I dissent. Action to recover a car. Trial by the court, and judgment in favor of plaintiffs. Motion of defendant for a new trial, which was denied. Appeal by defendant from judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial.
It is conceded that on the twenty-fifth day of May, 1884, the plaintiffs were by an order of the United States circuit court for the eastern district of Missouri, wherein the Wabash, St. Louis, and Pacific Eailway Company was a party, appointed receivers of the railroad, and all the property of the company, with power and instructions to take possession of the railroad, and to manage, control, and operate it, and preserve and protect all its property.
It further appears that the car in suit came into the .possession of the receivers above named at Toledo, Ohio, on May 29, 1884, when it was delivered by the company to the plaintiffs, as receivers, and that the receivers have used this car in carrying on the business of the railroad from that day until it was attached, as appears in this action, on the first day of April, 1885.
After the car came into the possession of the receivers, it was by them brought in the course of their business as receivers to the city of St. Louis, state of Missouri, a place within the jurisdiction of the court by which the plaintiffs were appointed. The receivers, on the sixteenth day of March, 1885, loaded the car with freight, destined for the city of San Francisco, and sent it so loaded to San Francisco, with the intent that the freight of said car might be delivered at San Francisco, and that the car might then be returned to St. Louis.
The car was brought to San Francisco, and while there *556was attached by Henry Payot and Isaac Upham, citizens of the state of California, in an action wherein said Payot and Upham were plaintiffs and the above-named railroad company was defendant. Under this attachment, the defendant, as the sheriff of the city and county of San Francisco, justifies.
It is argued that the plaintiffs suing as receivers cannot maintain this action, inasmuch as a receiver cannot maintain an action out of the jurisdiction of the court which appointed him.
It may be conceded that this is the general rule, and still the plaintiffs can maintain this action. The right to sue and maintain the action is founded on the possession of the car, delivered to the plaintiffs, as receivers, by the railroad company, in May, 1884, at Toledo, Ohio, and its being taken from that place by plaintiffs in the course of their management, carrying on, and control of the business of the company, to St. Louis, where it was loaded and sent to the city of San Francisco. This possession was given by the owner of the car, the railroad company, in pursuance of the order of the court, and was never afterward disturbed by the- company. The possession of the car remained in the receivers unchanged and never interfered with, until it was attached in this state, on the 1st of April, 1885. The plaintiffs, under the undisputed authority of the court making the appointment, and without challenge by the railroad company, were, during the period of this possession, using this car in carrying on the business of the railroad company. The taking possession of the car by the plaintiffs, as receivers, was lawful, and their continued possession was also lawful, and such possession vested in them as individuals a special property, on which title they can as individuals maintain this action.
This conclusion is supported both on principle and by authority.
The case of Chicago etc. R. R. Co. v. Keokuk Northern *557Line Packet Co., 108 Ill. 317, 48 Am. Rep. 557, is directly in point. There the contest was between a receiver of the property and effects of the Northern Line Packet Company, regularly appointed by the circuit court of St. Louis, Missouri, in an action brought against that company and an attaching creditor, on a writ brought in the circuit court of Adams County, state of Missouri.
The court held that the title of the receiver was good against the attaching creditor in the state of Missouri, and judgment was accordingly rendered in favor of the receiver.
The court, speaking to the point, said: “ The general doctrine that the powers of a receiver are co-extensive only with the jurisdiction of the court making the appointment, and particularly that a foreign receiver should not be permitted, as against the claims of creditors resident in another state, to remove from such state the assets of the. debtor, it being the policy of every government to retain in its own hands the property of a debtor until all domestic claims against it have been satisfied, we fully concede, and were this the case of property situate in this state, never having been within the jurisdiction of the court that appointed the receiver, and never having been in the possession of the receiver, it would be covered by the above principles, which would be decisive against the claim of the appellee. But the facts that the property at the time of the appointment of the receiver was within the jurisdiction of the court making the appointment, and was there taken into the actual possession of the receiver, and continued in his possession until it was attached, take the case, as we conceive, out of the range of the foregoing principles. We are of opinion that by the receiver’s taking possession of the barge in question within the jurisdiction of the court that appointed him, he became vested with a special property in the barge, like that which a sheriff acquires by the seizure of goods in execution, and that *558he was entitled to protect this special property while it continued, by action, in like manner as if he had been the absolute owner. Having taken the property in his possession, he was responsible for it to the court that appointed him, and had given a bond in a large sum to cover his responsibility as receiver, and to meet such liability he might maintain any appropriate proceeding to regain possession of the barge which had been taken from him. (Boyle v. Townes, 9 Leigh, 158; Singerly v. Fox, 75 Pa. St. 114.) It is well settled that a sheriff does by the seizure of goods in execution acquire a special property in them, and that he may maintain trespass, trover, or replevin for them.”
The court concludes its observations on this point as follows: “By taking the barge into his possession within the jurisdiction of the court that appointed him, a special property in the barge became vested in the receiver, and it is the established rule that where a legal title to personal property has once passed and become vested in accordance with the law of the state where it is situated, the validity of such title will be recognized everywhere.” (Citing Carriwell v. Sewell, 5 Hurl. & N. 728; Clark v. Connecticut Post Co., 35 Conn. 303; Taylor v. Boardman, 25 Vt. 581; Crapo v. Kelly, 16 Wall. 610; Waters v. Barton, 1 Cold. 450.) Cagill v. Wooldridge, 8 Baxt. 580, is to the same effect. In that case the contest was also between the receiver and an attaching creditor. The case was ruled in favor of the receiver.
A receiver of an important manufacturing company, appointed by a court in New Jersey, who took possession of its assets for the purpose of completing a bridge which the corporation had contracted to build in Connecticut, purchased iron with the funds of the estate, and sent it into that state, and it was held that the iron was not open to attachment in Connecticut by a creditor residing there. (Pond v. Cooke, 45 Conn. 126; 29 Am. Rep. 668.) *559In McAlpin v. Jones, 10 La. Ann. 562, and in Hurd v. City of Elizabeth, 4 N. J. L. 1, receivers were allowed to maintain actions without the jurisdiction of the court appointing them. In the case cited from 10 Louisiana Annual, the receiver had been appointed by a chancery court in Mississippi; he there took possession of the property, under the order of the appointment. A portion of the property, viz., four slaves, were stolen from the possession of the receiver, and came into the state of Louisiana. The owner brought suit in the latter state, and its highest court adjudged that he could recover.
It may be observed that the property sued for in this case was in the possession of the receivers within the jurisdiction of the court appointing them. The receivers got their possession in Ohio by delivery from the owner and took the car to St. Louis, where it was within the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States for the eastern district of Missouri. The fact that they got possession of the car out of the jurisdiction of the appointing court cannot make any material difference, when the property was at once carried into such jurisdiction, and therein retained in their possession. That it cannot affect the right of plaintiff to recover that the car was afterward sent by the receivers in the course of their duty and in the posecution of the business which they were appointed to carry on, see Chicago etc. R. R. Co. v. Keokuk Packet Co., 108 Ill. 323, 324; 48 Am. Rep. 557.
In the same line of decision -with the foregoing are Low v. Burrows, 12 Cal. 188, and Lewis v. Adams, 70 Cal. 403; 59 Am. Rep. 423.
In Low v. Burrows, supra, the action was brought by the assignee of a judgment recovered in New York. The assignment was made by an administrator in New York. It was contended that the administrator in New York had no right to assign the judgment, the debtor residing at that time beyond the state of New York. This contention was based on the ground that the authority of *560the administrator did not extend beyond the state in which the letters were granted. The court disposed of this contention adversely to counsel presenting it, and it was held that the administrator, having recovered the judgment, owned it and could assign it.
In Lewis v. Adams, supra, the action was brought on a judgment recovered by the plaintiff, as the executor of the last will of one Nat Lewis, against the defendant, P, T. Adams, in the district court for the county of Bexar, state of Texas. In the complaint in this suit the plaintiff described herself as executrix of Lewis, and it was contended that she having been appointed executrix by a Texas court, her authority was confined, to the state of Texas, and that she could not maintain any action in this state. It was held that the judgment recovered in Texas vested the title in her; that she was accountable to the court in Texas from which she received her ap-' pointment, and that she could maintain the action here on her own title as an individual. The whole subject is ably and fully discussed and the authorities cited in the opinion of Justice McKinstry. (See 70 Cal. 406, 407.)
In the same line of decisions is Wilkinson v. Culver, 25 Fed. Rep. 639, where a judgment was recovered by a receiver of a corporation appointed by a New Jersey court, and the receiver as owner of the judgment in his individual capacity was allowed to recover on it in an action brought in the United States circuit court for the southern district of New York. (See also Biddle v. Wilkins, 1 Pet. 686; Talmadge v. Chappel, 16 Mass. 71; Trecothik v. Austin, 4 Mason, 34, 35; Barker v. Higgins, 41 Md. 539; Cherry v. Speight, 28 Tex. 503; Rueks v. Taylor, 49 Miss. 552.) The three cases last cited were actions brought by foreign administrators on judgments which they had recovered as such administrators in their own states, and they were allowed to sue upon the judgments in their own names in the other states. (See also Morton v. Hatch, 54 Mo. 408.)
*561On this subject Justice Story, in his able work on Conflict of Laws, makes the following observations:—
“ § 516. And here it may be necessary to attend to a distinction important in its nature and consequences. If a foreign administrator has, in virtue of his administration, reduced the personal property of the deceased, there situated, into his own possession, so that he has acquired the legal title thereto, according to the laws of the country,—if that property should afterward be found in another country, or be carried away and converted there against his will, he may maintain a suit for it there in his own name and right personally, without taking out new letters of administration; for he is, to all intents and purposes, the legal owner thereof, although he is so in the character of trustee for other persons. In like manner, if a specific legacy of personal property is bequeathed in a foreign country, and the legatee has, under an administration there, been admitted to the full possession and ownership by the administrator, he may afterward sue, in his own name, for any injury or conversion of such property in another country, where the property or wrong-doer may be found, without any probate of the will there. The plain reason in each of these cases is, that the executor and the legatee have, each in his own right, become full and perfect legal owners of the property by the local law; and a title to personal property, duly acquired by the lex loci rei sitse, will be deemed valid, and be respected as a lawful and perfect title in every other country.
“ § 517. The like principle will apply where an¡ ex-ecutor or administrator, in virtue of an administration abroad, becomes there possessed of negotiable notes belonging to deceased which are payable to bearer; for then he becomes the legal owner and bearer by virtue of his administration, and may sue thereon in his own name; and he need not take out letters of administration in the state where the debtor resides in order to maintain a suit *562against him. And for a like reason, it would seem that negotiable paper of the deceased, payable to order, actually held and indorsed by a foreign executor or administrator in the foreign country, who is capable there of passing the legal title by such indorsement, would confer a complete legal title on the indorsee, so that he ought to be treated in every other country as the legal indorsee, and allowed to sue thereon accordingly, in the same manner that he would be if it were a transfer of any personal goods or merchandise of the deceased, situate in such foreign country.” (Story on Conflict of Laws, secs. 516, 517.)
To support the statements of the text, the learned author cites decided cases in the notes to the sections quoted. The cases above referred to are all governed by the rule that a title to personal property once vested and duly acquired by the lex rei sitse will be deemed valid, and be respected as a lawful and perfect title in every other country. (Story on Conflict of Laws, sec. 884.)
There is nothing in the foregoing in conflict with what is laid down in Booth v. Clark, 17 How. 322. In that case the action was attempted to be maintained in the circuit court for the District of Columbia on the mere order of a chancery court of the state of Hew York appointing a receiver. Booth, who was so appointed, failed to show that he had ever had possession of the claim or the evidences of the claim, the proceeds of which the plaintiff, Booth, endeavored to recover. On the contrary, the claim had always remained in the possession of Clark until it went into the hands of his assignee in bankruptcy, and came back to Clark’s possession under a purchase by Clark at a sale made by his assignee. The court dwells on the delay of the receiver to take steps to get possession of this claim as a material fact in the case. After pointing out the means by. which through the aid of the court he could have obtained *563possession of this claim, it is observed in the opinion: “ Such, however, was not the course pursued in this case, though the debtor was then a resident of the state of New York, and amenable to the jurisdiction of the court. No motion was made to force Clark to comply with the injunction which Camara had obtained under the creditor’s bill. The matter was allowed to rest for seven years, Camara being aware that Clark had a pecuniary claim upon the republic of Mexico, at least as early as the year 1843. The receiver during all that time took no action.”
The essential nature of the action in Booth v. Clark is correctly set forth in the opinion of the court in Hazard v. Durant, 19 Fed. Rep. 477. It was there characterized, and properly characterized, as an action by a receiver, a mere officer and servant of the court appointing him, and having no title to the fund by assignment or conveyance, or other lien or interest than that derived from his appointment. It may be well conceded that such an officer on such a showing of title cannot recover in a foreign jurisdiction.
If Booth, the receiver in Booth v. Clark, had, after his appointment as receiver, got possession of the Mexican claim prior to its coming to the hands of Clark’s assignee in bankruptcy, and such had been made to appear in his action, the court" would no doubt, in accordance with the principle of its rule laid down in Biddle v. Wilkins, 1 Pet. 686, have held in favor of Booth. Booth would then have shown an individual and personal right to recover.
The cases cited by the counsel for appellant, which follow Booth v. Clark, are like it in the material feature above pointed out. The receiver in all such cases relied on his order of appointment merely to recover. It cannot escape observation, that if this court sanctions the contention of appellant’s counsel, that it will authorize the taking of property from the hands of a court having *564ample jurisdiction, which had, through the agency of a receiver (its own instrument), gotten lawful possession of property, and whose possession was lawful, when this property was attached here.
The statements made in the note referred to in the prevailing opinion relate merely to a suit by a receiver in a foreign jurisdiction, where be had never reduced the property to possession, and relies solely on the order of appointment to recover, as a careful perusal of the note will make evident. There is no case cited in the note which holds that a receiver, after he has reduced the property of the litigant to possession, and it is taken from him, cannot sue for it in any jurisdiction where he can find it. The title vested in the appointed receiver when he has reduced the property to possession, and on this title lie can recover. His right to recover rests on his right and title procured in the mode above pointed out, and is not allowed on any consideration of comity. Title vests, and in consequenee a right to recover in the courts of every civilized country, as a matter, not of comity, but of right. No court has a right to take the property of one person and give it to another, or have it sold fo.r the benefit of another.. Considerations of comity only arise where the receiver sues in a foreign jurisdiction on the mere order of appointment. Considerations of comity allow such suit, where there is no legal policy which forbids it, does not affect the rights of creditors or other persons, citizens of tlie jurisdiction where the suit is brought. Such is Hurd v. Elizabeth, 41 N. J. L. 1, where the suit was allowed to be maintained on considerations of comity. The special property vested in the receiver gives him a. title on which he can recover anywhere. A sheriff gets only a special property where he has levied an execution, and on such title he can sue and recover anywhere. If a sheriff of this state seizes horses under a writ of attachment or execution within its limits, and the horses *565escape into the state of Nevada, and were taken possession of by a third person, we cannot see why he cannot recover in a suit in a Nevada court, even against an attaching creditor there.
The title of the receiver vested when he reduced this car to possession by the consent of the corporation. He sent it out of the state of Missouri, where he had it, for a lawful purpose. Why has a creditor a right to attach it ? It was not the property of the corporation when it was attached, but of the receiver of the court, of which the receiver is the hand and instrument.
I cannot conceive how a creditor can attach the property of one person to pay a debt due him by another.
The statement in the complaint that the plaintiffs were appointed receivers by the court of Missouri shows the origin of plaintiffs’ right; but it is further alleged that the plaintiffs took possession of the car, and held it in possession until such possession was interfered with by the defendant, as afterward stated in the complaint. The plaintiffs count specially on their own possession. We see nothing herein to prevent the plaintiffs from recovering on their individual rights. The averment as to their being receivers may be regarded as descriptio personas, and may be rejected as surplusage in accordance with the rule laid down in Lewis v. Adams, 70 Cal. 411, 412; 59 Am. Rep. 423.
I find no error in the record, and think that the judgment and order should be affirmed.