The opinion of the Court below was delivered
by Ti-iayer, P. J.,as follows:
There are few subjects in regard to wnich more solicitude has been shown by the Legislature and the courts than the protection of the widow’s right in the estate of her deceased husband. The act of 1764, relative to the partition of the estates of decedents, enacted that her share should be valued and charged upon the land;- that the interest should be regularly and annually paid to her, and that she might recover it by distress. The same provision was carried into the act of 1794, the act of 1807, and finally into the present law, the act of 29th March, 1832, which enacts that “the widow shall not be entitled to payment 'of the sum at which her purpart shall be valued, but the same shall remain charged upon the premises,” and that, “where a decree for a sale shall be~made by the orphans’ court, the court shall direct that the share of the widow of the purchase money shall remain in the hands of the purchaser during the natural life of the widow, and the interest thereof shall be annually and regularly paid to her by the purchaser, his heirs and assigns, holding the premises, to be recovered, by distress or otherwise, as rents are recoverable in this Commonwealth.” This provision is mandatory and absolute, so that it is not in the power of the court to adjudge the land to the party taking it, or to the purchaser, discharged from the payment of the interest on the widow’s share: Good v. Good, 7 W., 199; Medlar v. Medlar, 2 Penna. R., 355. And the object of the provision is, as pointed out by Kennedy, J., in Good v. Good, that the payment of the money, after any lapse of time, may be made perfectly secure. By such a sale her interest is converted into a money charge on the premises: Vensel’s Appeal, 27 Smith, 71. If a recognizance is taken, or other security, it is but a collateral security for the charge upon the land: DeHaven v. Bartholomew, 7 Smith, 126; Brooks v. Smyser, 12 Wright, 90. And debt or assumpsit by the widow lies against the purchaser or the alienee of the purchaser: Pidcock v. Bye, 3 R., 183; Shelly v. Shelly, 8 W. & S., *370153; DeHaven v. Bartholomew, 7 Smith, 128. The alienee and heir are in no better situation than the first purchaser: Hise v. Geiger, 7 W. & S., 273. And the Statute of limitations cannot be set up against the widow’s claim: Dillebaugh’s Estate, 4 W., 177; DeHaven v. Bartholomew, 7 Sm., 126.
George W. Arundel for plaintiff in error. If, by her tacit consent in allowing the payment of the full amount of the purchase money to the administrator, and its subsequent division between her other children and himself, the defendant in error induced the purchaser to believe she had abandoned her Interest in- the land, equity would, at least, hold her to a prompt assertion and pursuit of her claim, and should hold her failure for ten years, and until after the purchaser’s death, to assert her claim, such laches as to now estop her.*370These provisions and decisions are conclusive of the present case. [Here' the Court recited the facts supra.]
Under this state of facts, we entertain no doubt whatever that the share of the purchase money representing the widow’s interest is a continuing lien upon the land, which may be enforced by the present action. It was the fault of the purchaser to have paid over the whole amount of the purchase money to the administrator, if he did so without some agreement from the widow or a release of her interest. In the absence of that there can be no doubt that her share of it remains a charge upon the land. If the purchaser paid the whole amount to the administrator, he paid it in his own wrong, and the fact that he paid it ignorantly and in good faith will not exonerate the land from the charge, for nothing can accomplish that short of evidence of an actual receipt of the money by her, a release, or something tantamount to it. And it makes no difference that neither the deed executed to the purchaser, nor any order of court made in the progress of the proceedings in partition, charged the widow’s interest expressly upon the land. That charge is made by the law pro'prio vigore, is the legal result of the sale in partition, and it can only be extinguished by some act of the widow herself. Her rights cannot be taken away by her neglect to claim it, by the acts of third parties, or by lapse of time. Judgment must therefore be entered for the plaintiff. But it is a judgment de terris, and not a general judgment: Pidcock v. Bye, 3 R. 183; DeHaven v. Bartholomew, 7 Smith, 128.
Judgment for the plaintiff, de terris, on the points reserved, whereupon defendants took this writ, assigning for error the action of the Court in entering judgment for plaintiff upon the points reserved.
January 21st, 1884. It has been repeatedly held that a widow, in relation to her rights in her deceased husband’s estate, being a femme sole, is subject to the application of all the principles of equitable estoppel: Carr ». Wallace, 7 Watts, 394; Simpson’s Appeal, 8 Barr, 199 ; Troxell v. Iron Co., 6 Wright, 513; Ayres «. Wattson, 7 P. F. Smith, 360; Taggart’s Appeal, Leg. Int., Dec. 22, 1882. As the plaintiffs in error interpret the rulings in Schall’s Appeal, 4 Wright, 170; Horam’s Estate, 9 P. F. Smith, 152; Richards®. Rote, 18 ibid., 251; Vensel’sAppeal, 27 ibid, 71; and Dickinson v. Beyer, 6 N orris, 274, if the widow was a party to the proceedings in partition of her deceased husband’s estate, or had notice thereof, her interest in the land is divested by the subsequent sale under the order of the orphans’ court, and her right of dower is transferred in such a case from the land to the fund realized from the sale, and her right of action should be, if at all, against the administrator or his sureties, to account to her for the use during her life of the one third of the proceeds of the sale, he having, with her consent, received the identical fund now in dispute. ■ John White and Jacob JS. Bowers for defendant in error. The defendant in error, by the statutes, had no right to the money to remain on the property in the hands of the purchaser to secure her interest, and could not object to the partition, could do nothing but demand from the purchaser that which the law gave her — the interest for life upon one third of the purchase money, to be paid by the purchaser and those holding the property. The doctrine of estoppel does not apply to such a case. The purchase money in the hands of Bauer, who wras ordered by the court to make the sale, could, in law, be considered only as the portion legally payable to him, that is, the portion then payable to the heirs — no part of it could go to the widow upon distribution. Per Curiam:No fact is shown in this record to destroy the right of the widow, nor to estop her from asserting it. The opinion of the learned judge on the motion for judgment on the point reserved contains a clear and correct statement of the law.
Judgment affirmed. .