delivered the opinion of the court. The questions in this case arise upon the plea of the administrator, S. Satterlee, who was the only administrator taken and brought into court.
There is no doubt that the plea is bad in part. The outstanding judgments in favour of J. and L. Deoereaux, and of Gilbert and Bows, and the debt due on the covenant to Salisbury,are neither of them well pleaded. In all these cases, the intestate was jointly indebted with others, and there is no averment in the plea that he vzas survivor, without which he was not chargeable at law. The case of Norton v. Harvey, cited in Trethemy v. Ackland, (2 Saund. 48.) is directly in point. That case is also in point, in another respect, as it was there held, that as the plea was bad as to one judgment outstanding, though not as to the other, it was bad in toto, and judgment was given for the plaintiff, which was affirmed in the exchequer-chamber. It does not appear, from the very imperfect report of that case in Saunders, and from the one still more so, in T. Raym. 153. that. the plea set forth the precise amount of the assets in hand, and it might not have appeared with sufficient certainty that the assets were insufficient to satisfy more than the judgments that were well pleaded. But the fair inference from the plea must be admitted to be otherwise, for it set forth “ several judgments for large sums,” besides the judgment badly pleaded, and it averred that the executrix had “ assets only to a small sum.” In the present case the defendant has well pleaded three outstanding judgments which amount to upwards of 1,000 dollars; and he hath pleaded no assets prater 1,000 dollars; and the important question then arises whether a plea stating specially the amount of assets, and well pleading judgments more than sufficient to cover that amount, is to be adjudged bad in toto, so as to entitle the plaintiff to his judgment generally, for his whole demand, merely because the plea sets forth other judgments which form no protection to the assets.
, There is neither good sense nor justice in the rule as laid down in the case to which I have referred, and with respect to executors and administrators, who are only defending en auter droit, the rule goes to charge them in their own proper persons for the debts of others, and thereby works intolerable hardship. There is a general rule in pleading that a plea being entire is not divisible; and being bad in part is bad for the whole. (Earl of *19Manchester v. Valc, 1 Saund. 27.) This rule, when correctly applied, is logical and just. Thus, when a plea being entire, and going to the whole declaration, is good only as to part, and leaves material parts of the declaration unanswered, it is bad in toto, for it must contain an answer to the whole declaration, or it is no bar. There are numerous cases in which this rule has been applied. (Cro. Eliz. 268. 331. 443. Cro. Jac. 27. 1 Lev. 48. 1 Saund. 27.) So when two persons join in a justification which is bad as to one, the plea being entire and going to the whole declaration, is necessarily to be condemned as no sufficient answer. (Stra. 509. 993. 1184.) In all these cases, the fitness of the rule will at once be perceived. But, as Mr. Justice Butter observed in Duffield v. Scott, (3 Term Rep. 376, 377.) the rule has no application where the objection is merely on account of surplusage, and if the plea states sufficient matter in bar, even if it states something afterwards which is inaccurate, yet that will not vitiate the whole.
In the present case the plea sets forth sufficient matter in bar, viz. the three outstanding judgments, which will more than absorb the assets in hand, and the adding of other outstanding judgments which are not well pleaded, may be disregarded as surplusage, and it ought not to vitiate the sound part of the plea, on the maxim that utile per inutile non vitiatur.
Nor is the rule stated in support of the demurrer so well settled in the books as to require our obedience to it, in opposition to the reason and justice of the case. In Hancocke v. Proud, (1 Saund. 336.) the rule was disregarded, or set aside, by the court; for to a plea by the administrator of four several outstanding judgments, and nil ultra, the plaintiff replied severally to each judgment, that the first judgment was kept on foot by fraud, and the second satisfied, and that the defendant had assets over and above the two remaining judgments, and the replication was held good on demurrer, though if the rule had prevailed, (and which was strongly urged by Saunders, the counsel for the plaintiff,) the replication was double and bad, because the avoiding any one of the judgments in the plea would have entitled the plaintiff to his judgment.
The rule is, however, said to have been laid down by Lord Chief Justice Holt, in Parker v. Atfield. (1 Ld. Raym. 678. 1 Salk. 311. 12 Mod. 527.) But it is stated rather as a dictum than the governing point in the case, and the reason assigned *20does not seem to be sound; for it is said that if the administrates? plead three judgments, though he may not have assets more than to satisfy one, it is an admission of assets to satisfy three judgments, and if any one of them be ill pleaded, the plaintiff must have judgment for the value of the judgments pleaded. If the conclusion was just the rule would be applicable, but when the plea contains an explicit averment of assets, it is equally illogical and unjust to let the implied admission of assets prevail over the express averment to the contrary, expressumfacit cessare taciturn. This case is differently reported in the three books from which it is cited, and it is badly reported in all, and is not entitled to much weight in support of the doctrine for which it is adduced.
The correct rule on this subject is undoubtedly given by Lord Chief Justice Vaughan, in the case of Edgcomb v. Dee. (Vaugh. 89.) To the action in that case on simple contract, the administrator pleaded payment of several debts by specialty, and a debt by recognisance to 2,OOOZ. still due, and a judgment debt in favour of Allington, in the London court, to 2,6?0Z. and Avhich he had paid, and also a judgment for 7,8081. still due to one Cornwallis, and pleno administravitprceter assets to the value of the debts so paid, and to the amount of 10s. and which remaining assets of 10s. were bound by the recognisance, and the judgment of Cornwallis. To this plea there was a demurrer, on the ground that the judgment in favour of Allington, and the payment of it, was badly pleaded, and that as the plea Avas bad in part, the plaintiff was entitled to judgment for his whole debt. But the chief justice, in the able opinion which he has preserved, denied this conclusion, even admitting the judgment of Allington to be bad, and that until the valid judgment of 7,8881. and the recognisance of 2,000Z. Avere satisfied, (or either of them, if the other Avas not well pleaded,) and further assets remained, the plaintiff had no right to be paid; for until then he had suffered no Avrong, nor had the administrator done any, or derived any benefit by not satisfying the plaintiff. The true rule of pleading in this case, as he said, (and which was to be deduced from the case in 9 Edw. IV. 12. b. and Tresham's Case, 9 Co. 108.) was, that the plaintiff must avoid all payments pleaded in bar, until assets appear remaining in the defendant’s hands; and that the defendant was bound to set forth the amount of the assets, so that it might appear that he had none remaining, even if *21one or more of the judgments be badly pleaded. Unless this appeared with sufficient certainty, he admitted that the plaintiff would be entitled to judgment, and that if it did so appear, the badness of part of the plea was neither hurtful to the plaintiff nor beneficial to the defendant, for “ why should the plaintiff have Avhat he ought not, or the defendant pay what he ought not ?” and he observed further, “ that the spungy reason that the defendant’s plea is all entire, and, therefore, if any part be false, the plea is bad, is not sense.” Sergeant Williams cites this same argument, and comes to the same result, in his note to the case of Hancocke v. Proud, (1 Saund. 337. note 1.) and he supposes the true rule may be that if the executor plead judgments obtained against the testator, and that he has not sufficient to satisfy them, or any of them, if anyone or more of the judgments be avoided, still there ought not to be a general judgment for the plaintiff until so many are avoided as to leave assets in the executor’s hands. The decision of Lord Mansfield, in Harrison v. Boccles, in 1769, and which is cited with approbation by Lord Kenyon, in 3 Term Rep. 688. has much bearing on this point, because it is founded on a case analogous in principle. He held that the executor, on pleno adminislravit, was not responsible for the whole demand, if the plaintiff could even prove assets unadministered to any small amount, for that would be wrong and absurd; and that he was answerable only to the extent of the assets proved. In deciding a point of such clear and manifest justice, it is said he overturned a host of authorities.
Another objection to the plea is, that it does not extend to the assets in the hands of the other administrators, and if one administrator be responsible for the acts or devastavit of a co-administrator, the plea is undoubtedly bad. But I apprehend that is not the case, and that the rule is settled that one executor is not chargeable with the devastavit, or other act of his companion, and is only chargeable with the assets which come to his hands, and is answerable only for the goodness of his own plea. (Hargthorp v. Millforth, Cro. Eliz. 318. Elwell v. Quash, Str. 20. Baldwin v. Church, cited ibid.) When assets have once come to his possession he is answerable for the due administration of them, even if he deliver them over to his co-executor. (Cross v. Smith, 1 East, 246.) It is also equally well settled that each executor has the control of the estate, and may release, pay, or transfer, without the agency of the other, and that exe*22cutors and administrators stand on the same ground, and their powers and responsibilities, in respect to each other, are the same. (Jacomb v. Harwood, 2 Ves. 267. and the case of Willand v. Fenn, in the K. B there cited.) The plea that the intestate owed his co-administrator a certain debt which remains unpaid may, perhaps, not be well pleaded, but whether it be or be not is quite immaterial, and need not be considered, since the sound part of the plea covers the assets in hand, and more.
The plea contained distinct matters divisible in their nature, in like maimer as a plea of set-off of two separate and distinct demands. The plaintiff, therefore, instead of a general demurrer to the whole plea, should have confined his demurrer to the judgments and matters that were illy pleaded, and have traversed the residue of the plea. The different parts of the plea were as different counts in a declaration, or, perhaps, as different parts of the same count when it consists of distinct divisible matter, and then if any part be good it is sufficient on a general demurrer to the whole plea. (Dowsland v. Thompson, 2 Bl. Rep. 910. 1 Chitty on Pleadings, 643. Powdick v. Lyon, 11 East, 565.)
The defendant is accordingly entitled to judgment, with liberty to the plaintiff to withdraw his demurrer and reply or take judgment for assets in futuro which may come to hand, after satisfying ther judgments well pleaded.
Judgment for the defendant.