117 Me. 491 | Me. | 1918
At the time of her death, intestate, the domicile of Sarah Wood Lemon was in Massachusetts, She there left property for administration, and she also left property to be administered in the State of Maine. Administrations were granted in the different States, first in Massachusetts and later in Maine, to one Bennett Benari. He accepted the distinct trusts. Alleging that she had rendered personal services for the intestate in her lifetime, for which payment was not made, the plaintiff in the present case previously sued Mr. Benari, in his representative capacity, in Massachusetts. In that suit, in the Superior Court in Suffolk County, she recovered judgment against the estate of the decedent. That judgment remaining largely unsatisfied, she brought this action against Benari as administrator in Maine, counting on a cláim differing only from that which formed the basis of her case in Massachusetts, in that it gives credit for payments there made on account, since the commencement
The exclusion of the offered evidence was in accordance with the established doctrine of the courts of this country. Where administrations of the estates of the same intestate are granted to different persons in different states they are so far deemed independent of each other that a judgment obtained against one will furnish no right of action against the other, to affect assets received by the latter in virtue of his own administration; for in contemplation of law there is no privity between him and the other administrator. Story, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 522; Aspden v. Nixon, 4 How., 467; Stacy v. Thrasher, 6 How., 44; Hill v. Tucker, 13 Plow., 458; McLean v. Meek, 18 How., 16; Noonan v. Bradley, 9 Wall., 394; Reynolds v. Stockton, 140 U. S., 254; Smith v. Madden, 78 Fed., 83.3; Low v. Bartlett, 8 Allen, 259. As was said by Mr. Justice Virgin in Fowle v. Coe, 63 Maine, 245; “..................... the answer is, that the administrations of the estates of the same decedents in different states where there are creditors and property belonging to the same estate, are regarded as wholly independent of each other; that there is no privity between the different administrations; but that each is sovereign within its own limits.h
In the case at bar, the fact that one and the same person is administrator in both States does not alter the doctrine. The Massachusetts judgment is against the defendant in his representative capacity there. That representation does not extend beyond the assets of which the Massachusetts court that appointed him has jurisdiction. Stacy v. Thrasher, supra. Letters of administration are without extra-territorial force. Story, Confl. of Laws, Sec. 512; Smith, v. Guild, 34 Maine, 443; Saunders v. Weston, 74 Maine, 85; Smith v. Howard, 86 Maine, 203; Brown v. Smith, 101 Maine, 545. The two administrations are entirely unrestricted by each other. Low v. Bartlett, supra; Ela v. Edwards, 13 Allen, 48. In Johnson v. Powers, 139 U. S., 156, at page 159, Mr. Justice Gray, in delivering the opinion of the court, says: “A judgment recovered against the administrator of a
In Stacy v. Thrasher, supra, a judgment recovered in one State, on an alleged debt of the intestate, was held to be incompetent evidence of the debt in a suit brought by the same plaintiff in the Circuit Court of the United States, held within another State, against an administrator there appointed of the same intestate. In that case it was urged, as here, that the principle indicated was not applicable-because of the provision of the Constitution, that full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State. U. S. Con. Art. IV, Sec. 1. In speaking the speech of the court, Mr. Justice Grier said: “The judgment is against the person of the administrator, that he shall pay the debt of the intestate out of the funds committed to his care. If there be another administrator in another state liable to pay the same, debt, he may be subject to a iike judgment upon the same demand; but the assets in his hands cannot be affected by a judgment in which he is personally a stranger. The law and courts of a state can only affect persons and things within their jurisdiction. Consequently, both as to the administrator and the property confided to him, a judgment in another state is res inter alios acta.”
The ruling of the trial court was right.
Exceptions overruled.