McRoberts v. Burns

34 A.2d 519, 348 Pa. 166, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 520
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1943
DocketAppeal, 163
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 A.2d 519 (McRoberts v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McRoberts v. Burns, 34 A.2d 519, 348 Pa. 166, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 520 (Pa. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

This is an appeal from the decree of the court below finding that the defendant Burns was not guilty of any of the alleged fraudulent aets complained of and denying the relief prayed for. Plaintiff filed a bill in equity to set aside a power of attorney which he alleged that Attorney Bradley McK. Burns, and the latter’s friend, Bingham S. Packard, fraudulently secured from him fifteen days after the death of plaintiff’s half brother, James McRoberts, who died intestate, unmarried, and without issue, seized of real estate valued at $129,160. Under the law the plaintiff became seized of an undivided one-fourth interest in this estate. The power of *168 attorney authorized Burns to recover for the plaintiff whatever might be due him from the estate. As compensation therefor he assigned to his attorney thirty-three and a third per-cent (33-%%) of the sums of money which may be recovered in any proceedings either at law or in equity, instituted under the power given.

On October 17, 1939, Samuel McRoberts, brother of decedent, who had not known of plaintiff’s whereabouts for forty years and did not know whether plaintiff was living or dead, had Letters of Administration issued to him. The application for Letters of Administration did not list plaintiff among the heirs. Samuel McRoberts was advised by G-. D. Schrum, who was attorney for the Estate of James McRoberts, Deceased, that it would be necessary to locate his absent brother, the plaintiff, or his heirs, so that good title could be given to the real estate. After Letters of Administration were granted, Samuel McRoberts and Attorney Schrum began a search for plaintiff. The defendant, B. S. Packard, had been a tenant on the deceased’s farm for several years before McRoberts’s death. He knew there was an “unknown” half-brother. Packard communicated with Attorney Burns four days after the burial of decedent acquainting him with the situation. On October 27, 1939, Burns canvassed certain districts of Pittsburgh and finally located plaintiff’s residence and requested plaintiff’s wife to have plaintiff communicate with him. That evening Burns informed Packard that he had located the plaintiff and requested Packard to bring plaintiff to his office. On the following morning Packard induced plaintiff and his wife to accompany him to Burns’ office where plaintiff learned for the first time of his half-brother’s death. Plaintiff’s testimony on this point is as follows: “Mr. Burns started telling me about my brother Jim dying. I didn’t know nothing about it, and he said I was coming into this estate, that I had to have an attorney to fight this case, get the estate for me, and Mr. Packard he *169 gays if Sam and them knowed that I was coming in for my share of the estate, hard telling what might happen, what they might do to beat me ont of it, that they would do me bodily harm . . . Mr. Packard says if I wouldn’t give the case to Mr. Burns he wouldn’t have nothing to do with it, he would work again me, and Mr. Burns spoke up and says that I would have to sign the paper in order for him to go ahead and fight and get my share of the case ... So I handed it to my wife, and we hesitated about signing it — we didn’t want to sign it at first. At first my wife wanted to take it out, and Mr. Burns says, ‘Oh, you can look up my record in Sewickley’ . . . So I signed the power of attorney.”

Defendant Burns testified on cross-examination as to what took place at the meeting on October 28, 1939, as follows: “. . . they wanted to know what I had found out . . . and they asked me my opinion as to whether it meant anything to them, and I said that that was a pretty large order, that it would be hard to say. I said that if this was the same James Altenbaugh McRoberts, the son of James F. McRoberts, from what I had so far seen, it seemed probable to me that he had an undivided interest in this deceased brother’s estate, and they then asked me if I wouldn’t look after the matter for them . . . I agreed to represent them.” On this statement of Burns appellant chiefly relies to sustain his charge of fraud. Appellant’s paper book contains this statement: “The bare fact that Burns knew that plaintiff was seized of an undivided one-fourth (%) interest in said real estate when plaintiff visited Burns’s office and did not advise him thereof but on the contrary induced him to execute a-power of attorney, employing Burns to recover same for him on a contingent fee basis of Thirty-three and one-third (33-%) per cent is of itself sufficient to show deception and unfair dealing. Burns’ own testimony convicts him of actual or positive fraud.” Appellant further claims that “Attorney Burns occupied a confidential relationship with plaintiff and did not meet the burden *170 of proof [of showing] that no deception was used in the procurement of said power of attorney . . . and that the execution of the power of attorney was the free and intelligent act of the plaintiff”.

The court below negatived appellant’s contention and found “ as a fact that the defendant Burns dealt honestly and openly in all of his. dealings with the plaintiff”. The court also concluded as a matter of law that “there was no fraud or concealment of any hind whatsoever of any material facts on the part of said Bradley McK. Burns, either at the time the said power of attorney was signed by the plaintiff, or at any other time”.

The burden of proof in this case was upon the plaintiff. The appellant has proceeded on the theory that there was such a confidential relationship existing between appellant and Attorney Burns as to place the burden of proof upon Burns to show that he had dealt honestly and openly with the appellant. It is true that a confidential relationship exists between attorney and client, but at the time of the fraud alleged this relationship between these two parties had not been established. If there was any fraud committed by Attorney Burns it was not after he became appellant’s attorney but when he induced appellant to engage him as his attorney and to give him the power of attorney. It is the duty of any attorney to deal fairly with all persons whether clients or strangers, but the fact that Burns was an attorney when he had the conversation which led to the execution of the power of attorney does not cast the burden of proof upon him. He who alleges fraud in a case like this must prove it or the charge falls.

The court below found that there was no fraud here. Burns’ statement on cross-examination that “it seemed probable” to him that McRoberts had an undivided interest in this deceased half brother’s estate was an understatement that invites the imputation of being lacking in candor, but it does not amount to fraud. Burns should have made it clear to McRoberts that if the latter was *171 the half brother of the decedent, and if decedent died intestate and without issue, he, McRoberts, had an undivided interest in the decedent’s estate. Burns admitted on cross-examination that he knew at the time he secured the power of attorney that if the man who executed it was James Altenbaugb McRoberts, tbe half brother of tbe decedent, be bad a vested interest in that half brother’s estate. Under those facts Ms interest was more than a “probable” one.

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Related

Craig Estate
10 Pa. D. & C.3d 154 (Somerset County Court of Common Pleas, 1978)
McRoberts v. Burns
88 A.2d 741 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 A.2d 519, 348 Pa. 166, 1943 Pa. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcroberts-v-burns-pa-1943.