pennsylvania in cases like the one before him, and when the administrator claimed the whole of the fund as surviving husband, and no one appeared to object, the auditor awarded “ the entire balance, less costs of audit to George Ehrhart.” No exceptions having been filed, this report became finally confirmed, in due course, on April 28, 1901.

Had the deceased been, at the time of her death, a resident of Pennsylvania and the distribution of her estate directly controlled by our laws, the decree would have been “ according to law ” and right in every respect. But the laws of Maryland, as appears from the record, gave to the surviving husband only the one-half of the personal estate of his deceased wife, awarding the remaining one-half to her brothers and sisters; and as it requires no citation of authorities to prove that, in such a case and for the purposes of such a distribution, our state accepts and adopts, as her own, the laws of the sister state in which the deceased was domiciled, it follows that this estate was not distributed, in the first instance, “ according to law.”

When, in May, 1903, the appellees, having been apprised of the situation, filed their petition asking that the decree confirming the auditor’s report be stricken off so that the error already recited might be corrected, and further that the accounts be opened to permit them to contest two items of credit wrongfully allowed, as they claimed, their right to any relief was resisted by the appellant on the ground that the court, under the act of October 13, 1840, had no jurisdiction to review the proceedings. ■ The reasons assigned were that as to the alleged errors in the accounts, they were not set forth with the particularity required by that act; and as to the distribution, there was no formal allegation in the petition that the fund, in the hands [124]*124o£ the accountant, had not been paid over to the party to •whom it was awarded by the decree. As the subsequent proceedings effected no change whatever in the accounts as filed, this feature of the case may be dismissed without further consideration.

The parties who were seeking relief were the same persons who had been injured by the former erroneous decree ; the court to which they applied was the same court which had inadvertently made the mistake complained of; the party against whom the relief was sought was the identical person who alone had profited by the mistake and the relief prayed f or was to compel him to restore the money wrongfully awarded to him as the result of that mistake, to those to whom it rightfully belonged.

Under such circumstances neither the parties nor the court needed the aid of the act of 1840 to enable the former to ask for and the latter to decree the correction of the error that had been made. The power to grant such relief has always been inherent in the courts and it has been frequently decided that it was not taken away by the act of 1840.

In Young’s Appeal, 99 Pa. 74, Mr. Justice Green uses the following language:

“ It cannot be doubted that the court below had ample power to correct the error of its original decree, either under or independently of the act of October 13, 1840. Nothing had been done under the decree, and if it was erroneous it ought to be corrected in the interest of justice and by the court that made it. . . . The discretionary power of the orphans’ court to correct its own errors by petition of review outside the provisions of the act of 1840 has been affirmed in the cases of Gillen’s Appeal, 8 W. N C. 499 and Whelen’s Appeal, 70 Pa. 410, and is manifest upon plain principles applicable to the power of all courts over their own decrees.”

To the same effect and in language equally plain are the opinions in Milne’s Appeal, 99 Pa. 483, and Johnson’s Appeal, 114 Pa. 132.

The whole purpose of the act of 1840, as has been held in Kinter’s Appeal, 62 Pa. 318, and other cases, was to give to a petitioner, who complied with its requirements the right to demand that which, before the passage of the act, he could have obtained only by a successful appeal to the discretionary [125]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Pa. Super. 120, 1906 Pa. Super. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehrharts-estate-pasuperct-1906.