Speed v. Kelly

59 Miss. 47
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 59 Miss. 47 (Speed v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Speed v. Kelly, 59 Miss. 47 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On a former day of this term we reversed the decree of the court below, because the record showed the propriety of the appointment of the appellant as administrator of the estate of Mason, there being property (debts due the intestate) in this State, and declined to pass upon all the questions presented by counsel for the appellee, because we considered them prematurely presented, as they ought to arise on an application for distribution, and not upon a motion to revoke the letters of the administrator appointed by the courts of this State. Upon the request of counsel, both for the appellant and appellee, and understanding that the parties now before the court really represent the two classes of distributees, we have considered the case as if it was on proceedings for distribution. The cause is to be decided upon the construction of § 1270 of the Code of 1880, which is as follows: “ All personal property, situated in this State, shall descend and be distributed according to the laws of this State regulating the descent and distribution of such property, regardless of all marital rights which [51]*51may have accrued in other States, and notwithstanding the domicile of the deceased may have been in another State, and whether the heirs, or persons entitled to distribution, be in this State or not; and the widow of such deceased person shall take her share in the personal estate according to the laws of this State.” On the part of the appellee it is contended: first, that the words “ personal property situated in this State ” do not include choses in action held by one who dies domiciled in another State ; and secondly, if they do, the statute is unconstitutional, being an attempted distribution of property not within the territorial limits of the State. Careful and extended research has failed to discover in the laws of any other State or country any similar statutory regulation, and we are left to determine from the statute and its subject the fair import of its terms. We begin by saying that we entertain no doubt of the power of the legislature to overturn the fiction of law that personal property has its situs at the domicile of the owner, and to make it distributable by the laws of this State ; that the character of the property in no manner impairs the power; that the locality given to choses in action, by the fiction that it follows the person of the owner, is as susceptible to be changed and fixed at the place of the residence of the debtor for the purposes of distribution, as the fiction that tangible property is governed by the laws of the domicile may be changed and fixed at the place of the actual situs of the property. The fiction is not a rule of international law, but a mere principle, which produces uniformity of judicial action, and is applied by the courts through comity, but which no court would enforce against either a positive statute or the public policy of its State. Whether choses in action are included in the words “ personal property situated in this State ” is a question in the solution of which we have experienced great difficulty, and which we are unable to determine with entire satisfaction to ourselves. Personal property, whether of a tangible or an intangible character, is considered as located, for the purposes of administration, in the territory of that State whose laws must furnish the remedies for its reduction to possession. When the laws of such State are appealed to for authority and aid, the fiction yields to the fact, and the courts for all pur[52]*52poses of administration enforce the laws of the State under whose authority they act. When, however, in the course of administration, that point is reached at which distribution is to be made, the fund is usually remitted to the domiciliary administrator, but is sometimes distributed by the court having charge of the property, in which event distribution is made according to the law of the domicile. For the purposes of administration, therefore, personal property is situated in that State in which it is found, or, in cases of choses in action, in which the debtor resides ; for the purposes of distribution it is situated in the State of the domicile of the intestate or testator.

The appellant contends that by the terms of our statute all personal property which is subject to administration in this State is also to be distributed according to its laws, while the appellee argues that the statute applies only to such tangible property as has an actual situation here. The words “ personal property,” if not limited in their operation by the words “ situated in this State,” are certainly broad enough to embrace choses in action, and ordinarily we think would include them. The suggestion made in the case of McIntyre v. Ingraham, 35 Miss. 25, that the words “ personal estate ” do not include promissory notes, is not supported by the authorities cited. But the personal property, which the statute declares shall be distributed according to our laws, is personal property situated in this State. Without deciding what would be the result if both the evidence of the debt and the debtor were within this State at the death of the intestate, or whether there may not be cases in which, though the evidence of the debt may be in the hands of the intestate at the time of his death at his domicile in another State, the statute might be held to include the debt as situated in this State,' we are of the opinion that under the circumstances shown by the record in this cause the choses in action described in the proceedings cannot be considered as personal property situated in this State. A bequest of all one’s personal estate, or of all his goods and property, passes his notes and other choses in action. Anon., 1 P. Wms. 267 ; Crichton v. Symes, 3 Atk. 61; Moore v. Moore, 1 Bro. Ch. 127. But a bequest of all the personal property situated in a particular place [53]*53does not pass choses in action, except such perhaps as are usually treated as money.

In Fleming v. Brook, 1 Sch. & Lefr. 318, the testator bequeathed to Mrs. Fleming “ all my property of whatever nature or kind the same may be that may be found in her house in Duke Street, except a bond of F. M., Esq., in my writing-box in the said house contained.” Another bond secured by mortgage, and the mortgage and several bankers’ receipts, at the death of the testator, were found in the house. It was held that neither the bond nor the bankers’ receipts passed, because choses in action have no locality. In Moore v. Moore, 1 Bro. Ch. 127, a bequest of “ all my goods and chattels in Suffolk ” was held not to pass a bond found in a drawer in the house in Suffolk, the Chancellor saying, “ Choses in action have no locality; bonds have no more locality than other choses in action, otherwise than by drawing the jurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Court.”

To the same effect are many other cases. Jones v. Sefton, 4 Ves. 166; Hertford v. Lowther, 7 Beav. 1; Penniman v. French, 17 Pick. 404; Brooke v. Turner, 7 Sim. 671; Green v. Symonds, 1 Bro. Ch. 129, n.; Popham v. Aylesbury, Ambl. 68; Arnold v. Arnold, 2 Myl. & K. 365; Kendall v. Kendall, 4 Russ. 360; Rogers v. Thomas, 2 Keen, 8; Jackson v. Robinson, 1 Yeates, 101.

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Bluebook (online)
59 Miss. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/speed-v-kelly-miss-1881.