Grubb v. Galloway
Grubb v. Galloway
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The petition in the orphans’ court averred, affirmatively and specifically, every fact necessary to support the decree authorizing the mortgage, and the decree ivas therefore a judicial ascertainment of the truth of such facts, on which the mortgagee was entitled to rely.
The learned judge below so held in regard to the date of decedent’s death, but drew a distinction as to the debts set up in the schedule to the petition, and held that the latter exhibited such looseness or irregularities as to put the mortgagee upon inquiry as to the actual facts. This distinction is inconsistent with the other ruling and indefensible on principle. The decree was conclusive of everything involved in it and in reaching the result the orphans’ court necessarily passed on the subject of the debts in the schedule, as fully as on the date of decedent’s death, and determined that they were debts of the decedent, a lien on his real estate, and of the proper amount to require the mortgage petitioned for. The mortgagee was not bound to examine for himself and come to a different conclusion at his own risk, but was entitled to rely on the court’s decree as a conclusive adjudication of all the facts, so far as concerned the validity of the title under the mortgage.
Much reliance was placed by the court below on Smith v. Wildman, 178 Pa. 245. That case went to the utmost verge in authorizing collateral attack on a decree of the orphans’ court, but it falls far short of sustaining a judgment like this. In that case the petition for sale merely recited that the de
There is nothing in Hemphill v. Pry, 183 Pa. 593, at variance with the views here expressed. There the decree was founded partly on the assent of an infant without a guardian, and the defect of jurisdiction as to his interest was patent on the record.
It is of common knowledge and has long been a subject of judicial regret that sheriff’s sales pass uncertain titles, and property suffers in price accordingly. But it is the settled policy, founded on the highest interests of all concerned, that titles under sales and mortgages by order of the orphans’ court shall be secured beyond question, and the courts have been vigilant to secure and preserve this result. Occasional hardship from false statements or improvident decrees has been inevitable, and sometimes has led to decisions like that in Smith v. Wildman,
Judgment reversed and judgment directed to be entered on the verdict.
Reference
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Orphans' court sale — Tille—Lien of decedent's debts — Mortgage—Validity of decree. Where a petition to the orphans’ court by an administrator for leave to mortgage real estate for payment of debts avers the death of the decedent within five years, and the existence of debts of which a schedule is filed, and a decree is entered in accordance with the prayer of the petition, the decree is conclusive that the debts mentioned in the petition were debts of the decedent, a lien on his real estate, and of a proper amount to require the mortgage petitioned for. The mortgagee may rely upon the decree as a conclusive adjudication of all the facts, and the decree cannot be attacked in subsequent scire facias proceedings on the mortgage, on the ground that the schedule of debts in the petition exhibited such looseness or irregularities as to put the mortgagee upon inquiry as to the actual facts. Smith v. Wildman, 178 Pa. 245; 194 Pa. 294, criticised and distinguished.