Shewchuk Estate

282 A.2d 307, 444 Pa. 249, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 784
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 1971
DocketAppeal, 256
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 282 A.2d 307 (Shewchuk Estate) 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
Shewchuk Estate, 282 A.2d 307, 444 Pa. 249, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 784 (Pa. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Roberto,

We are confronted in this appeal with legal problems generated by the belated reappearance of a long lost daughter four years after the judicially approved distribution of her deceased father’s estate to his brother and two sisters. The principal issues involved concern (1) the power of an orphans’ court to review and reopen the distribution of a decedent’s estate on the ground of fraud and (2) the sufficiency of evidence of fraud in the instant case. We hold that an orphans’ court does have such power and that the findings of fraud are adequately supported by the present record.

The procedural history of this appeal is as follows: John Shewchuk died intestate on February 12, 1962, leaving an estate of approximately $150,000. On February 23, 1962, the Register of Wills of Philadelphia granted letters of administration to the decedent’s brother and sister, William Shafter and appellant Dorothy Zerkas.

*252 The administrators’ account was called for audit in the Orphans’ Court Division of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas on April 1, 1963, at which time it was revealed that decedent was survived by another sister living in the Ukraine by the name of Maria Arsak. A question also arose at that time as to whether decedent was also survived by a wife and daughter. Appellant and Shafter submitted a signed affidavit admitting the existence at one time of persons known as Pauline and Mary Eogowska but denying any legal relationship of such persons to the deceased. William Henry, counsel for the estate, filed his own affidavit setting forth his belief that decedent had a wife Pauline and a daughter Mary but that they had not been heard from for almost fifty years.

William Shafter died in January of 1964. John Shewchuk’s estate was next listed for audit on March 21, 1964, and again on April 9, 1964. On the latter date various witnesses testified that decedent had in fact been married to a Pauline Eogowska and had a daughter by her named Mary. Herbert Davis, a genealogist hired by William Henry on behalf of the estate to search for Pauline and Mary Eogowska, reported to the auditing judge concerning the advertising efforts which had been taken to locate Pauline and Mary.

The matter was next called for audit on December 14, 1964, at which time Davis testified that it was his expert opinion that there was little likelihood of ever finding decedent’s wife or daughter. On December 29, 1964, the auditing judge ruled that the decedent’s wife Pauline had forfeited her share of the estate by virtue of willful desertion; that decedent’s daughter Mary, having been missing for almost fifty years, was presumed to have predeceased her father leaving no issue; and that the estate was therefore to be awarded in equal shares to appellant, to the executrix of William *253 Shafter, and to the Secretary of Revenue to be held for Maria Arsak under the so-called Iron Curtain Act. 1

The Schedule of Distribution filed pursuant to this ruling was approved by the orphans’ court on April 14, 1965, and distribution of the estate’s assets was made accordingly. On May 27, 1966, the administrators and their surety, the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, were formally discharged from further liability on the bonds of the administrators. In June of 1968, the share which had been given to the Commonwealth for the benefit of Maria Arsak was awarded to her attorney-in-fact and was transmitted by him to Maria Arsak.

On June 30, 1969, appellee Mary Youlgaris filed a petition to open and vacate the distribution decrees of 1964 and 1968 on the ground that she was the decedent’s daughter and as such entitled to his entire estate. Preliminary objections pertaining to the petition’s lack of specificity were sustained and Mary thereafter filed an amended petition. Answers to the amended petition were timely filed, and extensive hearings were conducted in April and May of 1970 before the same auditing judge. On July 8, 1970, it was decreed that Mary Youlgaris was decedent’s daughter and that appellant, as surviving administratrix, was liable to recover the assets previously distributed. Exceptions to the decree were dismissed by the court en banc, and this appeal followed.

Appellee’s 1969 petition for review alleged that the original decrees of distribution in 1964 and 1968 had *254 been procured by the fraudulent misrepresentations of appellant and William Shatter. Appellant contends that even if these allegations be true, a petition for review will not lie once the assets of the estate have actually been distributed in accordance with the terms of a court decree.

Throughout the period of this litigation, Section 721 of the Fiduciaries Act of 1949, P. L. 512, as amended, 20 P.S. §320.721, provided as follows: “If any party in interest shall, within five years after the final confirmation of any account of a personal representative, file a petition to review any part of the account, or of an auditor’s report, or of the adjudication, or of any decree of distribution, setting forth specifically alleged errors therein, the Court shall give such relief as equity and justice shall require: Provided, That this section shall not authorize review as to any property distributed by the personal representative in accordance with a decree of court before the filing of the petition. . . . (Emphasis added.) 2

Despite Section 721’s apparent categorical prohibition of post-distribution review, it is settled that an orphans’ court “enjoys the inherent power to set aside an adjudication at any time upon the showing of fraud.” Alpern v. Girard Trust Corn Exchange Bank, 403 Pa. 391, 399, 170 A. 2d 87, 91 (1961). This is so even after distribution, for as stated in White’s Estate, 249 Pa. 115, 94 Atl. 470 (1915) : “Where, however, the fund has been paid out in accordance with the terms of decree, a bill of review will not lie as a matter of right, but only where fraud has been shown to have induced the decree, this latter being an indispensable *255 condition. Russell’s Admrs. App., 34 Pa. 258. In the case last cited it is said by Strong, J., ‘It was to prevent such injustice that a bill of review is denied after a “balance found due shall have been paid over.” The proviso is a protection to the accountant, as truly as to the cestuis que trust. The original decree is presumably right and it would be neither equity nor justice to punish the accountant for yielding obedience to it.’ While the review does not lie as a matter of right to correct errors after the fund has been paid out, yet if fraud be shown to have entered into the decree or induced it, notwithstanding the fund has been paid out, the court may, in the exercise of a sound discretion direct a review, Yeager’s App., 34 Pa. 173.” Id. at 120, 94 Atl. at 472. Cf. Burger Estate, 425 Pa. 395, 398, 229 A. 2d 463, 465 (1967). Such review is especially appropriate and necessary in a case such as the present one where the administrators were also beneficiaries. This potential conflict of interest and possibility for self dealing necessitate the closest scrutiny of any allegation of fraud. Cf. Young v. Kaye,

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Bluebook (online)
282 A.2d 307, 444 Pa. 249, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shewchuk-estate-pa-1971.