45 N.C. 196 | N.C. | 1853
After other statements not necessary to be repeated here, the bill prayed that the defendants "may account with your orator for the assets of the deceased in their hands, or the hands of either of them, and for the money and effects belonging to your orator deposited in their hands by the deceased as is hereinbefore charged, and that your orator may have such other," c.
The answers of the defendants were filed to Spring Term, 1849, and at Spring Term, 1853, the case was transferred to this Court.
The bill cannot be sustained in its present form. It is filed by Peter May, as the administrator with the will annexed, of Reading Anderson, and part of the prayer is, "that the "defendants may account with the plaintiff for the assets of the "deceased in their hands," and another prayer is that the defendants may account "for the effects belonging to your orator
"deposited in their hands by the deceased." Here are two distinct and independent causes of action united. One, to call in and collect the assets of the deceased, and the other, to follow the effects of the plaintiff, effects due to him individually and in his own right. At law, an executor or administrator cannot join a count for a debt due to him individually, with one in his representative capacity. Neither can they be joined in Equity. Adams Equity, 2nd edition 567. Davon v. Tanning, 4 Johns. Ch. 199. Bedsole v. Monroe,
It is no sufficient answer to the objection for the want (199) of parties, that one interested is dead, and there is no personal representative; it is the duty of those seeking relief by bill in Equity in a matter in which the deceased person is interested, to procure a representative, and it can therefore be no answer for the plaintiff that he is the representative. Martin v. McBride,
The truth is, the bill is so singularly constructed that no relief can be had under it.
PER CURIAM. Bill dismissed with costs. *177