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Ritchie v. McAuslin

Superior Court of North Carolina
Apr 1, 1795
2 N.C. 220 (N.C. Super. 1795)

Opinion

(April Term, 1795.)

Administration granted when the next of kin are out of the country should be durante absentia; if otherwise, it is erroneous. The next of kin in another country may appoint a person to take the administration here. The court should not grant letters to a person not designated in the act, before the persons designated have refused. The Superior Court will repeal the letters when improperly granted, and make an order for the county court to grant them to the proper person. Quere, whether it should not have been a mandamus.

PETITION, to rescind letters of administration, granted by the county court of CUMBERLAND to the defendant, of the estate and effects of Auley McNaughton, deceased, in July Term, 1792. The next of kin beyond sea, since that time, have appointed the petitioner to apply for the administration as their agent and trustee. He exhibited this petition to the county court, who refused to repeal the former letters; and thereupon the petitioner appealed to this Court. He had a similar appointment also from Willie Ewin McClay, trustee of the sequestrated estate of the surviving partners of Auley McNaughton Co. in Scotland.


Administration when granted, if the next of kin are infants, should be granted durante minoritate; if beyond sea, or out of the country, durante absentia; and if otherwise granted, it is erroneous. Where the next of kin reside in a foreign country, and cannot personally attend to take the administration themselves, they may appoint a person in whom they have confidence to take it for them; and the court ought to grant the administration to their appointee. The court have not executed the power the law gives them when they have granted letters to a person not designated in that act before the persons designated have refused, but only where they have granted letters to the proper persons. When they have granted letters to improper persons, they may repeal them, and ought to do so, at the application of the persons properly entitled. 1 Cro., 469; 6 Rep., 18. The consequence is that the letters in the present case, having been improperly granted to the defendant, to the prejudice of the next of kin in Europe, should be repealed, and granted to their appointed. H. Bl. Rep., 152. This was ordered accordingly, and an order of this Court was made for the county court to grant letters accordingly.

Quaere, if it should not have been a mandamus, for if they refuse to comply with this order, how are they to be brought under the penalty of a contempt committed towards this Court.

The court further said that they did not regard the appointment of the trustee of the sequestrated estate of the survivors, because the survivors were entitled to all the joint stock in trade until the net balance was ascertained; and as to that, the power of the (221) administrator commenced after the business of the survivors was finished; and besides, the administration would extend to such of the effects of the deceased as were not a part of the joint stock, and the survivors could have nothing to do with that, and the trustee stands only in their place.

See Carthey v. Webb, 4 N.C. 20; S. c., 6 N.C. 268.

Cited: Little v. Berry, 94 N.C. 437; Smith v. Munroe, 23 N.C. 351; Sawyer v. Dozier, 27 N.C. 104; Wallis v. Wallis, 60 N.C. 79; Williams v. Neville, 108 N.C. 561; Boynton v. Hearth, 158 N.C. 191, 195.


Summaries of

Ritchie v. McAuslin

Superior Court of North Carolina
Apr 1, 1795
2 N.C. 220 (N.C. Super. 1795)
Case details for

Ritchie v. McAuslin

Case Details

Full title:JAMES RITCHIE v. DUNCAN McAUSLIN

Court:Superior Court of North Carolina

Date published: Apr 1, 1795

Citations

2 N.C. 220 (N.C. Super. 1795)

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