Court Opinion

ID: 6623549
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:33:20.159683+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:48.369947
License: Public Domain

ELLISON, J.
— Plaintiff is the public administrator of Jackson county, in charge of the estate of William H. Lowe, deceased. He brought this action to recover a deposit of $1,500 left by deceased with the defendant, a banking institution in a county adjoining Jackson. The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
• It appears that’ Lowe resided in the State of Iowa and that he died in the State of Kansas in November, 1906, leaving also a deposit of $1,000 in a bank in Jackson county. In that month letters of administration were granted on his estate in his home county in Iowa to O. W. Huff, who duly qualified. In December, 1906, the defendant bank paid to Huff the amount of the deposit and took his receipt as such ¿dministrator. After-wards, in the same month, plaintiff, as public administrator, was put in charge of the estate by the probate court of Jackson county, Missouri, for the purpose of administering thereon. He collected the deposit in Jackson county and then demanded that left with defendant, but the latter having already paid, it to the home administrator in Iowa, refused payment and this action followed.
It is thus readily seen that the question involves the title of a foreign domiciliary administrator to personal *715effects of the deceased in a foreign State, and his right to collect debts owing to the deceased by debtors in such' state. It is a familiar rule of law that title to personalty at the death of the owner vests in the administrator. But here the controversy to the property is between two administrators appointed in different jurisdictions and under the authority of different sovereignties. The title and authority of the Iowa administrator in property of a deceased who resided in that state is governed by the laws óf that State, which are without force in Missouri. The property in controversy was in the latter state and while it cannot be appropriated from the true or real owners, yet it is under the jurisdiction of the latter state and can only be withdrawn therefrom in pursuance of Missouri laws. This rule is justified by the duty which a State owes its own citizens who may be creditors, as well as to itself in the way of taxation. Therefore a creditor of a deceased who was a non-resident is given the right to ask an administration of property which may be found in this State. And it will not do to say there are no creditors, for within the period of limitations that could not well be known. [Becraft v. Lewis, 41 Mo. App. 546.]
So it has come to be well-recognized law in this State that the foreign domiciliary administrator is without title to property in this State. [Naylor v. Moffatt, 29 Mo. 126.] “He cannot maintain a suit here for such property for the simple reason that he has no title to the property.” [Richardson v. Busch, 198 Mo. 174, 187.] To the same effect is: In the Matter of Henry Ames & Co., 52 Mo. 290; Turner v. Campbell, 124 Mo. App. 133; Stevens v. Larwell, 110 Mo. App. 140; Becraft v. Lewis, supra.
But it is urged if the debtor pays the debt to the foreign administrator, as in this case, he should be protected,. since the money has gone to where it must go in the end. That cannot be allowed to have any weight because of the utter lack of authority and title in such ad*716ministrator. He cannot even assign a note of the deceased so as to enable the assignee to sue upon it in this State. [McCarty v. Hall, 13 Mo. 480.] And in Bartlett v. Hyde, 3 Mo. 490, there Was a payment by the debtor to the foreign administrator yet the court held that the administrator appointed here could force him to pay it again; the court remarking, that it was not a question of hardship in.a given case, but an absolute law. In keeping with that holding it avüI be found to be stated in McCarty v. Hall, supra, that the foreign administrator could not “release or control” debts owing by debtors residing in other States.
Nor does the fact that an administrator’s title is, in reality, that of a trustee for the heirs and for the foreign domiciliary administrator, as is recognized in Naylor v. Moffatt, 29 Mo. l. c. 128; Richardson v. Busch, 198 Mo. l. c. 188, affect the question. For notwithstanding the administrative trusteeship for the benefit of such persons, yet creditors have a superior right to heirs (Hayes v. Fry, 110 Mo. App. 25), and, as resident creditors, they have a primary right to the protection of the laws of their own state in property of their decedent debtor which has been placed in such State, and to have it administered there instead of forcing them to the inconvenience of foreign jurisdictions.
There is a phase of this case which counsel for dedefendant has not permitted us to overlook, which is said not to appear in any of the other cases which have arisen in the courts of this State, and that is that here the defendant’s payment to the Iowa administrator was before the plaintiff had been appointed to take charge of the estate by our probate court. But that that cannot affect the rule in this state is made apparent by looking to the reason upon which the rule is founded. The reason is that the foreign administrator has no title whatever. The fact that the title may be in abeyance pending 'the appointment of an administrator here does not arm *717the foreign administrator with any authority or cast upon him any title.
What we have written is in accord with the view of the learned trial judge as expressed by him in writing at the trial, a printed copy of which has been furnished us by counsel. It has been a valuable and serviceable guide to the conclusion we have reached.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.