Summary
In Morefield v. Harris, 126 N.C. 626, it was held: "An administrator cannot sue in this State by virtue of his appointment in another State. There must be an ancillary administrator appointed here."
Summary of this case from First Nat'l Bank v. PancakeOpinion
(Decided 22 May, 1900.)
Administrator Appointed in Another State — Ancillary Administrator Appointed Here — Bona Notabilia — Attachment Issued by Justice — Lien, When.
1. An administrator can not sue in this State by virtue of his appointment in another State. There must be an ancillary administrator appointed here.
2. A transcript of judgment obtained by the administrator and brought here is sufficient notabilia to warrant the appointment of such ancillary administration.
3. Attachment issued by justice creates a lien from its levy, and not merely from docketing of the judgment in Superior Court. Code, section 354.
ACTION, with attachment proceedings, heard on appeal from justice's court before Allen J., at Spring Term, 1899, of STOKES.
W. W. King for plaintiff.
A. M. Stack for defendant.
T. M. Foddrill, administrator of J. C. Foddrill, in Georgia, obtained a judgment in Georgia against the defendant, W. E. Harris, resident there. A transcript of said judgment was forwarded to Wesley Morefield, with directions to take out auxiliary letters of administration in Stokes County, N.C. and issue summons and attachments against the defendant, which was done, and attachment levied on land there belonging to defendant.
The justice rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for $193.98 and interest and returned the papers to clerk of Superior Court.
Defendant appealed to Superior Court, and his Honor affirmed the judgment and adjudged that the attachment was a lien from the docketing of the judgment, and not from its levy.
Defendant excepted and appealed from the judgment. The (627) grounds of exception are stated in the opinion.
The administrator in Georgia who obtained a judgment against the defendant, also resident in that State, seeks to subject realty of the defendant lying in this State. The administrator appointed in Georgia can not sue in this State ( Butts v. Price, 1 N.C. 201; Anon., 2 N.C. 355; Leake v. Gilchrist, 13 N.C. 81; Smith v. Munroe, 23 N.C. 345; Sanders v. Jones, 43 N.C. 246; Stamps v. Moore, 47 N.C. 80; Grant v. Reese, 94 N.C. 720), but ancillary administration must be taken out here. 13 A. E. (2 Ed.), 921. The intestate had no property in this State, but when a certified copy of the Georgia judgment is sent here, that is sufficient bona notabilia to authorize administration here under The Code, section 1374 (3), Shields v. Insurance Co., 119 N.C. 380. The creditor, if he had lived, could have sued here upon the debt, and have procured service by attaching the property here of the debtor who is a nonresident of this State. The administrator is simply the personal representative of the intestate, and has the same right of action, and to attach property of a nonresident as the basis of jurisdiction which the intestate would have had if living. Any other view would be a denial of justice. In Leake v. Gilchrist, it is said that the assignee of the debt by the administrator appointed at the domicile of the deceased could maintain an action here, and this is reaffirmed in Grace v. Hannah, 51 N.C. 94; Riddick v. Moore, 65 N.C. 382. Of course the assignee could have no higher rights to sue than an ancillary administrator appointed in this State, and one of the (628) Court ( Hall, J.) adds that administration should be taken out in this State to sue on the debt, if it had not been assigned. Under the present Code (sec. 177), an assignee for purposes of collection could not maintain the action. Abram v. Cureton, 74 N.C. 523. In Smith v. Munroe, 23 N.C. Ruffin, C. J., points out that our statute (now with some amendment, Code, section 1374) was intended to prevent disputes as to what county should grant administration, where the deceased left goods in more than one county, and was not intended to exclude the necessary power to authorize administration where the intestate died out of this State, and holds that a right to a distributive share in an estate, or debts however desperate, or even a claim of one who had assigned for benefit of creditors, was sufficient bona notabilia to authorize grant of administration here upon the estate of one who died nonresident. In Shields v. Insurance Co., 119 N.C. 380, it was held than an ancillary administrator appointed in this State upon the estate of one dying domiciled in Alabama, upon proof that there was property in this State (there a policy of insurance) could maintain an action "no matter when or how such chattels were brought within this State," and that is conclusive of the present action. "Being under a valid appointment and having in his hands the policy sued on, the law did not allow the debtor to contest his right to collect on behalf of the administrator in Alabama." To same purport it has been generally held in other States, that if property is brought after the owner's death into a State of which he was not a resident, ancillary administration may be granted there though he did not own any property in such State at the time of his death. In re Hughes, 95 N.Y. 55; Johnston v. Smith, 25 Hun (N. Y.), 171; Saunders v. Weston, 74 Me. 85; Stearns v. Wright, 51 N. H., 600; Pinney v. McGregory, 102 Mass. 186; McCord v. (629) Thompson, 92 Ind. 565; Green v. Rugely, 23 Tex. 539, the latter case citing English authorities to the same effect. The lien relates back to the date of the levy, and not merely to the date of docketing the judgment in the Superior Court. Code, sec. 354.
Affirmed.
Cited: Person v. Leary, post, 506; Page v. Ins. Co., 131 N.C. 116; Coleman v. Howell, ib., 129; Hall v. R. R., 146 N.C. 346; Chapman v. McLawhorn, 150 N.C. 167; Martin v. Mark, 158 N.C. 442; Bank v. Pancake, 172 N.C. 515.