3 Mass. 514 | Mass. | 1807
The Court ordered the motion to be filed, and the cause was continued. And now, at this term, the Chief Justice and the Judges Sewall and Parker, being present, the following opinion of the Court was delivered by
This question comes before the Court on the motion of Nathaniel Goodwin, that he may be admitted to prosecute a suit, pending in this Court, and commenced by Daniel Goodwin against Ebenezer Jones.
The facts on which this motion is founded are, that Daniel Goodwin, of Hartford, in the state of Connecticut, sued out the original writ in this cause against the said Jones, in an action, the cause of which by law survives to his executor or administrator; that he prosecuted his action, until the same was regularly pending in this Court by appeal, and then he died; and that at the next term Nathaniel Goodwin, of the same Hartford, having obtained from the Probate Court for the district of Hartford, under the authority of the state of Connecticut, administration of the goods and estate of the said Daniel Goodioin, moved the Court that he might, in his said capacity, be admitted further to prosecute this action against the said Jones.
The motion is founded on the statute of this commonwealth, 1784, March 4, c. 32, which provides that when an [ * 517 ] action is * pending, the cause of which will survive, if either party die, his executor or administrator may take upon himself the prosecution or defence of the action. And if an administrator, deriving his authority from the laws of any other state, i within the true intent of this statute, the motion ought to be granted
The counsel in favor of the motion have argued that all the per sonal estate of any person, wherever it may be, follows the person, and must be governed by the law of the place where the owner has his domicil; and they have compared an administrator to the assignee of a bankrupt, who may sue to recover the bankrupt’s effects in any state where they are found. It is admitted that the assignee of a bankrupt, duly appointed pursuant to the laws of the state where the bankrupt dwells, may maintain an action in that character in any other state, the laws of which are not repugnant to his recovery
The common law limits the power of the ordinary, in granting administrations, to goods within his diocese ; and if the intestate left bona notabilia, the granting of administration belongs to the metropolitan, whose power is limited to his own province. An administration granted by him does not extend to Ireland, though under the same sovereign; for if a man dies intestate in London, having goods in London and in Dublin, administration of his goods in Dublin must be granted in Ireland. Gibs. 472.
But if it be admitted that an administrator, so appointed, might claim, on general principles, the intestate’s goods in this state ; yet that claim cannot be enforced, if the laws of this commonwealtli are repugnant to it. Before we consider some of these laws relating to tliis subject, two principles are to be premised as unquestionable:—■ That the title to, and the disposition of, real estate must be exclusively regulated by the law of the place in which it is situated; and that there cannot be, at the same time, two administrators holding distinct and independent rights to administer the same goods of the same intestate.
An administrator in this state has all the powers over the goods of the deceased, which is possessed by an administrator at common law; and he must administer all the goods, chattels, rights and credits of the intestate, which are within the state. And further, by our laws, the real estate is assets, in the hands of an executor or administrator, to pay the debts of the deceased, if his personal estate be insufficient, and may be sold by him on obtaining a license. If the estate be insolvent, he must pay all the creditors their demands, joro rata, the real, as well as the personal estate of the deceased composing the fund. If any judgment be recovered for a lebt due from the deceased, the lands, which were his, may be • aken to satisfy the judgment; and for this purpose the law considers them as in the hands of the executor or adminis [ * 519 ] trator, and charges him * with waste, if by his neglect in satisfying the judgment, the lands were so taken. He may satisfy any judgment recovered by him, by extending his execution on the lands of the debtor. And he may maintain a real action to foreclose a mortgage of lands, declaring on the seisin of the deceased; and the lands extended on, or mortgaged, he may, on obtaining license, sell for the payment of the deceased’s debts. And in all cases, where .he shall sell lands for the payment of debts, he must account for the proceeds to the judge who granted him administration, who may, in the two last cases, allow the charges of administration to be a lien upon the land.
From a view of these statutes it is very certain that the administrator, on whom these duties are enjoined, and to whom, this power is given, must derive his authority from the laws of the commonwealth. He has the disposition of lands, and for their proceeds he must account to the judge of probate, to whom no administrator can be compellable to account, unless he who received his admin istration from the judge. On one of the statutes a judicial lecision
If this motion should prevail, and the personal assets of the de ceased be insufficient to pay his debts, how could his lands in this state be assets in the hands of the present administrator ? Or if, in this action, he should recover judgment against Jones, and satisfy that judgment by a levy on the debtor’s lands, by what legal process could those lands be made assets for the payment of the intestate’s debts ?
When any person, an inhabitant of another state, shall die intestate, but leaving real estate within this commonwealth, if administration should not be granted by some judge of probate of a county in which the estate lies, there would be no legal remedy for the creditors of the deceased to avail themselves of his real estate for the payment of the debts - due to *them. [ * 520 J Therefore to prevent a failure of justice, administration in such case must be granted by some probate court here; and the administrator, so appointed, will, by virtue of his letters of admin istration, and of the laws, also have the administration of all the goods, chattels, rights and credits of the intestate which were within the state. And if a foreign administrator of that intestate should also have the administration of his personal estate here, there would exist two administrators of the same goods of the same intestate, independent of each other, and deriving their authority from different states, a consequence which cannot be admitted. But the granting of administration here cannot divest the foreign administrator of any rights already vested in him; and the necessary inference is, that whether administration be, or be not, granted in this state, an administrator appointed in another state cannot legally claim any interest in the goods of his intestate, which are subject to an administration granted in this state. And it is no objection to this reasoning, that debts due to the intestate on simple contract are to be considered as goods situate where he dies. For if the position be admitted, contrary to the authority of Wentworth, in his Executor (page 46,) where it is supposed that such debts are bona notabilia where the debtor lives; yet the administrator, if he recover judgment on such contract in this state, may satisfy it by an extent on lands, which certainly in their disposition are exclusively subject to the control of the laws of the commonwealth.
To obviate the inconvenience from the existence of two administrators, each having an independent right to prosecute a suit for the same cause of action, if a foreign administrator be allowed to prosecute a suit in the courts of the commonwealth, it has been said that our courts of probate cannot now grant administration of the goods and estate of a person who was not an inhabitant, nor resident within the state at the time of his death. This objection deserves some consideration.
The statute of 1784, March 12, c. 46, erecting the present courts of probate, enacts that a court of probate shall be held in each county by a judge for taking the probate of wills and granting administrations of the estates of persons deceased, being inhabitants or residents within the same county at the time of their decease; and for such other matters and things, as the courts of probate within the several counties shall by the laws of the commonwealth, have cognizance and jurisdiction of. It appears from the latter part of the section, that this court, thus established, has general jurisdiction of all probate causes recognized by law. And all laws of the late province, not repugnant to the constitution, nor since
Upon fully considering this subject, it is the opinion of the Court that the motion cannot be granted, and that judgment be entered that the writ is abated by the death of the original plaintiff.
We are sensible that the courts in Connecticut admit administrators, receiving letters of administration in another state, to prosecute personal actions in those courts. This usage probably arose from an agreement of the four New-England colonies, made in the year 1648, that if any known planter or settled inhabitant die intestate, administration shall be granted by the colony to which the deceased belonged, though he died in another colony, and that the administration, being duly certified, shall be of force for gathering in the estate in the rest of the colonies. Hazard's Collection, vol. 2, page 124.
*An intercommunity of the rights of administration [*523] among neighboring states, in which lands are assets for
Writ abated.
[Ingraham vs. Geyer, 13 Mass. 146.—Sed vide Orr vs. Amory, 11 Mass. 25— Dawes vs. Boylston, 9 Mass. 337.—Chitty’s Plead. 17, 5th ed.—Ed.]
[Stevens vs. Gaylord, 11 Mass. 256.- Ed.]
[Borden vs. Borden, 5 Mass. 67.—Langdon vs. Potter, 11 Mass. 313.—Ed.]