Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1911

Roseburg's Estate

Roseburg's Estate
Superior Court of Pennsylvania · Decided July 13, 1911 · Beaver, Head, Henderson, Orlady, Porter, Rice
47 Pa. Super. 255; 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 144

Roseburg's Estate

Opinion of the Court

Opinion by

Head, J.,

Margaret J. Roseberg died November 28,1886, intestate. She left to survive her a husband, William Roseburg, who took out letters of administration upon her estate, four children, and one grandchild, a daughter of a son of the decedent who died before his mother. The administrator did not file his account of the personal estate until 1899, some years before which time the granddaughter referred to died. At the time of her death she was but three years of age, and was survived by her mother, the present petitioner. Under this state of facts it is agreed that the personal estate of the decedent should have been equally distributed among the six persons who were her next of kin, to wit, her husband, her four surviving child*259ren, and this petitioner in right of her daughter, the grandchild mentioned. It was the duty of the administrator to advise the auditing judge of the facts necessary to enable him to enter a proper decree of distribution. Testifying for that purpose at the audit, the administrator made no mention whatever of the deceased grandchild who had survived her grandmother, and who had left as her own heir at law her mother, but named only himself and his four children as the surviving next of kin entitled to take the fund. As a consequence the present petitioner was excluded, and the fund, amounting to something over $5,000, was divided between the administrator and his four children.

Shortly after this decree was made, and in ample time to have corrected the wrong worked to the present petitioner, either through the ignorance or the fraud of one who stood in a double relation of trust towards her, the petitioner wrote William Roseberg a letter of inquiry as to her rights, if any, in the estate of his deceased wife. His reply is quoted in full in the opinion of the learned judge below. He finds, and his finding is supported by evidence, that the statements contained in that letter were not only false in fact, but were willfully and fraudulently false; made with the design to deceive the petitioner. The man who wrote that letter was not only her father-in-law, the head of the family in which she had lived as one of its members, a man of wide business experience on whose judgment she might naturally rely, but was the administrator of an estate in which she was interested, charged with the duty of duly administering that property. The learned judge below further finds that the petitioner did rely upon the representations made in that letter and was convinced thereby that she had no interest in the estate of Margaret Roseberg until she was accidentally informed a few years later of her true status and legal rights in the matter. She then began these proceedings to recover from the estate of William Roseberg, who was then dead but whose estate was unsettled, the money of which she had been wrongfully *260deprived by his action already described. She sought to recover not only the fractional share of her inheritance, which he had wrongfully received, but also the portion distributed to his children which she could not recover from them by reason of lapse of time.

The only defense made to her claim was the statute of limitations. It may be remarked that this is not a proceeding to review the account of William Roseberg, administrator of his deceased wife. We have therefore nothing to do with the act of 1840 and the decisions under it. That the orphans’ court had power to correct its own decree of distribution, so long as it affected the rights of no one except of him who had caused the erroneous decree, we think cannot be doubted. But the mere correction of that decree gave to the petitioner nothing except a foundation upon which to prosecute an action against William Roseberg, if living, or his estate after his death.

The whole doctrine of the application of the statute of limitations in cases like the present one is fully reviewed by Mr. Justice Mitchell in Smith v. Blachley, 198 Pa. 173. An examination of that case clearly shows that under the earlier decisions in this state there could be no doubt that the statute of limitations would have been unavailable as a defense in the present case. But even if we recognize the distinction sq carefully pointed out by that eminent jurist, we must still hold that, under the facts presented by this record, the statute of limitations furnishes no bar to the relief sought by the plaintiff and accorded to her in the decree here appealed from. In the case cited there is quoted with approval, the following language, taken from Wood on Limitation of Actions, sec. 276, as accurately expressing the doctrine that has been followed in more recent decisions: "Something more than mere silence is necessary unless the relationship of the parties is such that the party is bound to speak; it is necessary that some effort to conceal the fraud should have been made, either by preventing an investigation or by misleading the party making inquiry, or that misrepresen*261tations were made by the party which were calculated to mislead him.” In Fleming v. Culbert, 46 Pa. 498, it was said that even if an attorney in fact had collected the money of his client, his failure to pay it over within a reasonable time would be an actionable breach of duty and that the statute would run from the time the right of action accrued, “But, ” said Woodward, J., — “if there be fraudulent concealment on the part of the attorney, as, for example, if he give false or evasive answers to the inquiries of his client or principal, the statute begins to run only from discovery of the fraud.” Again, in Sankey v. McElevey, 104 Pa. 265, the whole question was again elaborately reviewed by Green, C. J., and the principle thus stated: “But even in courts of equity we apprehend that there must be some relation of trust and confidence between the parties, imposing a duty to give information or some affirmative act or fraud, something more than mere silence, which will suffice to defeat the operation of the statute, where the basis of the reply to the statute is concealment of the cause of action.”

Applying the principle thus enunciated to the facts as found by the learned judge below, we are obliged to hold that in this case the statute of limitations began to run only from the time of the discovery of fraud by the petitioner, and as a consequence interposed no bar to the successful prosecution of her claim.

Decree affirmed.

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