after stating tbe case: Tbe statute of tbis State (Revisal, sec. 5, subsec. 2) positively forbids letters of administration to be issued to a nonresident of tbe State, and it is to be inferred from tbis enactment, as well as from tbe course of decisions in tbis Court, tbat tbe policy of tbe law is well established to tbe effect tbat a nonresident administrator cannot sue in tbe courts of tbis State. Butts v. Price, 1 N. C., 201, Ann., 2 N. C., 355; Helme v. Sanders, 10 N. C., 563; Leak v. Gilchrist, 13 N. C., 73; Smith v. Munroe, 23 N. C., 345; Moorefield v. Harris, 126 N. C., 626; Scott v. Lumber Co., 144 N. C., 44. A nonresident who happens also to be an administrator appointed by a court in tbe State of bis and bis intestate’s residence and domicile may sometimes maintain an action in bis own name in another State — as, for instance, to recover property, possession of which be bad acquired as administrator and which bad afterwards been taken from him; but be sues, not as administrator, but in bis individual capacity, upon bis own right of possession. Leak v. Gilchrist, supra. There are, perhaps, other examples of a like kind. We have held, for instance, tbat when services are rendered by an attorney at law to an administrator or executor, tbe latter is liable, upon a quantum meruit, in bis individual and not in bis official capacity. McKay v. Royal, 52 *347N. C., 426. See, also, Tryon v. Walston, 83 N. C., 90; Hailey v. Wheeler, 49 N. C., 159; Beaty v. Gingles, 53 N. C., 302; Kessler v. Hall, 64 N. C., 60; Kerchner v. McRae, 80 N. C., 219. Where be must sue in bis representative capacity and recover only by virtue of bis office, a foreign administrator cannot sue in our courts. Original or ancillary letters of administration must be taken out here. The distinction between bis right to sue as administrator, when the cause of action belongs to him only in bis representative capacity, and bis right to sue when it belongs to him as bis own, though acquired originally by reason of his being administrator, runs clearly through all the authorities.
The plaintiff contends that he has the right to sue here upon the cause of action alleged in his complaint, because, while he qualified as administrator in Virginia, he is, under our statute, but a trustee of an express trust, and must hold the proceeds of his recovery in trust for those designated in the statute as the beneficiaries of the fund. We cannot agree with the learned counsel who so ably and ingeniously argued for the plaintiff in this view of our statute. We think it was manifestly intended by the statute that the administrator designated by it to sue for the damages, in case of a death caused by negligence or other wrongful act, should be one appointed by a court of this State, in the proper county. The act provides as follows: “Whenever the death of a person is caused by a wrongful act, neglect or default of another, such as would, if the injured party had lived, have entitled him to an action for damages therefor, the person or corporation that would have been so liable, and his or their executors, administrators, collectors or successors, shall be liable to an action for damages, to be brought, within one year after such death, by the executor, administrator or collector of the decedent; and this notwithstanding the death, and although the wrongful act, neglect or default causing the death amount in law to a felony. The amount recovered in such action is not liable to *348be 'applied as assets in the payment of debts or legacies, but shall be disposed of as provided in this chapter for the distribution of personal property in case of intestacy.” Revisal, sec. 59. Can anyone read that section and conclude that the Legislature intended that the action which is authorized by it could be brought by a foreign administrator ? The fair presumption would be that, when the act refers to an administrator, it means, nothing else appearing, a domestic administrator, especially when the decisions of the highest Court of the State have uniformly established that a nonresident administrator cannot sue in the courts of this State. The statute requires the suit to be brought by the administrator in his official and not in his private or individual capacity. lie must sue as administrator. Can words convey that idea any more distinctly and clearly than those used in the section quoted ? We have virtually held in two cases that this is the true construction of the act. Hartness v. Pharr, 133 N. C., 566, and Vance v. Railway, 138 N. C., 460. In the case last cited we said: “When it was provided that the action should be brought by the administrator, it was intended that he should be appointed by the Clerk of the county where the death occurred, if the decedent was a nonresident, domiciled in another State and without assets situated here.” But in Vance v. Railway, supra, we also cited with approval the case of Brown v. Railroad, 30 S. W. (Ky.), 640, as follows: “Within the line of the general statutes on this subject, defining when, under what circumstances and what courts shall have power to appoint an administrator for a nonresident decedent, it may be that the matter sued for in this action is not a debt or demand belonging to or owned by the decedent at the time of his death. Neither is it strictly personal estate of the decedent. But, beyond these general statutes, we think the particular statute applicable to cases of this kind, wherein the right of action is expressly given to an administrator, necessarily implies the right to have an administrator ap*349pointed by the local courts for this purpose alone, if there be no other necessity or right or authority for such an appointment- And we deem the court of the county where the injury was done and where the man died the proper court to entertain such jurisdiction.” The case of In re Estate of Mayo, 60 S. C., 415, was cited with approval, as, follows: “The statute is remedial and should be liberally construed, so as to accomplish its object. We, therefore, hold that the statute creating a right of action which cannot be enforced except by an administrator, and providing for a special distribution by said administrator of the proceeds, will warrant the probate court of the county where the intestate was killed in granting administration for the purpose of enforcing such right of action. This view is well supported by authority in other jurisdictions.” But we think that the decision in Hartness v. Pharr, supra, is more to the point. AVe held in that case that an administrator appointed in this State should bring the action and distribute the funds, according to the laws of this State, where the death occurred, although there had been a prior administration in South Carolina, where the intestate was domiciled at the time of his death. The contest there was distinctly between the administrator appointed in South Carolina and the plaintiff in the suit, who was afterwards appointed administrator in this State. The case of McDonald v. McDonald, 28 S. W. (Ky.), 482, was cited and approved as an authority supporting our decision. Further considering the question (at p. 573), we said: “In no possible view, as we have said, can this fund be regarded as a part of the assets of the estate of the deceased. The cause of action never accrued to him and never came into existence until his death, and the recovery thereon cannot be considered or treated as any part of his estate. The doctrine that the succession to personal property is determined by the law of the intestate’s domicile, as laid down in Leak v. Gilchrist, 13 N. C., 75, which was cited in the brief of the defendant’s counsel in *350support of bis position, bas no application to tbis case. Tbe personal representative in South Carolina, in right of tbe next of kin, succeeded to no property, because bis intestate died leaving none, unless be bad effects other than money now claimed as a part of bis estate. To require tbe defendant Pharr (tbe administrator appointed in tbis State) to pay tbe money to tbe South Carolina administrator would be in direct contravention of our statute.”
Tbis suit is of the first impression in our courts. We were cited to several cases decided in other jurisdictions which apparently give some color to tbe plaintiff’s contention. We have examined them carefully and find none which is supported by any reasoning or argument cogent enough to induce us to depart from tbe principle established by tbis Court for many years, and we think that one of tbe cases cited (Boulden v. Railroad, 205 Pa. St., 264) would seem, in principle at least, to conflict with the plaintiff’s contention. In that case tbe Court held that, as tbe administrator was appointed in New Jersey and tbe cause of action, to-wit, tbe negligent killing, occurred in that State, tbe action might well be brought in Pennsylvania without an ancillary administrator. But tbe decision is expressly based upon tbe fact that tbe administrator bad qualified in tbe State where tbe cause of action arose. That is not tbe fact in tbis case, and tbe reasoning of tbe Court, which is predicated solely upon tbe existence of tbe fact in that case, would seem to be direct authority against tbe plaintiff. Tbis Court, as we have shown, bas for many years held, contrary to tbe last proposition mentioned in that case, that ancillary administration in tbis State is necessary. We find that tbe authorities in tbe other States are very conflicting, and those in favor of tbe defendant’s contention are much better reasoned than those seeming to bold a contrary doctrine. In tbe case of Railway v. Brantley, 28 S. W. (Ky.), 477, a Court of exceptional ability and learning bas considered tbe question at length and presented convincing reasons for tbe *351conclusion reached, that an administrator appointed in one State cannot sue in another to recover damages for a death caused by negligence, unless specially authorized by statute so to do; that the plaintiff not only has no capacity to sue in such a case, but has no cause or right of action. The opinion in that case is hot only well considered, but is in perfect harmony with what this Court has held to be the law for many years in regard to the right of an administrator appointed in one State to sue in the courts of another.
It was said by counsel for the plaintiff that the law of Virginia was similar in its provisions to our statute, but there is nothing in the record to show what the law of that State is. We do not take judicial notice of the statutes of another State. They must be pleaded and proven. Hooper v. Moore, 50 N. C., 130; Knight v. Wall, 19 N. C., 125; Moore v. Gwynn, 27 N. C., 187; State v. Jackson, 13 N. C., 564; Hilliard v. Outlaw, 92 N. C., 266. “If not pleaded and proven, the presumption, under the authorities, is that the unwritten or common law of another State is the same as the unwritten or common law in this State.” Lassiter v. Railroad, 136 N. C., 89 ; Griffin v. Carter, 40 N. C., 413; Brown v. Pratt, 56 N. C., 202. But not so as to a statute. This suit, though, is brought upon our statute, and the statement that the statutes of the two States upon the same subject are alike was made in order to show that the distribution of the fund recovered would necessarily be made according to our law. Our statute would control the distribution of the fund, whether the statutes of the two States are alike or not (Hartness v. Pharr, supra) ; so that it is immaterial to consider the similarity of the two enactments, even if there were evidence of it. We have held in the last-cited case that the fund must not only be distributed according to the law of this State, but by an administrator appointed here, and that is conclusively against the plaintiff’s right to recover in this action. Would it be right to permit the plaintiff to recover and take the fund out of the State and *352compel tbe distributees resident in tbe State, or tbe University if there are no distributees, to go to Virginia to litigate their rights with tbe foreign administrator, (if be should refuse to pay over tbe fund upon demand ? Tbe State looks after and safeguards tbe interests of its own citizens in such cases, and will retain property here in custodia, legis, in order that they may be protected in tbe assertion of their rights. This is but simple justice to them, and a duty, therefore, that rests upon tbe State. Holshouser v. Copper Co., 138 N. C., 248; Hartness v. Pharr, supra; Vance v. Railway, supra.
Every argument based upon right and justice, as well as tbe best-considered authorities, are opposed alike to tbe plaintiff’s contention that be can sue or recover in tbe courts of this State. We have discussed tbe plaintiff’s right to sue, as we were asked to do by counsel, in order to put an end to tbe litigation, if be has no such right; but, as tbe ruling of tbe court upon tbe motion to dismiss was not appealable, and in tbe then state of tbe case tbe demurrer ore lenus was equivalent to such a motion, we must dismiss the appeal. Clark’s Code (3d Ed.), p. 738, and cases cited.
Appeal Dismissed.