Miller v. Hoover

97 S.W. 210, 121 Mo. App. 568, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 500
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 210 (Miller v. Hoover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Hoover, 97 S.W. 210, 121 Mo. App. 568, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 500 (Mo. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

J. C. Pittington recovered a judgment against defendant in the circuit court of Rocking-ham county, Virginia. A short time thereafter defendant moved to Missouri and ever since has resided in Ray county. Some years later Pittington died in Rocking-ham county and an administrator of his estate was duly appointed by the probate court of that county. This was followed by the appointment of an administrator by the probate court of Ray county and the present suit was brought by the latter administrator in the circuit court of Ray county to recover on the Virginia judgment. It is conceded that no assets of the estate exist in Missouri unless, for the purposes of administration, the Virginia judgment should be regarded as possessing a situs in Ray county, the home of the debtor. This was the view [571]*571taken by tbe learned trial judge who sustained the action and this appeal is prosecuted by defendant from the judgment recovered by plaintiff.

Whether the situs of the Virginia judgment is to be considered as being fixed at the. place where' the judgment was recorded, i. e., Rockingham county, or as following the person of the debtor, no action could be maintained in this State on that judgment by the Virginia administrator. It is a generally accepted rule that an executor or administrator appointed in one State cannot maintain an action in another State in his representative capacity.

The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Wilkins v. Ellett, 108 U. S. 256, observed “that the reason for the rule is the protection of the rights of citizens of the State in which suit is brought and the objection does not rest upon any defect of the administrator’s title in the property but upon his personal incapacity to sue as administrator beyond the jurisdiction which appointed him.” [13 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law 948; Story on Conflict of Laws (8 Ed.), sec. 516; Richardson v. Busch, 198 Mo. 174, 95 S. W. 894. In this State the principle underlying the rule is differently stated. “The letters of the foreign executor have no extra-territorial force and give him no title to property of the testator in this State and he could not bring or maintain an action in his official capacity in this State to recover it. His title does not extend beyond the limits of the State of the testator’s domicile and the movable property therein.” [Naylor’s Administrator v. Moffatt, 29 Mo. 126; Partnership Estate of Ames, 52 Mo. 290; Gregory v. McCormick, 120 Mo. 657; McPike v. McPike, 111 Mo. 216.]

But there are cases in which a foreign executor or administrator may maintain an action relating to the property of the decedent. Thus where he has reduced movable property to his possession and has brought it [572]*572into this State and has been wrongfully dispossessed thereof, he may sue in his own name to recover either the property or damages for its conversion without obtaining a grant of an ancillary administration. [1 Woerner on Am. Law of Adm., sec. 162.] And where the foreign administrator, as such, has recovered a judgment in the State of his appointment against a debtor of the estate and the debtor afterwards removes to this State the foreign administrator may sue in his own name on that judgment in the courts of this State. [Tittman v. Thornton, 107 Mo. 500; Hall v. Harrison, 21 Mo. 227.] But in such apparent, though not real, exceptions to the general rule it will be noted that the administrator had become vested with the full legal title to the property —was in fact the trustee of an express trust and, as such, could maintain an action relating to the property in his individual capacity. . This Avas the ground on Avhich the action was sustained in Tittman v. Thornton, supra. “Michael Carroll could not prosecute a suit in this State as administrator appointed under the laws of IOA\ra, but, having recovered a judgment as administrator in that State, he may sue upon the same in this State in his individual capacity. His right to recover here does not depend upon profert of his letters of administration.” [1 Freeman on Judgments (4 Ed.), sec. 217.]

In the present case the Virginia administrator, as an individual, could not have maintained an action in this State on the judgment recovered by his intestate against defendant. He was no party of record to that judgment and in order to prosecute an action thereon it would have been necessary for him to plead and prove his representative relation to it and this, under the general rule stated, would have been fatal to his right of recovery.

His disqualification to maintain such action being apparent, it remains to be seen whether an administra[573]*573tor could be appointed in this State fpr that purpose. Defendant argues that an ancillary administration cannot be granted in this State without the existence therein of property belonging to the estate on which to administer, and this is true. He further argues that the Virginia judgment does not constitute property in this State, since the situs of that judgment is in Rockingham county, the place where it was recovered, and concludes that the probate court of Ray county was without jurisdiction to appoint an ancillary administrator: that plaintiff, as such, acquired no title to the judgment and therefore the action must fail.

The ecclesiastical courts of England, which had jurisdiction over the administration of the estates of deceased persons adopted during the common law period certain rules and principles for the purpose of avoiding conflicts among different diocesan courts over questions of jurisdiction. Among them was the rule that the authority of each court and its officers should not extend beyond its territorial limits, and. this is the parent of the modern American rule that the grant of letters of administration in one State confers on the administrator no powers or rights that may be exercised beyond the State boundaries. Other rules prescribed the theoretical location of intangible property belonging to the estate. The situs of a simple contract debt due the estate was held to be at the place where the debtor resides at the 'time of the death of the creditor. [2 Woerner on Am. Law of Adm., sec. 309; Pinney v. McGregory, 102 Mass. 186.] That of a specialty, such as a bond or similar obligation, at the place where the instrument itself was-located at the death of the decedent. And that of a judgment recovered by the decedent in his lifetime at the place where the judgment was recorded. [1 Woerner on the Am. Law of Adm. (2 Ed.), sec. 205; Smith, Adm’r, v. Bank, 5 Peters 518; Beers v. Shannon, 73 N. Y. 292; Strong v. White, 19 Conn. 238.] In this State [574]*574it has been held that simple contract debts dne the estate are assets at the place where the debtor resides. [Becraft v. Lewis, 41 Mo. App. 546; McCarty v. Hall, 13 Mo. 480; Partnership Estate of Ames & Co., supra.] But the distinction made between simple contract debts and specialties and judgments in the ecclesiastical law of England, though recognized in McCarty v. Hall, supra, has not been applied or adopted.in this State and we perceive no reason why it should be. It was an arbitrary rule established for the purpose of meeting the exigencies of a situation peculiar to the probate system of England in vogue during that period and therefore may be regarded as a mere local rule. [Swancy v. Scott, 9 Humphreys (Tenn.) 327.] To adopt it in our jurisprudence would logically lead to one of two conclusions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 210, 121 Mo. App. 568, 1906 Mo. App. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-hoover-moctapp-1906.