This is an application for a writ of prohibition against the judge of the probate court of Kootenai county. Plaintiffs pray that a writ issue prohibiting any further action or proceedings by the probate court on the petition of Bridget Madden heretofore filed in that court. It was agreed on the hearing that the names of ¥m. C. Connolly and Ellen Udell should be added as parties to the action and be bound by the decision herein. The facts necessary to an understanding of this case and on which the decision must turn are as follows:
John Corbett, a resident of Kootenai county, died intestate on the 30th day of January, 1907, leaving an estate variously estimated at from twenty thousand to seventy-five thousand dollars. Thereafter and on February 20, 1907, Lawrence F. Connolly procured letters of administration of the Corbett estate. Upon securing his appointment as administrator, Connolly represented to the court that he and one John J. Connolly, residing at Harrison, Idaho, and William C. Connolly and Ellen Udell, residing at Greeley, Nebraska, were the surviving heirs of John Corbett, deceased. The estate was thereafter appraised, and on March 7, 1907, an inventory and appraisement was filed with the probate court. Such proceedings were had in conformity with the statute, that thereafter and on August 23, 1909, a decree of settlement of final account and distribution was made and entered. The estate was accordingly distributed to the Connollys and their sister, Ellen Udell. On February 28, 1912, Bridget Madden, a nonresident alien and a resident of Galway, Ireland, filed her petition in the probate court of Kootenai county, alleging her residence and citizenship in the county of Galway, Ireland, kingdom of Great Britain, and alleging that she was a half-sister of John Corbett, deceased, and as such was entitled to succeed to his estate under the laws of the state of Idaho. After due and regular notice was given, a hearing was had on the petition of Bridget Madden, and the court sustained a demurrer thereto on the ground that under the provisions of see. 5715, Rev. Codes, “no nonresident foreigner can take by succession, unless he appears and claims such *33succession within five years after the death of the decedent tc whom he claims succession,” and that accordingly the petitioner had failed to appear and claim succession within five years of the death of the intestate, and was therefore barred by the statute. The latter order and decree was entered on the 23d day of March, 1912. The matter remained in that condition without further proceeding being taken until April 6, 1912, when Bridget Madden filed a motion in the probate court to set aside and vacate the judgment and decree of March 23d dismissing her petition, upon the ground that the order of March 23d did not allow her the right to file an amended petition, and she prayed that the order and decree might be vacated and that she be permitted to file an amended petition. The motion was subsequently heard, and on April 18, 1912, the court made an order permitting her to file an amended petition, which petition was submitted at the same time and in connection with the motion. By the amended complaint the petitioner sought to bring herself within the provisions of see. 5715 of the Rev. Codes requiring a nonresident alien to appear and claim the right to succession within five years of the death of the decedent. She alleged that Lawrence F. Connolly, John J. Connolly, 'William C. Connolly and Ellen Udell each well knew at the time the estate of John Corbett was distributed to them that Bridget Madden was the only and sole surviving heir of John Corbett, deceased, and was rightfully entitled to the estefe'\ and that they concealed such fact and failed A) disclose the’^ame to the probate court of Kootenai county. She further Alleged that the first knowledge or notice that she had of thevleath of her brother, John Corbett, was on about the 9th day \^f April, 1911, when she was advised of his death and that >\e had left an estate in Kootenai county, Idaho, of the value ^f about $75,000, and that she thereupon demanded of Lawrence F. Connolly, the administrator of said estate, all of the property belonging to said estate:
“That upon receiving the information of the death of John Corbett, and of the value of the estate left by him, *34your petitioner madena demand upon said Lawrence F. Connolly on and prior to the 9th day of April, 1911, for the return and delivery of the property of the estate of John Cor-bett to your petitioner. That said Lawrence F. Connolly refused to deliver said property to your petitioner, and informed your petitioner that she had no right in or to said property, and that said Lawrence F. Connolly had at all times refused to deliver said property over to your petitioner, or to her attorneys duly authorized.
“That on or about the-day of December, A. D. 1911, your petitioner, Bridget Madden, appeared in the probate court in and for Kootenai county, state of Idaho, by her attorney Robert TI. Elder, and then and there gave notice to the Honorable Bert Reed, probate judge of Kootenai county, state of Idaho, that your petitioner, Bridget Madden, claimed an interest in the property of the estate of John Corbett, deceased, and requested and directed the Honorable Bert Reed, probate judge of Kootenai county, state of Idaho, to notify Robert IT. Elder, your petitioner’s attorney, if the said Lawrence F. Connolly should apply to said court for a discharge.
“That Bridget Madden, the above-named petitioner, on or about the 14th day of March, A. D. 1911, filed her bill of complaint in the circuit court of the United States in and for the district of Idaho, against Lawrence F. Connolly, individually, and as administrator of the oíate of John Cor-bett, deceased, John J. Connolly, 'WJ'Aíj- Qonnolly, Ellen Udell, and the Empire Mill Co., a corporation, deíénfiSafe, in said action, and' in said bill of complaint Bridget Madden, as plaintiff, claimed to be the heir vf John Corbett, deceased, and claimed to be the owner of/ all the property belonging to the estate of John Corbett, deceased. That in said action your petitioner prays for á decree of said court decreeing your petitioner to be the owner and entitled to the possession of all the property of the estate of John Corbett, deceased. That it is alleged in said bill of complaint that your petitioner is the sole and surviving heir of John Cor-bett, deceased, and tint by said action your petitioner on *35or about tbe 14th day of March, A. D. 1911, appeared in said court and claimed the property of the estate of John Corbett, deceased.
“That thereafter a writ of subpoena was duly issued to said defendants, Lawrence F. Connolly, "William Connolly, John J. Connolly, Ellen Udell, and the Empire Mill Company, commanding them to appear in said action and to make answer to allegations in said bill.
“That thereafter Lawrence F. Connolly, individually, and as administrator of the estate of John Corbett, deceased, John J. Connolly, and the Empire Mill Co., appeared in said action.
“That thereafter said action was dismissed without prejudice to another action.”
The foregoing allegations are followed by the further allegation that the petitioner has at all times since she learned of the death of her brother claimed all the property belonging to his estate, and that she had at various times demanded possession of said property from Lawrence F. Connolly, the administrator of the estate, and that she thereafter and on the 13th of November, 1911, executed and delivered to "William C. Carlyle, E. H. Belden, and W. C. Losey a power of attorney wherein and whereby she authorized her attorneys to collect, sue for, recover and claim all the property of John Corbett, deceased.
The foregoing are the allegations by which the petitioner, Bridget Madden, sought to avoid the provisions and operation of sec. 5715 of the Rev. Codes.
As we view this case, a construction of the provisions of the statute (see. 5715) will be decisive of the right of Bridget Madden, on the one hand, to a hearing on her amended petition in the probate court and of the petitioners herein, on the other hand, to have a writ of prohibition issue to the probate court. If the petition shows on its face that no claim to the right of succession has been made within the five-year period, then the writ prayed for should issue. The statute (see. 5715, Rev. Codes) provides as follows í
*36“Resident aliens may take in all cases by succession as citizens; and no person capable of succeeding under the provisions of this title is precluded from such succession by reason of the alienage of any relative; but no nonresident foreigner can take by succession, unless he appears and claims such succession within five years after the death of the decedent to whom he claims succession.”
The foregoing provision of the statute is a part of the law governing probate proceedings, and is found in chap. 14, title 10, part 3, of the Code of Civil Procedure. This chapter is devoted to the specific subject of “Succession,” and commencing with sec. 5700, which defines succession, the chapter proceeds step by step to define the interest which passes to heirs and to enumerate the heirs in the order in which they shall be entitled to succeed to the estates of deceased persons and such other matters as naturally pertain to the devolution of estates. Now, under the statute of this state (sec. 18, Rev. Codes), the common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with the constitution or laws of the United States in all eases not provided by statute, is the law of this state. At common law aliens could not acquire property by descent. An alien at common law had no inheritable blood, and could not therefore claim through an intestate. (Norris v. Hoyt, 18 Cal. 217; 2 Cyc. 90-95, and notes.) It became necessary, if aliens were to be allowed to take property in this state by succession, that the lawmaking power of the state should alter the common-law rule and declare the policy of the state in relation thereto. The legislature in the exercise of this power enacted sec. 5715, supra, and provided that aliens may take in all cases by succession as citizens, but qualified this provision with reference to nonresident aliens. In case a nonresident foreigner should claim by succession, he must “appear and claim succession within five years after the death of the decedent to whom he claims succession. ’ ’ The statute is definite and certain as to the date from which the five years begins to run. That date is the date of the death of the decedent. The only room for uncertainty about the statute is what constitutes an *37appearance and claiming “such succession.! ’ It would seem that where the alien is a nonresident and the property is in the possession and custody either of the state or of a third party who asserts title to the property, as was true in this case, and the alien has never reduced the property to his personal possession, it would be necessary for him to assert some legal claim to the property in an appropriate proceeding in a court of competent jurisdiction to determine and adjudicate his right of succession as prescribed by the probate laws of this state.
Counsel for Bridget Madden, the alien claimant, cite and rely on State v. Smith, 70 Cal. 153, 12 Pac. 121, in support of their contention that the words “appear and claim such succession” are satisfied by any appearance in person or by attorney within the state and asserting a right to the property or asserting a right of succession or contracting with reference to the property. A careful study of the ease cited convinces us that it does not go to the extent claimed for it by counsel and that it does not support the contention here urged. In that ease the decedent was a naturalized citizen of the United States and died intestate in the state of California, leaving an estate of real and personal property. He left no heirs resident in the United States, but did leave one nephew and three nieces in England, his only next of Idn. The nephew, John Smith, Jr., came to California and obtained letters of administration after having declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States. ITe administered upon the estate, reduced it to possession, and caused it to be finally distributed to the next of kin as above indicated. Thereafter the state, through the attorney general, brought an action to declare the estate escheated to the state of California. The supreme court held against the contention made by the state on two grounds: first, that an action by the state having been commenced within the five-year period after the death of the decedent was premature and could not be maintained until after the lapse of the full five-year period; and, second, that the nephew of the decedent and one of the next of kin having come pérsonally to Cali*38fornia and asserted his right and at the same time the right and claim of the three nieces to the property, and having taken actual possession of the property, had brought himself and the other claimants within the meaning and purvierv of the statute (sec. 672, Civil Code of Cal.), which required the alien claimant to “appear and claim” the property within five years after the death of the decedent. It will therefore be seen from a comparison of the facts presented in the California case with the facts of the case at bar that there is a wide difference between them, and that the California case does not furnish authority for the position taken by the alien claimant in this case.
While not controlling our decision in this case, still it is worth while to note the difference between" our statute and the California statute on this subject. Sec. 672 of the Civil Code of California (vol. 2, Peering’s Annotated Codes) is a part of title 2, part 1, division 2, of the Civil Code, and title 2 is devoted to the subject of “Ownership,” and secs. 669 to 672 are devoted to the subject ©f “Owners.” Sec. 672 has specific relation, therefore, to the ownership of property. It prescribes the five-year limitation for the appearance of nonresident aliens, and differs from our statute, in that it provides that he “must appear and claim the property within five years from the time of succession,” while our statute (sec. 5715) found in the Code of Civil Procedure and in the probate procedure thereof, says: “No nonresident foreigner can take by succession, unless he appears and claims such succession within five years after the death of the decedent.” This change of wording is significant, and when taken in connection with the fact that our statute is found in the probate practice act, while the California statute is found in the Civil Code dealing with owners and ownership of property generally, it appears to us that the difference is significant and worthy of consideration. Under our statute it would seem that it was intended that the claim and appearance should be made in the course of the administration or through the probate court in some manner.
*39Our statute is not a recognition or extension of any previously existing right a nonresident alien had, but it is rather the fresh grant of a right or a statute of grace which the state confers on aliens. The state might as well declare all such estates escheated rather than allow them to go to a nonresident alien who is otherwise within the recognized line of succession. In this condition of the law, the question of time becomes an essential prerequisite to the right of a nonresident alien to succeed to an estate left by a decedent within this state.
The only question, therefore, remaining to be determined in the case at bar is whether the facts pleaded in the amended petition tendered in the probate court were sufficient to show an appearance and claim to the right of succession on the part of Bridget Madden within the five-year limitation. It is admitted that no appearance of any kind was ever made in the probate court of Kootenai county within the statutory time, and that no appearance was made in any court of competent jurisdiction. It is alleged that an appearance was made in the federal court within the five-year period, and that the action which Bridget Madden sought to prosecute in that court was subsequently dismissed for want of jurisdiction of that court over the subject matter. It has been held, however, by this court, and we think correctly so, that a party who mistakes his remedy and seeks relief in a federal court does not thereby stop the running of the statute of limitations in the state court (Finney v. American Bonding Co., 13 Ida. 534, 90 Pac. 859, 91 Pac. 318; Mills v. American Bonding Co., 13 Ida. 556, 91 Pac. 381; Morbeck v. Bradford-Kennedy Co., 19 Ida. 83, 113 Pac. 89), and the principle involved in this holding is applicable to the case at bar. The filing of the suit in the federal court was clearly not an appearance and claim of the right of succession to this estate as contemplated by the provisions of see. 5715. On the other hand, the fact that an attorney went to the office of the probate judge and asked to be notified if any further step should be taken in the course of the administration or settlement of the Corbett estate without in fact making any *40appearance in the ease or appearing in court upon any hearing had in the matter of the estate was clearly not an appearance and claim of the right of succession such as is contemplated by the statute. The same may be said with still greater force and reason in reference to the allegations as to the claims and assertions of right made by her attorneys and agents to the administrator.
It is argued, however, that Bridget Madden alleged fraud on the part of the Connollys in not reporting to the probate court that she was the only surviving heir to the estate and in not advising her of the fact that her brother, John Corbett, was dead, and that he had left an estate which she was entitled to inherit. It may be conceded that the allegations of the petition are true in this respect, and still that admission would not help the case of Bridget Madden. It is not charged that the Connollys through any fraud or otherwise kept her from appearing and asserting her right or that they made any misrepresentations or that they deceived her or misrepresented facts to her. Whatever fraud may have been practiced by them in procuring the estate to be distributed to them could in no way prejudice Bridget Madden if she failed and neglected to appear and assert her right within the five-year period prescribed by the statute. Any fraud practiced by the Connollys in this respect would be a fraud on the state of Idaho to which the property would have escheated, rather than a fraud on Bridget Madden. Had they not been guilty of any fraudulent misrepresentations to the probate court and had they not claimed the property at all and Bridget Madden had still failed to appear, the property would have escheated to the state under the provisions of secs. 5716 and 5717 of the Rev. Codes. They represented, however, that they were the sole surviving heirs and the property was distributed to them. Bridget Madden failed to appear within the statutory time granted her, and consequently lost the right conferred by the state on a nonresident alien to appear and assert any right of succession to the estate. It follows, therefore, that any fraud which may have been practiced could not and did not work any injury upon Bridget Madden. If it *41was a fraud upon tbe state of Idaho, that is met in this ease by the fact that the state is not a party to this proceeding, and has at no time been a party to the proceedings in the settlement and distribution of this estate and has asserted no claim to the property of the estate.
It follows from what has been said that upon the face of the petition as presented by Bridget Madden, the time granted her by statute had expired and that the court was without Jurisdiction to grant her any relief whatever. Having reached the foregoing conclusion, it becomes unnecessary for us to consider any other question raised in this case. The writ should issue, and it is so ordered.
Stewart, C. J., and Sullivan, J., concur.