On the 13th day of May, 1896, the decedent, Frida or Freída Maas, opened an account with the appellant, which is a savings bank organized under the laws of the State of New York, giving her residence as Twenty-third street, Lincoln place, West New York, N. J. She died intestate on the 15th day of November, 1898, at her residence in Guttenberg, in the county of Hudson, State of New Jersey, leaving her surviving a son and daughter, both minors and residents of the same place. At the time of her death there remained a balance of eighty dollars to her credit on deposit with the appellant. Letters of administration on her estate were *526duly issued to her deceased husband’s brother, Frederick Maas, by the surrogate of Hudson county, N. J., on the 23d day of August, 1899. The administrator qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties, and upon the same day presented her pass book and a certified copy of his letters of administration to the appellant and demanded payment of this balance of account which, with interest, aggregated eighty-three dollars and fifty-four cents. The bank paid the balance of the account to him upon the surrender of the pass book and a certified copy of his letters. Prior thereto and on the 23d day of November, 1898, Charles Maas, also a brother of her deceased husband, was duly appointed general guardian of her minor children by the surrogate of the county of New York, and thereafter and on the 9th day of March, 1899, he was also duly appointed administrator of her goods, chattels and credits by the surrogate of the county of New York. Pie duly qualified and letters of administration were duly issued to him. Three days after the bank paid the balance of account to the foreign administrator the domestic administrator served notice upon it of his appointment and that he would hold it responsible for the payment to any other person of any money belonging to the estate of the decedent, and two days thereafter he brought this action to recover said balance of deposit. It does not appear that the infants changed their residence, and presumably the letters of guardianship were issued on the theory that there was property of the decedent' in the county of New York. (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 2822,2821.) It does not appear what other property, if any, the decedent left in the county of New York on account of which letters of administration were issued ; but the bank had no notice of the issue of the domestic letters until after it had paid the money to the foreign administrator. It does not appear that the decedent left any creditors in this State. On these facts the question presented by this appeal is whether the payment by the bank to the foreign administrator is a defense to the action. No exact precedent has been cited in this or any other jurisdiction, and we find none. It seems to be well settled that the situs of a debt is the domicile of the creditor, not that of the debtor. The administrator of the domicile of the decedent takes title to all his personal property, whether situated within or without the State. The title to all personal property wherever situated vests in him by the let*527ters testamentary and relates back to the time of the death of the intestate; and the succession of the property is governed by the law of the domicile of the owner. (Matter of Prout, 128 N. Y. 70; Schluter v. Bowery Savings Bank, 117 id. 125, 129 ; Parsons v. Lyman, 20 id. 103 ; Matter of Butler, 38 id. 397; Stoddard v. Lum, 159 id. 265, 276; Carroll v. Hughes, 5 Redf. 337; Luce v. Manchester & Lawrence R. R., 2 New Eng. Rep. 263; Matter of Election of Cape May, etc., Nav. Co., 51 N. J. L. 78, 82; Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Vogel’s Executrix, 76 Ala. 441.)
It is the duty of the administrator of the domicile to exercise due diligence to recover personal property when beyond the jurisdiction of the State and collect debts owing to the decedent by non-residents, and for his failure in this regard he may be charged with the value thereof in the settlement of his accounts. (Parsons v. Lyman, supra; Schultz v. Pulver, 11 Wend. 361; Matter of Butler, supra.) The administrator of the domicile thus having title to the personal property of the decedent, a voluntary payment made to him within or without the State by a non-resident debtor discharges the indebtedness. (Matter of Prout, supra; Luce v. Manchester & Lawrence R. R., supra)
Although the domiciliary administrator is clothed with title to the property, his letters of administration have no extra territorial force, and on grounds of public policy for the protection of home creditors a foreign administrator or executor is not permitted to maintain an action to recover property located here or to enforce the payment of an indebtedness owing to the estate by a resident of our State. (Parsons v. Lyman, supra; Matter of Prout, supra; Wilkins v. Ellett, 9 Wall. 740; Redfield’s Surr. Pr. [2d ed.] 27, 28.) The foreign administrator may, however, assign the claim and the assignee may recover the property or collect the indebtedness by an action in this State. (Toronto General Trust Co. v. C., B. (& Q. R. R. Co., 123 N. Y. 37, 47; Peterson v. Chemical Bank, 29 How. Pr. 240; 32 N. Y. 21; Middlebrook v. Merchants’ Bank, 3 Keyes, 135 ; McNulta v. Huntington, 62 App. Div. 257, 258. See, also, Mabon v. Ongley Elec. Co., 156 N. Y. 196, 201.)
If the foreign debtor be found within the jurisdiction of the courts of the decedent’s domicile, an action may be maintained *528there by the domiciliary administrator and a recovery thus had will bar an action by an administrator even if already appointed in the State where the debtor resides. (Wilkins v. Ellett, supra; Equitable Life Assurance Society v. Vogel’s Executrix, supra.)
The Code of Civil Procedure provides for the issue of ancillary letters of administration in the case of a non-resident where letters have been issued at his domicile and it is discretionary with the •court whether to require the payment of local creditors or to require security to insure their payment by the foreign administrator. (Code Civ. Proc. art. 7, tit. 3, chap. 18, §§ 2699-2701.)
The Surrogate’s Court of any county of this State in which there is personal property belonging to a non-resident decedent has jurisdiction to issue letters of administration regardless of whether letters have been issued in the foreign State, and the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court first exercising it is exclusive of that of other counties (Code Civ. Proc. §§ 2476, 2477 ; Taylor v. Pub. Admr., 6 Dem. 158) and to apply such property in payment of the claims of local creditors. While the court may then, in its discretion, distribute the remaining property to those who are entitled thereto according to the law of the decedent’s domicile, ordinarily this will not be done if there are foreign creditors or if the foreign law of distribution differs materially from ours or would be construed differently by our courts than by the courts of the foreign jurisdiction. In either of these events if there are local next of kin or legatees the fund ordinarily will be remanded to the foreign jurisdiction to be administered there. (3 Redfield’s Surr. Pr. [2d ed.] 26; Jessup Surr. Pr. 650-653; Parsons v. Lyman, supra; Despard v. Churchill, 53 N. Y. 192; Brown v. Brown, 1 Barb. Ch. 189, 213 ; Lynes v. Coley, 1 Redf. 405 ; Carroll v. Hughes, 5 id. 337; S. C., sub. nom. Matter of Hughes, 95 N. Y. 55 ; Barry’s Appeal, 88 Penn. St. 131; Stevens v. Gaylord, 11 Mass. 256; Wilkins v. Ellett, supra.)
In the absence of property here the remedy of a domestic creditor against the estate of a non-resident decedent is such as is given by the foreign law and must be enforced there. (Lyon v. Park, 111 N. Y. 351, 355.) This is also the remedy of a local creditor where a local debtor makes a voluntary payment to the foreign domiciliary administrator. It was observed in the case of Taylor *529v. Syme (162 N. Y. 513, 518) that the reason for the rule forbidding a foreign administrator or executor to prosecute actions here has little force where there are no local creditors, but that, nevertheless, the rule still obtains. These principles seem to be well established and sustained by abundant authority.
We find considerable dicta to the effect that the appointment of a local administrator supersedes the authority of a foreign administrator to receive voluntary payments from non-resident debtors, but in no case were they essential to a decision. It is loosely stated in some of the cases that such a voluntary payment discharges the debt where “ there is no conflicting grant of letters.” (Vroom v. Van Horne, 10 Paige, 549; Brown v. Brown, supra) In Parsons v. Lyman (supra) the court say: “ The foreign law furnishes the rule of decision as to the validity of the title to the thing claimed; but in respect to the legal assertion of that title it has no extra territorial force. As a result of this doctrine it is now generally held everywhere, and it is well settled in this State, that an executor or administrator appointed in another State has not, as such, any authority beyond the sovereignty by virtue of whose laws he was appointed. (Morrell v. Dickey, 1 John. Ch. 153; Doolittle v. Lewis, 7 id. 45 ; Vroom v. Van Horne, supra) But if residents of this State have in their possession property which belongs to a party domiciled abroad, or are indebted to him, they may, of course, recognize any valid title claimed under him, arising out of an act in pais, by testament or by succession upon intestacy, and may voluntarily deliver over the property or make payment of the debt. 'Our jurisdiction is not violated nor our tribunals in any respect contemned by such a transaction. Simply, our laws are not invoked, because in the case supposed there is no occasion for their agency. If the property or money is thereupon taken by the new possessor into the foreign jurisdiction we have no further concern with the matter. If the claimant whose demands have thus been conceded, is himself a trustee for others, as in the case of an executor or administrator, he is subject to the same legal pursuit by the parties whom lie represents or who are interested in the trust as though he had received the assets at the domicile of the former owner. The iact that those assets were at one time within our jurisdiction, or *530had existed in the shape of a debt owing by a resident of this State is of no legal consequence. In stating this position, I, of course, exclude any consideration of cases where a lien by way of attachment or otherwise had been fastened upon the property, or where-any claims of a domestic executor or administrator had attached to-it before it had passed into the hands of the party claiming under the foreign title.” In Schluter v. Bowery Savings Bank (supra) the court, speaking of a voluntary payment to a foreign administrator, say, “ payment to him made anywhere, in the absence of any conflicting claim existing at the time, is valid.” It would seem from a cursory examination of Stone v. Scripture (4 Bans. 186) that this-question had been settled adversely to the appellant. There a mortgage held by a non-resident was attempted to be discharged by the foreign administrator after the appointment of a local administrator. It is apparent- that the parties were aware of the appointment of the domestic administrator. 'Furthermore, no consideration passed at that time for the mortgage had been paid to the party subsequently appointed the foreign administrator and surrendered up long before he had any authority to act.
The local administrator is entitled to the possession of the property and to collect the debts for the purpose of administration here, because public policy requires that our creditors be protected, and for this reason we deem the foreign administrator incapacitated from prosecuting claims here, notwithstanding the fact that the title is in him. It is undoubtedly the rule- that where the local administrator and a foreign administrator claim the right to collect a debt, owing to the decedent by a debtor residing here, the debtor must account to the domestic and not to the foreign administrator. (Lawrence v. Townsend, 88 N. Y. 24.) It does not follow, however, that every domestic debtor of the foreign decedent is chargeable with constructive notice of the appointment of a domestic-administrator. This public policy, we think, does not preclude a local debtor from paying a foreign domiciliary administrator, who-, is vested with the title, in the absence of knowledge of the appointment of a domestic administrator or of facts and circumstances-which would lead a prudent man to inquire whether one had been appointed.
The bank would undoubtedly be liable if it made the payment *531negligently. (Appleby v. Erie County Savings Bank, 62 N. Y. 12; Heermans v. Ellsworth, 3 Hun, 473; 64 N. Y. 159; Gearns v. B. S. Bank, 135 id. 557.) In the case at bar there is no finding of negligence on the part of the bank, nor would such a finding be warranted. The decedent was a woman, a non-resident, and the account was small. There was nothing to indicate that she would be likely to have creditors here. The mere fact that the bank knew that she was a non-resident, as shown by her account and the foreign letters, was not sufficient to put it upon inquiry. If this payment cannot be sustained then there is little value in the rule that a payment may be made voluntarily to a foreign administrator. If this merely means that the payment is good, provided no local letters of administration have been issued, then there is no safety in making such payment. Local letters might be issued in any county of the State ; and even if the bank were connected with each surrogate’s office by telephone or telegraph, it would have no guaranty of protection in making a payment, for it might be proved that a minute before the payment was made, local letters were issued in some county or that the information it received was erroneous. We deem it quite probable that in the great majority of instances where non-residents are depositors in the savings banks of this State in small amounts, they have no local creditors. Instead of enforcing any public policy of the State, we think it would be rather against public policy to hold that no local debtor may pay a foreign domiciliary administrator except at his peril. If that rule should be announced, then in every instance it would be necessary to take out letters of administration here, involving considerable expense in the service of citations and the publication of notices to creditors. A small fund like this would be absorbed in such legal .proceedings. I think that we should, by analogy, apply in the case at. bar the rule that prevails in the case of an ordinary payment by a debtor to his creditor who, without notice to the debtor or his knowledge, has assigned the claim to a third party. (Heermans v. Ellsworth, supra; Johnston v. Allen, 22 Fla. 224; Van Keuren v. Corkins, 66 N. Y. 77; Huntington v. Potter, 32 Barb. 300.) Moreover, the reason for the rule requiring that payment be made to the local administrator does not apply here. The foreign domiciliary administrator has the title; but for the protection of home cred*532itors we refuse to let him have the property, and on account of his disqualification to sue we assert ownership or rather a lien for the purpose of paying such creditors. Here, however, the bank, acting in good faith, and in accordance with a provision of its by-laws by which it obligated itself to pay tbe account to the legal representatives of the depositor upon the surrender of the pass book, has paid the domiciliary administrator who had title, and it does not appear that there are any local creditors who require protection. The foreign administrator had a good title, but local creditors, if there were any in this jurisdiction, had a right to have the assets applied in payment of their debts. These minors in whose behalf the action is brought will receive their share of this fund from the foreign administrator upon the settlement of his accounts in Hew Jersey. (Luce v. Manchester & Lawrence R. R., supra) The bank should not be required to pay tbe local administrator, thus providing a double fund for the payment of these minors. It has already paid their duly con stituted trustee. The equities are with the bank, and in no event" should this action be permitted to be maintained until it is shown that there are local creditors whose claims will otherwise be lost.
It follows that the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
McLaughlin, J., concurred; Van Brunt, P. J., concurred in result; Patterson and O’Brien, JJ., dissented.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.