This is an appeal by an administrator from a decree of the Probate Court in Worcester County disallowing certain items in his account. At the hearing before the Chief Justice, the appellee desired to contest other items in the account besides those involved in the appeal of the administrator, but the court ruled that it was not open to her to contest other independent items. The appellee does not question now the correctness of the ruling, and we think that it clearly was right. Boynton v. Dyer, 18 Pick. 1. Harris v. Harris, 153 Mass. 439.
The principal matter in dispute relates to the disallowance of the payment by the administrator of a note held against the intestate at her decease by Walter B. Chase of Sutton in this State, an heir at law. The intestate lived in Connecticut, where she possessed real and personal estate. She also possessed real estate in Sutton. The appellant, who lives in Worcester, was appointed administrator in both States. The next of kin were Walter B. Chase aforesaid, a brother, and one Hattie H. Jacobson of Portland, Maine, a half sister. By the laws of Connecticut kindred of the whole blood take to the exclusion of the half blood. There were debts of the intestate in this State, consisting of the note to Chase, and of unpaid taxes on the estate in Sut
The appellee contends that the note should have been paid by the administrator out of the personal estate in Connecticut, and she relies on Livermore v. Haven, 23 Pick. 116, and also on Fay v. Haven, 3 Met. 109, where another question growing out of the same controversy was considered. But in Livermore v. Haven, as was observed in substance in Prescott v. Durfee, 131 Mass. 477, the question was whether the court in its discretion should grant a license under the circumstances to sell real estate in this Commonwealth for the payment of debts. In this case the license has been granted by a court of competent jurisdiction, after due notice, and the sale has been made, and neither those proceedings nor the validity of the appointment of the administrator can now be attacked collaterally by the appellee. Pierce v. Prescott, 128 Mass. 140. It does not appear that the payment by the administrator was not made in good faith, or that there was any collusion between him and Chase in regard to the settlement of the estate in Connecticut, or the sale here.
In Prescott v. Durfee, ubi supra, it was held that a Massachusetts creditor of a New York intestate, who died possessed of real estate here but no personal estate, might procure the appointment of an administrator in this State, and attach the real estate to recover the payment of his demand. It appeared that an administrator had been appointed in New York, and that there was personal estate there more than sufficient to pay all the debts, and there was nothing to show that the creditor had made any effort to collect his debt out of the personal estate in New York. But neither fact appears to have been regarded as material.
If there had been different administrators in Connecticut and Massachusetts, and the same course had been pursued by them in regard to the respective estates that has been followed by the present administrator, we presume that it hardly would be contended that the payment of Chase’s note by the administrator in this State should be disallowed. We do not see that it makes
The two remaining items relate to the burial of the deceased whose remains were brought into this Commonwealth and con
A majority of the court think that the decree of the Probate Court should be reversed in respect to the items appealed from, and affirmed in other particulars, and it is
So ordered.