Court Opinion

ID: 6315086
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-18 20:25:15.461764+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:59:13.748238
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered
by Knox, J.
— In ordinary cases, where land is taken at an appraisal, under proceedings in partition, by one of several heirs, and a recognizance is entered into, to secure to the other heirs *217their respective purparts, the administrator of the estate has nothing to do with the recognizance. In the present case, however, upon the representation to the legislature that the heirs-at-law of Joseph Ball numbered “many thousands,” an Act of Assembly was passed, which, amongst other things, authorized the administrator to receive the purchase-money due on proceedings in partition, and provided the 'means of distributing the same to the heirs of the decedent. We see no constitutional objection to this act, and under it the Court of Common Pleas has properly held, that the administrator could, in the name of the Commonwealth, sustain the action, and could compel payment of the recognizance.
It is alleged, that one of the defendants was entitled to a distributive share in the estate of Joseph Ball, and that the other was attorney in fact for several of the hpirs, and an effort was made to retain out of the recognizance such parts as the defendants would be entitled to receive upon distribution. It does not appear from the paper-book that any evidence was either given •or offered, from which it could have been determined how much the defendants were entitled to out of the money due on the recognizance ; and at all events, as the Act of Assembly points out a specific mode by which the interests of the several heirs shall be ascertained and paid, an action at law was no place for partial distribution. The remedy of the defendants 'is by a settlement of the administration account, and distribution to be made by an auditor, as provided for in the Act of Assembly.
Judgment affirmed.