DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 310
Judges: Brown, Frazer, Mestrezat, Moschzisker, Potter
Filed Date: 5/1/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
Appellee, as administratrix of the estate of Charles O. Skeer, deceased, filed her account in 1909. Exceptions taken by the heirs were dismissed by the lower court, but on appeal to this court the decree was reversed, and accountant surcharged with the sum of $119,234.43, the value of decedent’s interest in a certain partnership (Skeer’s Est., 236 Pa. 404). Pursuant to this decision a decree was entered in the court below October 15,1912, which included interest from the date of the decision of this court. There was also a general balance of $13,-621.02 for distribution among the heirs. Accountant then brought a bill of review alleging error in the amount of the surcharge, which was dismissed by the lower court, but, on appeal, this court granted a rehearing, and directed the report to be recommitted to the auditor for the purpose of ascertaining the value of the interest of deceased in the partnership in question. In a supplemental report filed by the auditor, the value of this interest was found to be $74,946.41, to which he added interest from May 13,1912, the date of our former decree, to May 14, 1914, the date of filing his report, making a total surcharge of $83,153.04. Exceptions were filed to the supplementary report, by the heirs, March 12, 1914, and by the administratrix, March 21, 1914. Both
While the general rule is that judgments carry interest from the date of entry, Section 17, of the Act of March 29, 1832, P. L. 190, provides that “no executor or administrator shall be liable to pay interest but for the surplusage of the estate remaining in his hands or power when his accounts are, or ought to be, settled.” By Section 18, of the same act the amount of interest to be paid in all cases “shall be determined by the Orphans’ Court under all the circumstances of the case.” Where the account has been filed, and a formal decree entered and confirmed, and no excuse exists for delay in carrying out the order, the accountant is properly chargeable with interest as in such case the account would be one which “ought to be settled,” and there are no “circumstances of the case” warranting a suspension of the rule that a judgment carriés interest from date of entry: Withers’ App., 16 Pa. 151. Where there are exceptions to the account, however, payment cannot safely be made until the exceptions are disposed of, and a final decree entered, as it is not until then the actual amount due is finally fixed. The question of addition of interest must at that
As a result of the bill of review brought by the administratrix a decree in the surcharge amounting to a considerable sum was secured by her. She should, therefore, not be punished for retaining the original sum, as that sum was not, in fact, due; nor should interest be computed on the amount actually found due in the proceedings for review, for the reason that until such decree was entered there was no way to determine the amount actually due, and, therefore, no sum which the administratrix should have paid, or which the heirs would have accepted. The heirs cannot complain that the delay was solely due to the action of the administratrix in appealing from the award, as they also appealed. Although it is true the exceptions to the decree, and appeal of the administratrix to this court were filed before those of the heirs, this slight difference in the time is not sufficient to warrant the conclusion that the delay was due entirely to the fault of the administratrix, especially as the heirs had taken the initiative in filing exceptions to the auditor’s report, and gave every indication of an intention to dispute the decree to the end. Until a final decision was reached there was no fixed sum which the heirs could accept, or which the administratrix could pay, without taking the chance of paying more than she legally owed. On the whole, we cannot say that under the circumstances the court below committed error in refusing to add interest. Although the appeal of accountant was only partially successful, the heirs demanded more than she was bound to pay as in Dietterich v. Heft, Snyder v. Dietterich, 5 Pa. 87, where it was held a guardian was not liable for interest on the balance of his accounts while his exceptions were pending in the Orphans’ Court and on appeal, the balance having been reduced by the appellate court. The heirs appealed, and as in Yoder’s App., in Yoder’s Est., 45 Pa. 394, accountant’s ■ appeal was decided at the same time as the appeal of the
The decree of the court below is affirmed.