Court Opinion

ID: 3856345
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:41:46.377231+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:12:16.494029
License: Public Domain

Argued October 7, 1925.
An examination of the record brought up on the appeal makes it apparent that the relief sought by the bill depends on the ability of the appellant to show that the sale of the real estate at Ventnor, New Jersey, was collusive, and that the return of the executors that it was made to John B. Moore, although true in form, was not true in fact — Mrs. Megraw, the widow of the decedent and one of the executors, being the actual purchaser. The partial account of the executors covering the transaction of the sale of that property having been confirmed in August, 1913, and distribution having been made in accordance with the account there exhibited, the petitioners must invalidate the sale to secure the relief sought. The respondents denied directly and comprehensively that the property was bought by or for Mrs. Megraw and alleged that the sale was regular and bona fide for a fair and adequate consideration. The burden of proof was on the petitioners therefore to establish by sufficient evidence the truth of their averments with respect to the irregularity of the sale. This the learned master found they had not done. He therefore decided against the application for a review of the account and recommended the dismissal of the bill. This report was approved and confirmed by the Orphans' Court and the only question properly for consideration now is whether the averments of the bill for review were sustained by testimony. A consideration of the evidence brought up brings us to the opinion that the master's report was well founded. No evidence was introduced from which the master or the court below would have been warranted in setting aside the sale to Moore. The fact that Mrs. Megraw remained in the house or that she caused the premises to be taken care of after the sale was not sufficient to show that the transaction was fraudulent on the part of the executors. The house is apparently that willed to her *Page 155 
by her husband and was her home, and her presence there was presumably on consent of the purchaser at the executor's sale. If not, it was incumbent on the proponents to show the contrary. Nor is the fact that some years after the executor's sale, Moore conveyed to Mrs. Megraw sufficient to avoid the title of Moore. If that was part of the plan formed before the executor's sale to enable Mrs. Megraw to become the owner that should have been proved by competent evidence. Very properly therefore the master and the court failed to sustain the averments of the bill of review.
The decree is affirmed and the appeal dismissed at the cost of the appellants.