1 Stew. 429 | Ala. | 1828
delivered the opinion of the majority of the Court.
The attention of the Court has been exclusively directed to the sufficiency of this replication, and in case of its insufficiency, to the defectiveness of the third plea. The question arising on demurrer to this replication, it is obvious that the appointment of the plaintiffs as administrators, with the will annexed, of John Greening, and the validity of that appointment, are the turning points of the whole case now before us. It is well established by authority, and not controverted at the bar, that as this point comes up collaterally in the present case, we cannot pronounce the appointment by the Orphans’ Court of Dallas county invalid,- unless they were without jurisdiction, and their act utterly void. That it was merely voidable, would avail nothing in the present inquiry. Without adverting to other cases illustrative of the distinction between void and voidable acts, it is sufficient now to say that if the appointment was made with jurisdiction to the prejudice merely of a paramount claim to administration, which Wade H. Greening might have asserted, it would have been voidable. But if the Court of Dallas had been deprived of all jurisdiction in consequence of an executorship then subsisting and potentially in being,
When a Court of Ordinary have granted letters testamentary to the persons entitled and capable of discharging the duties of the trust, they have emptied or divested themselves of jurisdiction by the transfer, and cannot resume jurisdiction over the same matter, until it reverts to them by the occurrence of some of those disabilities or events which either for the time or perpetually vacate the office ; as the nonage, insanity or death of the executor, the repeal of his letters, or in our State, his resignation in the way prescribed by, statute. This is certainly true-with respect to Courts in the same State. But Orphans’ Courts in this State may, and no doubt have jurisdiction to appoint administrators with the will annexed in some instances, and under some emergencies, notwithstanding the due appointment and qualification of an executor in another State. I will go further, and admit that even the personal presence of such executor will not of itself, in all cases, divest our Courts of jurisdiction. We must not only be-personally, but potentially present, so far as the exigencies of administration may require in each case. This is manifest when it is considered that a foreign executor, except as authorized by our statutes, has no power to assert a remedial right by. suit. The statute of 1821,
In such a case then, where it is made to appear by proper allegations in the pleadings, that there was money to collect by suit or otherwise, or indeed an apparent necessity for any kind of an action, the < executor from abroad might be here in person, and yet he would not be viewed as filling the full character of executor contemplated by law, necessary for- the purposes of complete administration. Again, if such an executor were to come here and fail to take possession of other property than money either from neglect or inability, our Courts might acquire jurisdiction. Because otherwise,
It is manifest then, accordingto this well settled principle of the common law, that in the case now before us, Wade H. Greening had a right, and was bound to take the possession of his testator’s property in this State, if it could be done without suit. It is equally clear, that having reduced it to possession, as the plea alleges he did, he was responsible to the creditors and legatees for a proper administration. This right vested by the will, and maintained by possession, which drew with it the responsibility mentioned, could not exist in legal contemplation, together with a right in the Orphans’ Court of Dallas to transfer it to another. One is utterly incompatible with the other, and the existence of the one presupposes the extinguishment or nonexistence of the other. The property then being reduced to possession as stated in the plea, and (so far as regards possession in this State) not denied by the replication, Wade H, Greening needed no remedy by suit. He asked for no remedial rights, and hence to all the purposes of the administra
The conclusion then is, that with the above restrictions, which are not alleged to exist, he is as much an executor in the one case as he would he in the other; and there
«Laws Aia.:
“5|.Bac' Abr'S2’
srage31a
taws Ala. 196.
6-^aws Ala. page 1 7' ^18'