On about the 12th day of May, 1897, the appellant, Thomas J. Douglas, was a resident of Otero county, *340Colo., and there intermarried with Margaret V. Douglas, and thereafter the two continued to live together as husband and wife in the state of Colorado until the 25th day of February, 1908, on which date they removed from Colorado to Idaho. Between the date of their marriage and their removal to Idaho, and while they were husband and wife, they acquired and accumulated real, personal and mixed property which amounted to the sum of $13,050 at the time of their departure for Idaho. During this time they were engaged in the farming business, the wife discharging the usual and ordinary household duties and the husband conducting the farming business. The wife had no separate property of any kind or character recognized as such under the laws of Colorado Upon arriving at Twin Falls, Idaho, the husband invested this money in real estate. They continued to live in Idaho until the time of the death of Margaret Y. Douglas, the wife of the appellant, which occurred on the 25th day of October, 1909. She left surviving her her husband and her minor children, Mary E. Douglas, Robert M. Dóuglas and Kenneth Douglas. Administration was had on the estate of Margaret Y. Douglas, and among other things, the inventory returned one-half of this real estate as community property and subject to administration under the laws of Idaho. The administration proceeded on the theory that this was community property and an order was subsequently made for the sale of this property and a sale was made. Thereafter the husband, Thomas J. Douglas, concluded that this was not community property but his separate property, and he was thereupon suspended as administrator of the estate and a special administrator was appointed, and appellant thereupon made a motion to have this property stricken from the inventory on the ground that it was not community property but his separate property. This motion was sustained by the probate court. Thereafter the appellant instituted this action for the purpose of quieting his title to the whole of the property on the ground that it was his separate estate.
We are called upon in this case to determine whether the property purchased by the appellant on his arrival here from *341Colorado became bis separate property or the community property of himself and his wife. Under the provisions of see. 2679, Rev. Codes, “All property owned by the husband before marriage, and that acquired by gift, bequest, or devise or descent is his separate property ’ ’; and sec. 2680 defines the status of all property acquired after marriage by either husband or wife, and sec. 3060 defines community property as follows: “Community property is property acquired by husband and wife or either, during marriage, when not acquired as the separate property of either.”
It will be observed from the foregoing provisions of the statute that the community property law prevails in this state, and it will therefore afford us very little light or information to examine or review authorities coming from states where the common-law rule prevails with reference to the property relations between husband and wife. It seems to be conceded by counsel on both sides of this case that the community property law does not prevail in Colorado, and did not prevail at the time that appellant and his wife acquired this property and departed from the state. Upon the trial of the case the appellant offered to introduce a part of the dissenting opinion in Schuler v. Henry, a Colorado case reported in 42 Colo. 367, 94 Pac. 360, 14 L. R. A., N. S., 1009, which quotes with approval from Denver & R. G. R. Co. v. Young, 30 Colo. 349, 70 Pac. 688, to the effect that the wife acquires no right or interest in any property accumulated by her labor and services in the performance of the usual and ordinary household duties, and that such services belong to the husband. We shall not go into this question, however, because it is conceded that the property accumulated in Colorado by appellant and his wife was the separate property of the appellant there.
Various principles of the law are discussed by respective counsel pro and con as bearing upon this question. It is urged, for instance, that the marital relation in Colorado amounted to a contract and that this property was acquired under that contract, and that to allow the wife an interest in the property in this state would be a violation of the contract *342entered into in another state. On the other hand, it is contended that under the law of Idaho the accumulations of the husband and wife after marriage is community property in which the two spouses are equally interested, and that to inquire into the laws of Colorado which vest the absolute title in the husband and'enforce such law in Idaho is contrary to all legal principles, in that it amounts to executing a foreign law within our own jurisdiction. It is not perceived that either of these contentions is well founded in this case, for reasons which we will hereafter give. It is a well-established rule that’ personal property acquired during coverture is governed and controlled by the law of marital domicile. This seems to be based upon the theory that movables have no situs, or rather that they accompany the person everywhere. (Kraemer v. Kraemer, 52 Cal. 305; note to Rush v. Landers, 57 L. R. A. 353; note to Brookman v. Durkee, 12 L. R. A., N. S., 921.) On the other hand, real property is governed by the law of its situs. (Rush v. Landers, 107 La. 549, 32 So. 95, 57 L. R. A. 353, and note.)
Then we have this situation: That real property is purchased in this state by a married man and during the existence and continuance of the marital relation. The prima facie presumption at once arises under our statute that this property was community property. The man who purchased it, however, and on whom the burden of showing that it is not community property rests, resists and contests the claim that such property is community property, and in doing so, shows that it was purchased wholly with personal property which was at the time his separate and individual estate. In doing so, he finds it necessary to prove the laws of the state in which he accumulated this personal property and from which he brought it in order to show that it was his separate and individual estate and that his wife, the other member of the community, had no interest in such property. It is not, therefore, a question of enforcing and executing a foreign law in this state, but it is merely a question of ascertaining what the foreign law was as one of the probative facts in establishing the ownership of the property.
*343We start in to the investigation in Idaho confronted with the statute which says that all property acquired by husband and wife, or either, during marriage, when not acquired as separate property of either, is community property, and the presumption, in the first instance, is that the laws of Colorado are the same as the laws of this state. (Maloney v. Winston Bros. Co., 18 Ida. 757, 111 Pac. 1080.) This presumption, however, is subject to be rebutted by competent proof. The appellant succeeds in this proof by showing that there was no community property law in Colorado when he accumulated this property, and that such accumulations were the sole and separate property of the husband under those laws. By this means, the title and ownership to this property is fully and clearly established, and we find that when appellant departed from the state of Colorado with this property, it was his separate property, and of course the mere crossing the state line into Idaho could not divest him of his title or vest that title in someone else. It would take something more than the mere crossing of the state line to transfer the title to property he had with him. He shows, then, that he immediately invested that money in this particular real estate in Idaho. The mere fact of investing this money could not of itself change the title or transfer the right of property from him to someone else. 'This is merely an exchange of one class of property for another, and it is well settled that investing one bind or class or specie of property in another kind or class does not change the character of the title or right of ownership, and that the title by which the property was held and governed will continue the same. (Thayer v. Clarke (Tex. Civ. App.), 77 S. W. 1050.) Such property, therefore, as the real estate here involved, purchased in the manner this was purchased, with the separate property of the husband, does not fall within the class of “property acquired after marriage” referred to and defined in sec. 2680, supra.
This question has been considered by a number of courts where the community law prevails. Kraemer v. Kraemer, 52 Cal. 302, is a case where the husband and wife had accumulated property in Illinois which, under the laws of Illinois, *344became the separate property of the husband, and had removed to California, and the husband had invested it in real estate in the latter state, where the community property law prevails and under which the wife was entitled to one-half interest therein. The court held that the mere act of investing the husband’s separate property accumulated in the state of Illinois in property in the state of California did not change the nature of the ownership or of the title by which the property was held, and that it would still remain the separate property of the husband. The syllabus to that case says: “If husband and wife acquire personal property in one state and then remove to another state with same, the law of the state where they lived when the property was acquired governs as to whether it is separate or community.” This case was cited with approval in Shumway v. Leakey, 67 Cal. 458, 8 Pac. 12. It was again cited, approved and followed in Estate of Burrows, 136 Cal. 113, 68 Pac. 488. In the Burrows case, a marriage took place in the state of Kansas and the parties there accumulated considerable property. The state of Kansas, however, had no community property law, and in that state the husband is the absolute owner of all property acquired and accumulated during coverture. The parties moved to California and there the property was invested, and the court held that the property acquired in California was held by the same title and ownership as that with which it was purchased. The court said: “All he had in Kansas belonged to him and was his separate property when he arrived in California, no matter whether it was acquired in Kansas before or after marriage.He started from Kansas with money which was wholly his; I fail to see how the ownership was or could be changed by its removal here.”
The community property law prevails in Texas, and in Blethen v. Bonner, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 585, 71 S. W. 290, the supreme court had under consideration a similar question where property had been accumulated by husband and wife in Massachusetts where the community property law does not prevail. The husband thereafter removed to Texas and invested the money in property in the latter state. The ques*345tion arose as to whether under the community laws of Texas the wife acquired a community interest in the property. The court, among other things, said: “Lauds in Texas, purchased by a married man, after moving there, with money which he earned in another state while a citizen thereof, under the laws • of which the money was his separate property, are not community property.” The court in that case was presented with the same proposition that is presented here, namely, that they were called upon to enforce the laws of a sister state within the borders of Texas. The court answered that question as follows:
“It is suggested that this view involves the enforcement of the laws of a sister state by a Texas court in the disposition of property here situated. But not so. We have merely ascertained the law of Massachusetts as a fact in determining the quality or extent of the title to money acquired in Massachusetts by a citizen or citizens of that state, and thereafter brought into and invested in this state. It may seem that Massachusetts, the boasted center of advanced thought, should long since have discarded the rule invoked in behalf of L. B. Blethen, and relegated it to its place among the rejected barbarisms of the common law. But, whatever may be our opposition to the common law in this particular, and the extent of our admiration for the rule of the civil law, so firmly embedded in the hearts and jurisprudence of the Texas people, that the fruits of the joint effort of husband and wife shall be shared equally between them, the power of the people of Massachusetts to determine for themselves the conditions upon which her citizens may acquire and hold property within her own borders must be conceded, and we have no power to alter the status of property fixed and vested by such laws before its introduction into this state. We have simply determined the character of L. B. Blethen’s title to the money with which the lands in controversy were purchased as a fact, and applied thereto the law of Texas. ’ ’
The Blethen case was followed and approved by the court of civil appeals of Texas in Thayer v. Clarke (Tex. Civ. App.), 77 S. W. 1050.
*346A somewhat similar principle of law was enunciated by the supreme court of Louisiana in Young v. Templeton, 4 La. Ann. 254, 50 Am. Dec. 563, where the civil law prevails, in the state of Washington, and in Brookman v. Durkee, 46 Wash. 578, 123 Am. St. 944, 90 Pac. 914, 12 L. R. A., N. S., 921, 13 Ann. Cas. 839, the supreme court of that state held that “where money acquired in the course of trade in another state is the separate property of the husband there, it will continue to be his property when brought into this state, as will property purchased here with it, whether real or personal, notwithstanding Ballinger’s Ann. Codes & St., sec. 4490, providing that property acquired by a husband after marriage, otherwise than by gift, bequest, devise, or descent, is community property, since a contrary construction would destroy vested rights.” To the same effect see Elliott v. Hawley, 34 Wash. 585, 101 Am. St. 1116, 76 Pac. 93. The Brookman-Durkee ease has been cited with approval in Colpe v. Lindblom, 57 Wash. 106, 106 Pac. 637, and Alaska Banking & Safe Deposit Co. v. Noyes, 64 Wash. 672, 117 Pac. 492.
It has been further argued in this case that after an order of sale by the probate court had been made of this property on the theory that it was community property and the sale had been made and confirmed, the judgment became res ad-judicata under the authority of Clark v. Rossier, 10 Ida. 348, 78 Pac. 358, 3 Ann. Cas. 231, and that an action will not thereafter lie in the district court questioning the title conveyed under the probate sale. As was said by this court in Miller v. Mitcham, 21 Ida. 741, 123 Pac. 941, “probate courts have exclusive, original jurisdiction in the settlement of estates of deceased persons, and it is within the jurisdiction of those courts to determine who are the heirs of a deceased person and who is entitled to succeed to the estate and their respective shares and interests therein. The decrees of probate courts are conclusive in such matters. A probate court, however, does not have jurisdiction to determine adverse claims or an adverse title to real estate, except in so far as such questions arise between the heirs or devisees of an estate and are necessary to be determined in the administration of the *347estate.” In other words, a probate court has no authority in the administration of an estate to order and confirm the sale of real estate which belongs to someone else and which did not in fact or law belong to the estate being administered. A decree in such a case could not, and would not, be conclusive or res adjudicata, against the owner of such property unless he became a party to the proceeding and participated in the litigation and allowed the judgment to become final under the statute. In such case he might be estopped raising the same question.
In this case it does not appear that appellant is urging his rights to the detriment of anyone who relied upon the probate proceeding, or that the question here involved was litigated or attempted to be litigated in that proceeding. It is true that it was assumed that this was community property at the time of the administration, but no one acquired any right or interest under the probate proceedings which will be adversely affected by this decree so far as appears from the record. We conclude, therefore, that the probate proceedings are not a bar to this action, nor do they estop the appellant here from asserting his rights.
The judgment should be reversed, and it is so ordered, and the cause is remanded with direction to take further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed. Coste awarded in favor of appellant.
Stewart, C. J., and Sullivan, J., concur.