By the Court.
Nisbet J.
delivering the opinion.
[1.] The lying over of this cause on the docket for so many terms after the suggestion of Hardwick’s removal, without any action therein, did not amount to a discontinuance. Up to the time when the order was taken, to make the administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, a party, there had been no motion to speed the cause. It was continued, therefore, from term to term, by the Court. If then, when the Court ordered it to be dismissed, upon the hearing of the rule to make Rogers the administrator de bonis non, a party, Hardwick, the removed executor, had been in a position on the record to proceed with the action, either in his personal character, or as executor, he would not have been hindered from so doing, by these frequent continuances made by the Court. They are to be considered as having been made by the Court, because the record does not show any motion in the cause, intervening the suggestion of Hardwick’s.removal and the order to make parties.
[2] The Inferior Court could not have made the administrator de bonis non a party, because he had no right at Common Law to sue for the purchase-money of these negroes, for which the action was instituted. The sale was an administration by Hard-wick, and the administrator de bonis non could neither call Hardwick to account nor collect in the purchase money.
[3.] The administration of this property charged Hardwick, and gave him the right to sue for the. price, either in his individual character or as executor. The powers of the administrator de bonis non, by the Common Law, extend only to the administration of the estate, so far as it was unadministered when he came into the trust. Nor could he have been made a party under the Act of 1845, for the rights of the removed executor and also his obligations, and also the rights of the administrator de bonis non had been fixed before the passage of that Act. It was subsequent to the administration of this property by Hardwick, *602and has no application to the case. 1 Kelly 80. 5 Geo. R. 58. 10 Geo. R. 266. Cobb’s N. Dig. 335.
No attempt was made, however, to make him a party, and he not being made a party, in pursuance of the order, the Inferior Court dismissed the action against the claim of counsel for plaintiff to proceed with the cause in the name and right of Hard-wick, personally. Was this done contrary to law, is the only question to be considered ? The claim set up by plaintiff’s counsel to proceed with the cause as stated, is founded on the rule, that the’ property being administered, the right to the purchase money was in him personally, and by striking out that part of the declaration which describes him as executor, as merely surplusage, the action would stand in his individual name. The rule as stated, is a trae rale ; but other .things are tobe considered. First, I inquire how is this action brought ? It is brought by Hardwick, in his representative character; he describes himself as executor; makes profert of his letters testamentary, and prays that the defendant appear and answer to his plaint as executor. It could not proceed as an action in his representative character, because he had been removed upon his own showing, from the executorship. His removal being suggested on the record, the Court affirmed the fact of his removal, by the order which directed that the cause be dismissed, unless the administrator de bonis non be made a party at the succeeding term. That order had the effect of a judgment affirmatory of the suggestion of removal. Nor could the cause be retained as a suit in his personal character, being made such by striking out or disregarding so much of the declaration, as exhibits him in a representative character, as merely descriptio persones. The rule as to descriptio persones, in these cases, is this : if the plaintiff describes himself executor, fyc. §T., it is an action in his personal character — the descriptive part being regarded as immaterial. But if the plaintiff describes himself, as he has done in this case, as executor Sec., then it is an action in his representative character, and the descriptive part is of substance, and cannot be regarded as immaterial. Whether this distinction be with or without reason, it is the rule of the Common Law, *603and was the rule of the Common Law when we adopted it, and it is therefore, obligatory upon this Court. The order of the Inferior Comí, dismissing the suit, was right; the little word as, is in such cases, quite potent. (1 Chitty’s Pleadings, 205 margin. 5 East, 150.)
Let the judgment be reversed.