This is an appeal from an order of the Probate Court for the sale of real estate by an administratrix for the payment of debts. On the 4th of January, 1879, William Wittenmyre, a resident of Cook County, died intestate, leaving him surviving the appellee, his widow, and Sallie C. Young and Charles A. Wittenmyre, two of the appellants, his children and only heirs at law. The estate of said intestate at the time of his death consisted of certain real estate situate in said County of Cook, and certain personal property,consisting chiefly of a stock of merchandise, then at Appanoose County, in the State of Iowa. The appellee was appointed administratrix of said estate by the Probate Court of Cook County, and afterward filed her inventory, showing that no personal property had come to her hands as such administratrix except an open account for §60, which was afterward filed in said court as a desperate claim. A widow’s award of §2,080 was allowed by said court, and the administratrix thereupon, after presenting her report showing a deficiency of personal assets, filed her petition for the sale of said real estate for the payment of said award, together with a claim of §75 proved against the estate, and the cost of administration, estimated at §250. During the pendency of the proceedings, by agreement between said widow and heirs, the widow’s award was by said court reduced and fixed at §1,500, and the cause coming on to be heard on pleadings and proofs, the court, after charging the administratrix with certain moneys which had come into her hands from various sources in this State, found the deficiency of personal estate to be §1,030, besides interest and the costs of administration, and ordered the sale of said real estate for the payment of the same.
It appears that the appellee, after her appointment as administratrix by the Probate Court of Cook County, took out letters of administration from the proper court of Appanoose County, in the State of Iowa, and proceeded under that appointment to administer upon the personal estate of her intestate in that State. The administration produced, after paying all claims presented in that State and expenses, the sum of §2,850.09, which sum was, under the direction of the Iowa court, distributed to the said heirs and widow of said intestate, each receiving the sum of §950.03. Such final distribution, having been reported to said court, was approved and the administratrix ordered discharged. «
It is urged that as sufficient personal estate came into the hands of the appellee in the Iowa administration to pay all claims in this State, there is no warrant for the sale of real estate for their payment. It is true that personal estate is the primary fund for the payment of debts, and, as a general rule, must be first exhausted before real estate can be made liable. Sutherland v. Harrison, 86 Ill. 363. Here, however, all the personal estate was in a foreign jurisdiction and was administered upon there, and the question is whether it was obligatory upon the courts of that jurisdiction, and of the administratrix acting under their direction, to remit the surplus remaining in that jurisdiction to this State for the payment of debts here, instead, on completing the administration, by paying the money over to the distributees of the estate.
The rule to be derived from the authorities seems to bo, that where there are two administrations of a single estate, one in the place of the domicile of the testator or intestate, and the other in a foreign jurisdiction, whether the courts of the lafter will decree distribution of the assets collected under the ancillary administration or remit them to the jurisdiction of the domicile, is not a question of jurisdiction but of judicial discretion, depending upon the circumstances of the particular case. Harvey v. Richards, 1 Mason, 380; Despart v. Churchill, 53 N. Y. 192; Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y. 103; In re Hughes, 95 N. Y. 55; Wright v. Phillips, 56 Ala. 69; U. S. v. Cox, 18 How. 100; Carmichael v. Ray, 5 Ired. Eq. 365; 3 Redfield on Wills, 27. This is of course subject to the rule that personal property, wherever administered upon, is distributable according to the law of the decedent’s domicile, but this qualification is unimportant in the present case, since the distribution made by the Iowa court was in accordance with our laws.
Hnder the rule above stated, it was a' matter wholly dependent upon the discretion of the Iowa court whether the money remaining in the hands of the administratrix after the satisfaction of all claims in that State, should be distributed under its direction and control, or be remitted to this State for distribution here. That court saw fit in the exercise of its discretion to direct a distribution there, and its judgment to that effect is conclusive and can not be called in question here. The personal estate thus disposed of must be regarded as having been lawfully administered upon and distributed, and it therefore can not be treated in any sense as a part of the estate to which resort may be had for the payment of claims in this State. There being then no personal estate within the reach or control of the domiciliary administration for the payment of claims, a resort to the real estate for that purpose becomes necessary and proper.
But there is another reason why the appellants can not be permitted to call in question the distribution by the Iowa court. Hot only were they present by their counsel taking part in the proceedings, but they received and still hold then-respective shares of the money distributed. By the plainest principles of equity and natural justice they should be estopped to call in question the propriety of the proceedings by which-said distribution was made to them. They can not be permitted to attack a judgment and partake of its fruits at the same time. Hor can they hold and enjoy their shares and at the same time insist that the share retained by the appellee as a widow of the intestate, should still be treated as personal assets in her hands subject to the payment of claims. By the distribution the share retained by the widow ceased to be assets of the estate and became hers in her own right, and she can no longer be called upon to account for it.
Some complaint is made by both the appellants and the appellee as to various of the rulings of the court below in stating the account of the administratrix for the purpose of arriving at the deficiency of personal assets. As to many of these items the evidence is conflicting and in some respects unsatisfactory, but we find no grounds for dissenting from the conclusion reached by the court below. It will be of no avail for us to analyze the evidence in detail, and we therefore content ourselves with saying, in relation to these as well as various other points raised in the arguments of counsel, that we find no error in the record. The decree will, therefore, be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.