The single question in this case is whether the claim in suit is \ assets within this State. If it is, the judgment appealed from ! should be affirmed; if it is not, the plaintiff, as administrator appointed by a surrogate in this State, has no title to the claim, and for that reason cannot maintain the action.
It may be premised that the succession to the personal property of the plaintiff’s intestate, and the distribution of the same among the next of kin, are to be governed by the law of North Carolina, m which State the intestate had his domicile at the time of his death. But the question to be decided is not one of succession or distribution. It is a question whether the New York administrator has power to collect the claim in suit.
It is held, in numerous cases, that simple contract debts; (unlike specialties, which are assets where they be) are assets where the debtor resides at the time of the death of the creditor. *438The rule, we apprehend, has this extent, that simple contract debts follow the person of the debtor. The object of the rule is to prevent conflicts of jurisdiction. (Att’y-Gen. v. Boumens, 4 M. & W., 171.) In Wentworth on Executors, the rule is thus stated: As to specialties, “the law hath been taken, that because the persons of the debtors be moveable, passant and transitory; therefore, these debts shall bo said to be and to make bona notabilia whore the bonds or other specialties be, and not where the debtors inhabit'and dwell. * * * But incase the debts bo only by contract, without specialty, then indeed they are to be esteemed bona notabilia there, and in that place where the debtor is." (Phil. ed., 1832, p. 109.) But if, after the death of the creditor, the debtor transfers his domicile to another State or country without having paid the debt, or having been sued for its recovery, it can hardly bo doubted but that the demand against him would become assets within the State or county to which he removes. That such would bo the case in this State seems to follow from our statute, which provides that a surrogate shall have power to grant letters of administration where an intestate, not being an inhabitant of this State, shall die out of the State, not having assets therein; but assets of such intestate shall thereafter come into the county of such surrogate. (2 R. S., 73, § 23, subd. 4.)
We think it very clear that" if the defendant had removed his domicile to this State, the debt owing by him, not having been paid or sued upon in North Carolina, would have become assets m this State, so that the surrogate of the county in which he took up his domicile would have had jurisdiction to grant letters under the statute referred to. What difference does it maleo, so far as the question of jurisdiction is concerned, that he came into this State without the intention of changing his domicile? He thereby voluntarily subjected himself to the courts of this State. Jurisdiction over the demand owing by him to the estate had not been exercised in North Carolina. He had not paid the debt, nor had ho been sued upon it. The case was as completely within the letter of the statute above referred to, as if he had removed permanently. Was it not within its meaning? Suppose he had been in this State several years for a temporary purpose, without the *439intention of making bis domicile here, would not the claim have been assets here, notwithstanding his domicile continued to be in North Carolina? If not, he could successfully avoid paying the debt as long as he should choose to remain here, unless there should be other assets in this State; for foreign admiuistrajBÉj cannot sue in our courts without talcing out letters here, and^BI surrogate in this State can grant letters, without assets in his county, upon the estate of a deceased person, not an inhabitant of his county, dying without the State. (2 R. S., 73, § 23; see Hollister v. Hollister, 10 How. Pr. R., 532.) If the stay of the defendant in this State, for .a temporary purpose, however pro-' tracted, could have the effect to make the claim against him assets here, the length of his stay is immaterial. It is enough that he is within the State a sufficient length of time to be sued by an administrator of the estate duly appointed here, and that such suit is actually brought in good faith. We have not been referred to any caso, and are not aware of any, in which the precise question before us has been adjudged. The result of such examination as we have been able to give to the subject is, that the claim in suit was assets in this State, the defendant not having paid it or been sued upon it in North Carolina or elsewhere, at the time when the plaintiff took out letters here and commenced the present action.
• This result involves no conflict of jurisdiction. If the views above expressed are correct, the claim in suit ceased to be assets in Noi’th Carolina and became assets here by the voluntary act of the debtor in coming into this State, followed by suit, brought in good faith, against him here. Being assets in New York and not in North Carolina, a judgment in favor of the administrator here will be a bar to a future action by the administrators in the latter State.
As has already been suggested, the case would have been different if the defendant had paid the claim to the administrators in North Carolina, or had been sued by them. (Stevens v. Gaylord, 11 Mass., 256.) So, also, it would be materially different if the debtor had left North Carolina and had come into this State with the intent to defraud the North Carolina administrators. In such case, a recovery here would not bar an action against the *440debtor in North Carolina., But in the present case, no fraud upon the administrators in North Carolina is, or can be, suggested. The plaintiff was appointed administrator here upon the application of the administrators hi North Carolina, and that fact warrants ÉHjpresumption that this action was brought with their concur-RSffie. Under chapter 403 of the Laws of 1863, letters of, administration may bo granted in this State to administrators appointed in á foreign domicile, or to any person or persona authorized by them to receive the same.
The rights of creditors in North Car olma cannot ho invoked by the defendant, for several reasons. In the first place, those creditors, if any there be, are represented by the administrators in that State, and are to be held to have concurred with them in the bringing of this action. In the next place, the right of creditors in that State will not bo prejudiced by a recovery here. The administration in New York is ancillary to that in North Carolina, the latter being the domicile of the intestate at his death. If there arc no legal claimants in this State, in the character of creditors or next of kin, the administrator here will be bound to remit the assets collected by him to the administrators in North Carolina, to be by them administered according to the law of the intestate's domicile,. (2 Kent’s Com., 434.) If there are creditors hero, it -will probably be his duty to apply the assets in his hands to their payment, but that will work no injustice to foreign creditors. If the estate be solvent, all will be paid in full; if not, the proper course would seem to be to pay the creditors here, pro rata, having regard to all the assets, and the whole amount of debt here and abroad (Dawes v. Head, 3 Pick. R., 128; 2 Kent’s Com., 434.) And in either case, it would seem that the surplus should be remitted to the principal administrators for distribution, unless in the exercise of judicial discretion it shall bo thought that the circumstances of the case require that it be distributed here. (Harvey v. Richards, 1 Mason, 403; Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y., 103; Despard v. Churchill, 53 id., 192.) What circumstances bearing upon that question may appear when the question of distribution shall come up before the proper tribunal, we cannot anticipate. It is enough that nothing now appears which would require the surplus to be *441retained here, and the existence of facts of that nature cannot be assumed in order to defeat the present action.
The suggestion of the appellant’s counsel that his client has a defense to the claim in suit, growing out of transactions in North Carolina, is foreign to the question. Whatever defense he may have will be available to him in this action, and the circumstance that he will be subjected to the inconvenience of going to a foreign State for testimony is no answer to the plaintiff’s suit. In fine, the defendant, who confessedly owes the debt, stands as a mere volunteer in behalf of the foreign administrators and the creditors represented by them, with whose consent, presumptively, this action is brought.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs of appeal.
MrjTjovr, P. J., and Talcott, J., concurred.Judgment affirmed, with costs of appeal.