Opinion
(December Term, 1860.)
A distributive share in the hands of an administrator, due the wife of a nonresident debtor, can not be subjected to the payment of the husband's debts in this State, by means of an attachment, in equity, under the statute, Rev. Code, ch. 7, s. 20.
CAUSE removed from the Court of Equity of ROBESON.
The bill sets out that Catherine McLean died intestate, in the county of Robeson, some time in the year 1858, seized and possessed of a considerable estate, and left, among other next of kin, a sister, Margaret, who had intermarried with the defendant Neill McPhaul. As one of the next of kin of her sister Catherine, Margaret McPhaul was entitled to a distributive share of her estate. Letters of administration upon the estate of Catharine McLean were granted to one Morrison, who is made a party defendant in this suit. The bill further states that Neill McPhaul, the defendant, is a nonresident of the State, and is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of one hundred and forty-five dollars, due upon a former judgment, and it prays that the distributive share of the estate of Catharine McLean to which defendant is entitled in right of his wife, and which is still in the hands of the administrator, Morrison, may be decreed in satisfaction of this debt.
Defendant demurred for the want of equity, and the cause being set down for argument upon the bill and demurrer, was sent to this Court by consent.
M. B. Smith, for the plaintiff.
Leitch, for the defendants.
The question is, can the creditors of a nonresident reach a distributive share in the hands of an administrator, which is due to the wife of the debtor, by means of an "attachment in equity" under the statute, Rev. Code, ch. 7, sec. 20?
We are of opinion that the case is not embraced by the statute, for this very satisfactory reason: The distributive share, while (16) in the hands of the administrator, does not belong to the husband. It is true, by the juris mariti, he may reduce it into possession during the coverture, and if he does so, it belongs to him, or he may assign it, and if the assignee reduces it into possession during the coverture, it will belong to him, but until it is reduced into possession, it belongs to the wife, and if the husband dies before that is done, either by himself or his assignee, the interest of the wife is absolute. This is settled; Arrington v. Yarboro, 54 N.C. 73, where the subject is fully entered into and disposed of.
The fact that a legacy in the hands of an executor, or a distributive share in the hands of an administrator, which is due to the wife, belongs to her and not to the husband, is the ground of the well established doctrine, i. e., equity will not interfere, at the instance of a creditor of the husband, in order to subject the fund to the satisfaction of the debt, either by compelling the husband to reduce it into possession or assign it for the benefit of his creditors, and thus enable them to reduce it into possession. If the husband chooses to do so, the Courts of Equity, in this State, will not interfere to prevent him and require a settlement on the wife. But neither in North Carolina nor in England, nor anywhere else that we are informed of, do Courts of Equity interfere actively to the prejudice of the wife, and subject her interest without the consent and cooperation of the husband, to the payment of his debts, because it would be doing injustice to the wife to deprive her of the chance to have the absolute ownership if she survives, and of the right to have the interest devolve upon her personal representative if she dies first, whereby it would be first applicable to the satisfaction of her own creditors, before it passes to the husband and becomes liable to his creditors. In Allen v. Allen, 41 N.C. 293, and Barnes v. Pearson, Ibid., 482, the general doctrine is assumed, and those cases are made exceptions on the ground that where the husband makes an assignment and an interest vests in the assignee, the Courts are then called on to aid (17) the assignee in like manner as they would aid the husband, to reduce the interest into possession, whereby the wife ceases to be the owner of the fund.
On the same general principle, it is held at law that a legacy of the wife can not be taken under an attachment by the creditor of the husband; Arrington v. Screws, 31 N.C. 42.
In short, there is neither authority nor principle to support the position on which the bill is based.
PER CURIAM. Demurrer sustained.