Opinion by
Mr. Justice Brown,The plaintiffs in this ejectment are the children and grandchildren of George L. Bowser, deceased, who died intestate July 8, 1891. The defendant admits that the title to the land in controversy was in him at the time of his death, but, to defeat the title of the plaintiffs to it as his heirs at law, he sets up a deed to himself from Bowser’s administrator. The learned court below held that nothing had passed to the appellant under that deed, and a verdict was accordingly directed for the plaintiffs. When Bowser died he was the guardian of Martha E. Wyman, whose maiden name was Keirns. He had made no settlement with his ward, and on December 5, 1894, she presented her petition to the orphans’ court of Cambria county for the appointment of an auditor to state a guardianship *302account. An auditor was duly appointed for that purpose, and his report, finding that the estate of Bowser was indebted to her in the sum of $1,311.75, was absolutely confirmed on February 26, 1896. In the spring of 1900 Bowser’s administrator presented a petition to the orphans’ court, asking for an order to sell the real estate which is the subject of this ejectment for the payment of the decedent’s indebtedness to his ward, as found by the report of the auditor, and, such order having been granted, the administrator sold the said real estate to the defendant below. The sale was duly confirmed by the court, and on June 8, 1900, the deed upon which the appellant stands was duly executed and delivered to him by the administrator.
When Bowser died the Act of assembly relating to the duration of the lien of the debts of a decedent was that of February 4, 1834, P. L. 70, the twenty-fourth section of which provided that no such debts, except those secured by mortgage or judgment, should remain a hen on the real estate of such decedent longer than five years after his decease, unless an action for the recovery thereof should be commenced and duly prosecuted against his heirs, executors or administrators within the period of five years after his decease. The very narrow question raised by the appellant is whether the proceeding by the ward in the orphans’ court was “an action” within the meaning of the act of 1834, for, if it was not, it is conceded the orphans’ court was without jurisdiction to award the order of sale after five years had expired from Bowser’s death, and the defendant took nothing by his deed from the administrator. The only answer that need be given to the (question thus raised by the appellant is that it is not an open one. In Bindley’s App., 69 Pa. 295, it was definitely settled that a proceeding in the orphans’ court, such as was instituted by Bowser’s ward, was not “an action” contemplated and required by the act of 1834, and did not, therefore, continue the lien of his indebtedness against his real estate beyond five years from his *303death. In so holding, in a carefully considered opinion, Mr. Justice Sharswood said: “It only remains to consider whether the appellant, having presented his claim before the auditor appointed to report distribution of.the proceeds of a sale made tinder a previous order of the orphans’ court within the five years, and had a pro rata dividend awarded to him, and confirmed by the court, his lien on the real estate of the decedent was thereby kept alive and continued. The words of the act, as we have seen, are, 'Unless an action for the recovery thereof be commenced and duly prosecuted.’ These are strictly technical words, and according to the well-established canons of interpretation, should be received in their technical signification: 1 Black. Com. 59, note. It is now, however, contended, although it is a ground which does not appear to have been taken in the court below, that the claim before the auditor was an action commenced against the administrator, and duly prosecuted to a decree — that the act of assejnbly does not speak of actions at common law — or in a court of common-law jurisdiction; any querela, any lawful complaint in any competent court, will literally answer the words of the act; at all events, if not within the letter it is within the spirit of the law; the appellant has given notice of his debt against the estate in a mode pointed out and authorized by law. There is great plausibility in this contention. We should remember, however, that the principal intention of the twenty-fourth section of the act of 1834 was to promote the security and repose of titles in the hands of heirs and devisees as well as purchasers from them, and we think that it would imperil these objects to give the section so broad a construction as that now contended for.” ■’ The rule as laid down in Bindley’s Appeal was reaffirmed in Craig’s App., 5 W. N. C. 243, and in Bartley’s Est., 7 Pa. Dist. Rep. 36, in an exhaustive opinion by Judge Penrose, the question was again fully discussed in passing upon the provisions of the first section of the Act of June 8, 1893, P. L. 392, which differs only from the act of 1834 in limiting the duration *304of the lien of a decedent’s debts not of record to two years instead of five. The pertinent question there asked by Judge Penrose may be appropriately repeated here: “By what act of assembly, principle, or practice can an action against 'heirs’ — living persons — be prosecuted by the creditors of a decedent in the orphans’ court 'to judgment,’ or at all?” The action required by the statute must be commenced and duly prosecuted in the common pleas, and the court below correctly so held.
The assignments of error áre overruled and the judgment is affirmed.