We need not inquire whether the motion by the plaintiff in error to amend the inventory he had returned, should have been allowed; the questions arising upon the special verdict are — 1st. Is the administrator entitled to the personalty, which belonged to his intestate, at the time of her death, and unadministered by his predecessor ? 2d. Is the property in question subject to distribution according to the statutes which apply to intestacies ?
It is enacted by the act of 1806, that if a person die intestate, or the executors- named in the will, neglect or refuse to act, &c., administration of the goods and chattels, rights and credits of such intestate, or of such testator with the will annexed, shall be granted to the widow, or next of kin, or some of them; and in case of their refusal, then to the principal creditor, Sf c. [Clay’s Dig. 220, § 1.] The same, statute provides that an appraisement and inventory shall be made and and returned to the proper Orphans’ Court. [Id. 223, § 11; 225, § 26.]
The descent of land in cases of intestacy is explicitly provided for, and it is then enacted, “ When any person shall die possessed of goods and chattels, or personal estate, not bequeathed, the same shall descend to and be distributed among his or her heirs, in the same way and manner, that real estate not devised descends by this act: Povided, that the goods and chattels, or personal estate of any person deceased,, whether testator or intestate, shall stand chargeable with the payment of all the just debts and funeral expenses of the deceased, and the charges of settling the said estate; and after *912the payment thereof, the surplusage in case of intestacy, shall be decreed by the Orphans’ Court, one third thereof to the widow of the deceased person, &c.” [Clay’s Dig. 168, § 2; 191, § 1.]
We think-it clearly inferable from these enactments, that the grant of administration conferred upon the plaintiff the goods and chattels, rights and credits of his intestate, which were unadministered. Such is the well established effect'of the English statutes oí a kindred character. This being so, it was competent for him to have maintained an action at law against Lathrop for the recovery of the possession of the slaves.
In Coons & Co. v. Nall’s Heirs, &c. 4 Litt. Rep. 263, it was held, that a suit even in equity’will not lie in behalf of the heirs of a dowress for the rents and profits of a dower estate ; although it was alledged that no will was made, or administration granted. In such case the right of action is in the personal representative, and a recovery by the heirs would not bar a suit by him, should one be afterwards appointed: Further, a suit for an account of the personal estate of the ancestor, must be brought by his personal representatives.
It has been often said, that the administrator represents the intestate in respect to the personalty, the legal right to which vests in him immediately on the grant of administration, and the grant relates back to the time of the intestate’s death. Such is the effect of the authorities cited by the defendant’s counsel upon this point. See Vaughtcrs v. Elden, 2 Brev. Rep. 30T. In that case, certain property of the intestate went into the distributee’s possession without administration who sold the same to the defendant. After the death of the distributee, the plaintiff administered on the estate of the late owner of the property, and after demand, brought trover for its recovery. A verdict and judgment were obtained for the full value, embracing the increase of slaves, &c.; the court deciding that the distributee had no interest beyond the mere equity to have the residue after the payment of the debts, and that the legal estate was in the administrator.
In Bradford v. Felder, 2 McC. Ch. Rep. 168, it was determined that the next of kin to a decedent, cannot maintain *913a suit in equity for the recovery of the property of an intestate’s éstate without administering, though he be exclusively entitled. If he take possession, and dispose of it, such disposition will be inoperative.
These decisions, it is insisted, are inapplicable to the case at bar, because the husband of the sole distributee of the intestate’s estate, had taken possession of the property, and paid all the debts, so that no administration was necessary; and his possession will be referred to his rights as husband. To sustain this argument, the plaintiff has cited several cases in Chancery, from the South Carolina Reports. In Spann and wife v. Jennings et al. 1 Hill’s Ch. Rep. 324, it was decided, that where the wife was entitled to the whole of the estate of deceased infants as their next of kin, and there being no debts, before her marriage took possession of the estate without administering, which after marriage continued with her husband, the husband was entitled to administration in right of his wife; but as no debts were to be paid, or distribution made, administration would have been a “ nugatory ceremony.” If any other person had administered, the property could not have been removed from him. “ By going into equity and showing that there were no debts, and that his wife was exclusively entitled, a recovery at law would have been restrained.” To the same effect is Huson, et al. v. McMeekin’s Adm’r, 1 Rich. Eq. Rep. 1.] Without stopping to inquire whether these cases correctly ascertain the law, it is enough to say, that they professedly proceed upon principles which are recognized in Chancery, and which it is admitted would not be administered in a court of law. In the latter tribunal, the party having the legal title must recover the possession of the intestate’s estate, and when thus reduced into possession, (as we piust intend it was in the present case,) it must be distributed according to the direction of the statute upon the subject. The Orphans’ Court, though a peculiar, and to some extent an extraordinary jurisdiction, does not exercise the powers of Chancery. To ascertain who are the distributees, it must look to the parties at the time the distribution is ordered, where legal rights have not previously vested.
Here the husband had not such a possession as invested *914him with his marital rights in his wife’s estate, at least'in a court of law; or if they ever attached, they were divested by the grant of administration, and the designation of the property as the estate of the intestate. Whether the husband’s rights are such as to command the protection of equity, is not now a proper subject of inquiry — that question can be considered when it arises. This view is decisive of the cause, and the judgment must be affirmed.