Opinion
(December Term, 1855.)
It is a general doctrine of the common law recognized in this State, that no suit can be brought, or maintained, by any executor, or administrator, or against any executor, or administrator, in his official capacity, in the Courts of any other country or State, except that from which he derives his authority to act, in virtue of the probate and letters testamentary, or the letters of administration there granted to him.
This principle is not varied by the fact that a part of the assets of an estate have been recovered by an administrator appointed in another State, suing in his individual capacity in a Court in this State upon promises made him by the defendant, and by such defendant seeking to enjoin the judgment.
APPEAL from an interlocutory decree of the Court of Equity of Randolph County, at its last Fall Term, his Honor, Judge CALDWELL, presiding.
Gilmer and Miller for plaintiffs.
Bryan, for defendants, agreed as follows: What Equity has the plaintiff to retain the amount received, or to a set off against it?
The facts of this case are set forth in the opinion of the Court.
The money was the individual property of Dubose; the negro which he had bought of Newby, (by his agent Brookshire, the plaintiff,) had been recovered from him, and this was the consideration (277) money he had paid, to which he was entitled upon every principle of equity and good faith; this money was in the hands of plaintiff, and he had received it as the agent of Dubose.
The plaintiff claimed that he was entitled to the balance of a distribute share in the hands of defendant, as administrator of William Brookshire. The defendant, if liable on this ground, is only liable as administrator, and his assets can only be administered according to the laws of Alabama; this involves the rights of creditors and the question of assets, priorities, etc. Which can only be adjusted by the local law. Next of kin can only claim according to the lex loci.
No suit can be brought to charge defendant as administrator in the Courts of any country except that from which he derives his authority to act. Story's Con. Laws, sec. 513, et seq.
Plaintiff is bound to establish his claim judicially in the first place, 1 Paige 622; Sellers v. Bryan, 17 N.C. 361.
To authorize a set off in Equity as well as at law (the debt being ascertained) there must be mutuality — mutual debts and mutual credits. 2 Story's Eq. sec. 1436; 21 Eng. L. and E. 546; 23 do. 457; 5 Mason 201; Bunting v. Ricks, 22 N.C. 130.
If available, it was as much available at Law as in Equity.
This case comes before us upon an appeal from an interlocutory order dissolving an injunction which had been granted upon the filing of the bill. The only facts necessary to be stated are as follows: William Brookshire died intestate, in Clarke County, Alabama, in the year 1842, and letters of administration were granted to the defendant, Abel H. Dubose, by the Probate Court of that County. The intestate left no wife or issue, and the plaintiffs and defendants, other than the administrator, are his next of kin, and as such, entitled, under the laws of Alabama, to a distribution of his estate. In the later part of the year 1844, the plaintiff, Willie F. (278) Brookshire, went to the State of Alabama with powers of attorney from the other next of kin, to demand a settlement with the defendant, Dubose, as administrator, and to receive from him the shares of the intestate's estate, to which he and they were entitled. While there, he was induced, as he states, by the fraudulent representations of the administrator, to receive for himself and his principals, much less than was really due to him and them, thus leaving, upon a full and fair settlement, a large balance still due to each of them. The bill then states that the plaintiff, Willie F. Brookshire, "received for Thomas Newby and wife $400, and brought the same with him to Randolph County, North Carolina, where he resided; the said Newby and wife residing in Indiana; that the said Newby and wife having peculiar notions on the subject of slavery, became desirous to get one of the slaves belonging to the estate, for the purpose of emancipating him, and caused suit to be brought against the said Dubose in Alabama, for the slave allotted to them, and recovered him; that fearing the receipt of the $400, in the hands of the said Willie, might affect them in their suit for the slave, they refused to take the money, or any part of it, but permitted it to remain in his hands; but, that after they succeeded in their suit, they demanded the said money of the said Willie, as being a part of their share of the estate of William Brookshire, over and above the negro which they had recovered. That the defendant, Dubose, forbade him, the said Willie, to pay the money to Newby and wife, and brought suit for the same in Randolph Superior Court of law, and recovered a judgment for it at the Fall Term, 1853, upon proof of the oral and written declarations of the said Willie, that Newby and wife had refused to receive the said money, and that he was willing to repay it to the said Dubose." The prayer of the bill was for an account and settlement, and until that could be had, for an injunction against the judgment at law. Upon the coming in of the answer of the defendant, Dubose, the facts stated in which, it is unnecessary to set forth, further than that it denied that any thing was due the plaintiffs, (279) and insisted that the estate of the intestate had been fully settled, and a decree to that effect entered in the Probate Court in Alabama — the injunction was dissolved, and from the interlocutory order, the plaintiff, Willie F. Brookshire, appealed.
We are clearly satisfied that the bill cannot be sustained at all, and the order dissolving the injunction was therefore proper. Mr. Justice Story, in his admirable work on the conflict of laws, in discussing the subject of a suit by or against a foreign executor or administrator, says, "It has hence become a general doctrine of the common law, recognized both in England and America, that no suit can be brought or maintained by any executor or administrator, or against any executor or administrator in his official capacity, in the Courts of any other country, except that from which he derives his authority to act, in virtue of the probate and letters testamentary, or the letters of administration there granted to him. But if he desires to maintain any suit in any foreign country, he must obtain new letters of administration, and give new security according to the general rules of law prescribed in that country, before the suit is brought. So, on the other hand, if a creditor wishes a suit to be brought in any foreign country, in order to reach the effects of a deceased testator or intestate, situated therein, it will be necessary that letters of administration should be there taken out, in due form, according to the local law, before the suit can be maintained; for the executor or administrator appointed in another country, is not suable there, and has no positive right to, or authority over, those assets; neither is he responsible therefore." Story's Con. of Laws, 3rd Ed. sec. 513. For this the learned author cites many cases, the authority of which, as establishing the general rule, the plaintiff's counsel does not dispute. But he contends that the present case in an exception, for the reason, that the administrator came into this State, and instituted a suit in one of our Courts for the collection of a part of the assets. This, he says, has conferred upon our Courts a jurisdiction to call upon the administrator for a full account and settlement of the whole estate of his intestate. The reply is obvious and conclusive. The administrator sued, and could sue, (280) here, only in his individual, and not in his representative capacity. The defendant in the suit at law held money in his hands, which, after the refusal of Newby and wife to receive it, he declared to belong to the plaintiff on that suit, and expressed his willingness to repay it. Having received the money in Alabama, from the administrator, for another person, without sufficient authority, as it appeared, to do so, he was bound in conscience as well as by law, to return it to him; and it would be conceding rather too much to him, that his breach of good faith, which compelled the administrator to sue him in his individual capacity, could give him the right to drag the administrator from his own Courts into ours, for the purpose of compelling him to render a full account of his administration in our Courts. Thinking, as we do, that our Courts have no jurisdiction to entertain the bill, we direct the interlocutory order to be affirmed with costs, without adverting to any other question discussed by the counsel.
Per curiam.
Decree accordingly.