delivered the opinion of the Court:
The refusal of a court to vacate an order of publication cannot in general be regarded as involving the merits of an action so far as to authorize the appeal from the decision for which provision is made by Section 772 of the Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia. But the order of refusal, under the peculiar circumstances of the present case,, appears to reach to the question of the jurisdiction of the court and its right to proceed with the suit. It cannot, therefore, be regarded in this instance as a merely interlocutory order.
Undoubtedly it is not the law as claimed in argument in this case, that a probate court can draw to itself the administration of all the assets, both real and personal, of a decedent, whether situated within the-territorial judisdiction or outside of it. It is not entirely true, even of the personal estate, that it is necessarily all drawn to the place of the domicile of the deceased, and to the administration there granted. An executor or administrator is neither entitled to sue nor liable to be sued outside of the jurisdiction which has conferred his authority upon him, and to the courts of which alone he is amenable, unless there' is express statutory provision to permit such suit by the legislative power of the jurisdiction where the suit is sought to be maintained. And while it is not now unusual to find statutory enactments in many of our States permitting foreign executors and administrators the right to, sue, it still remains the universal policy to preserve local assets for the satisfaction in the first instance of local claims, and to allow only the residuum to be transmitted to the place of the principal administration at the domicile of the deceased.
But whatever may be the relaxation of the law in regard to the collection of the personal assets of the decedent, we certainly cannot concede to the probate court of a foreign jurisdiction, a power over real estate which we deny to our own court of probate. We cannot concede to any foreign court whatever, whether of general or of limited jurisdiction, *166the right to administer as assets of a decedent, the real estate whereof he died seized in the District of Columbia, or in any manner to exercise authority over such real estate. It is very true that, as determined long ago by Lord Hardwicke, in the case of Penn v. Lord Baltimore, 1 Vesey, 444, a,court of equity may by its decree, indirectly- affect the title to real estate situated outside of its territorial jurisdiction, when it has jurisdiction of the persons of the parties in interest and is entitled, in proper cases to enforce obedience to such decree by compulsory process in personam. But we are not advised that it has ever yet been held in any case by any court that, in the administration of the assets of a deceased person, it could decree the sale of real estate situated outside of its territorial jurisdiction. It is at all events the law of the- District of Columbia that real estate in this District is subject in such cases only to the decrees of a court of equity of the District. We deem it unnecessary to cite authorities in support of a position so elementary.
But the question of apparent difficulty in the case is this: Conceding, as it must be conceded, that only a court of equity in the District of Columbia has jurisdiction in the premises, it is argued that this jurisdiction may not be exercised in the present instance on account of the alleged impossibility of having proper parties to the suit. It is assumed that the executors of Plumb are necessary parties, without whom the suit cannot be maintained; that inasmuch as they are foreign executors, they cannot be sued, and cannot be made parties to any suit; and that therefore suit cannot be maintained at all.
If this argument be sound, it would follow that the real estate of the decedent in the District of Columbia could not be reached by any court in satisfaction of his debts. We can scarcely regard such a conclusion as correct, or the argument which leads to it as sound.
It is true, as a general rule, that in a creditors’ bill filed for the purpose of subjecting the real estate of a deceased person as assets to the payment of his debts, the executor or *167administrator is a necessary party. It was so held nearly two centuries ago in England in the case of Knight v. Knight, 3 P. Williams, 331; and it has been so held in Maryland and other States of the Union. Tyler v. Bowie’s Administrators, 4 H. & J., 333; Baltimore v. Chase, 2 G. & J., 381; David v. Grahame, 2 H. & G., 94; Carey v. Dennis, 13 Md., 1; Piper v. Tuck, 26 Md., 208; Lynn v. Gephart, 27 Md., 547; McDowell v. Cochran, 11 Ill., 31; Postlewaitv. Howes, 3 Iowa, 365; Allen v. Simons, 1 Curtis, 122. And such has been the settled practice of the District of Columbia during the whole century of its existence as a separate jurisdiction. Bank of U. S. v. Ritchie, 8 Pet,, 128. The reason is because the personal estate of a decedent is the fund to which recourse must primarily be had for die payment of his debts, and the real estate can only be resorted to for that purpose when the personal assets are insufficient. The ascertainment of the condition of the personal estate and of its insufficiency is an essential preliminary in the determination of the necessity for recourse to the real estate, and consequently the executor or administrator of the personal estate is a necessary party in the investigation.
But while this is the general rule, it is subject to the qualification that if there are no personal assets, and consequently no qualified executpr or administrator — for without assets there can not be administration, and without some preliminary showing of personal assets no administrator can be appointed or letters testamentary granted — in that event a creditor’s bill may be maintained without the presence of an •executor or administrator. The law does not require either that which is impossible or that which is nugatory; and in the case in which it would refuse administration for the want of personal assets to be administered, it cannot be that it would refuse to permit a suit to reach the real estate on the ground that there was no administrator to be made a party to the suit. Birely v. Staley, 5 G. & J., 432.
In the present instance there are, it is true, executors of the decedent, and those executors have been duly qualified *168in the State of Kansas, and have entered upon the performance' of their duties, and taken possession of the personal assets of the deceased in that State. But there is no administration of which we can take judicial cognizance. The administration in Kansas is non-existent so far as concerns the District of Columbia. Our courts cannot recognize the executors who have become qualified in that State, except in so far as they may, under our statute, bring suit here if they so desire, and there is occasion for them to bring suit. In the absence of administration in the District of Columbia, we are justified in assuming that there are no executors or administrators for the purpose of such suits as that now before us. For when a court of equity has determined that it cannot proceed with a creditor’s bill against the real estate of a decedent until the executor or administrator of the personalty is made a party to the suit, it means an executor qualified or an administrator appointed within the jurisdiction who can be reached by the process of the court. Any other meaning of the rule would nullify the jurisdiction of the court.
In the case of Milligan v, Milledge, 3 C ranch, 220, the question was mooted, but not decided, whether it was necessary to proceed against an executor in one jurisdiction, and reduce a claim to judgment before proceedings upon the claim could be instituted against devisees and legatees in another jurisdiction. But since the time of that decision the policy of our jurisprudence, both State and Federal, has with great unanimity settled it that a creditor should not be required to go out of his own State to enforce his claims-against a person who is not to be found therein, when there are assets or property of such person to be found within the jurisdiction. For this reason attachment laws have been enacted, and are to be found, we presume, in every State of our Union. The rights of residents as against non-residents are zealously guarded, when there is question of insolvency, or of assignments for the benefit of creditors. And it would be a strange anomaly if, when death has impressed a trust *169upon both realty and personalty which there was upon neither while the owner lived, one of the class of persons for whose benefit the trust was intended should be compelled to seek a distant State or a distant country, and first require satisfaction from some personal representative when there was ample realty within his own jurisdiction.
In the case of Noonan v. Bradley, 9 Wall., 394, the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Mr. Justice Field, said: “Upon this question (the right of an administrator to maintain suit outside of the jurisdiction) the law is well settled. All the cases on the subject are in one way. In the absence of any statute giving effect to the foreign appointment, all the authorities deny any efficacy to the appointment outside of the territorial jurisdiction of the State within which it was granted. * * * The same doctrine is as applicable to the case of executors as to that of administrators; the right to sue in both instances depending upon the letters.” And yet in the present case it is contended that, while under this decision it has no extra-territorial efficacy whatever, the appointment of a foreign executor or, administrator is efficacious enough to block the wheels of justice in this jurisdiction, and in every jurisdiction outside of the place of the appointment. We cannot assent to the validity of this contention. We are of opinion that while it was improper to introduce into the present suit as parties the executors of the decedent who procured their letters only from the probate court in Kansas, it would be entirely proper to maintain in this District a creditor’s bill in favor of resident creditors against the real estate of the decedent upon allegations to the effect that he left no personal property here, and that there was no administration within this jurisdiction.
Inasmuch, however, as the motion to vacate the order of publication is, in effect, a demurrer to the bill of complaint, it is proper to observe here that this bill in the shape in which it is presented can scarcely be maintained. It is a bill for discovery, as well as a creditor’s bill for the sale of a specific piece of real estate. It is not quite apparent how the com*170plainants expect discovery to be enforced when there is no jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants, and when most of those defendants are minors, incapable, in the proper sense of the term, of making discovery in equity. Moreover, discovery is sought indiscriminately from executors, devisees, and legatees of assets, real and personal, in the District of Columbia and outside of it, when it is not apparent that the executors have anything to do with the realty, or the devisees with the personal estate. Nor is it made to appear why discovery is sought at all. Says the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Brown v. Swann, 10 Pet., 497: “The rule to be applied to a bill seeking discovery from an interested party is, that the complainant shall charge in his bill that the facts are known to the defendant, and ought to be disclosed by him, and that the complainant is unable to prove them by other testimony.” There can be no discovery here as to the personal assets, because there is no local executor or administrator to make it, and the foreign executors cannot be sued or compelled to account to any court in the District of Columbia. And with regard to the real estate, the land records of the District are as open to the complainants as they are to the defendants, unless the interests have been kept secret, and there is no allegation to that effect.
The bill of complaint, therefore, as a bill of discovery is demurrable and cannot be sustained. Neither can an order of publication issue upon a bill for discovery. It is plainly not of the class of suits in which an order of publication is authorized by the statute.
But if we regard as sufficiently specific the- description of. the only piece of real estate which the bill of complaint has attempted to designate with anything like precision — and of this there, is grave doubt — the bill may be sustained as a creditor’s bill to subject specified real estate to the payment' of debts, while disregarded as a bill for discovery; and upon such creditors’ bill an order of publication against non-resident heirs or devisees would be proper. The statute ex*171pressly provides, “that publication may be substituted for personal service of process upon any defendant who cannot be found in suits for partition, divorce, by attachment, for the foreclosure of mortgages and deeds of trust, and for the enforcement of mechanics’ liens and all other liens against real or personal property, and in all actions at law or in equity which have for their immediate object the enforcement or establishment of any lawful right, claim or demand to or against any real or personal property within the jurisdiction of the Court.” Rev. Stat. U. S. for D. C., Sec. 787. The claim of the complainant is, in the very words of the statute, a claim against real property within the jurisdiction; and, therefore, expressly within the provisions of the statute.
It is argued that creditors of a decedent have no lien against the real estate until the filing of the bill; that suits that create a lien are not suits to enforce a lien; and that, therefore, creditors’ bills are not within the meaning of the statute. But even if creditors’ bills were not within the purview of the last clause of the statute, and were not actions in equity to enforce a lawful claim against real estate, this argument would lead to an illiberal and unreasonable construction of the law. While it is true that there is no express lien in favor of creditors against the real estate of a decedent until the filing of the bill for the purpose, the law charges the realty as well as the personalty, with a trust for the payment of debts; and the heir or devisee takes the realty subject to that trust. It is to enforce that trust, which may be regarded as a general or tacit lien upon the property, that the creditor files his bill, and thereby acquires a specific lien. Watkins v. Holman, 16 Pet., 25; Miller v. Sherry, 2 Wall., 237.
There is one other question to be considered in this case. Section 788 of the Revised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia requires that “no order for the substitution of publication for personal service shall be made till a summons for the defendant shall have been issued, and returned ‘ not to be found.’ ” A summons was issued in *172this case, and returned “ not to be found ” on the same day-on which it was issued, notwithstanding- that the rule day for the return of writs did not occur for more than ten days afterwards. And thereupon, within seven days afterwards, the order of publication was made, and immediately published. This we regard as a grave irregularity. It may be that it was no more than an irregularity. But when the validity of such service of process is directly questioned in the suit in which it is issued, we cannot regard a practice of twenty years, if there has been such practice, as any justification of it. The legislative power evidently did not mean that the issue of a summons and its due return as preliminary to an order of publication, should be an empty formality; and such it would be under the practice adopted in this case. Why should the summons be issued at all, if it is to be returned immediately without any actual attempt to serve it, or any time given within which to serve it? The attempt to serve the process might be futile; the fact of non-residence stated in the bill might indicate in advance the futility of any such attempt. But it is very evident that Congress did not intend to leave to the complainant, either by the statements of his bill, or by the verbal direction of his solicitor to the marshal, to determine the question of the feasibility of the service of a writ or to dispense with the attempt to. serve it. Congress evidently meant that there should be some opportunity for a bona fide attempt to serve the writ. And yet, under this practice, if the defendants actually came within the jurisdiction at any time before the rule day the marshal would have been precluded by his return from any further action. A writ that has been duly served, as prescribed by its terms, may be returned at any time after its service; for the reason that the purpose of its issue has been accomplished, which is to give formal notice to the person required to respond to it. But when the marshal is given ten days or upwards to find a person and to notify him of a pending suit, he does not perform his duty by informing the court on the first day, five minutes or less *173after the order is placed in his hands, that he has been unable to find the person. On the face of the process, it is apparent in such a case that the marshal has made no attempt whatever to serve it, and the proceeding is plainly collusive, although not intentionally a violation of law.
It is irregular to return before the return day a writ not served personally on the party designated in it. Hinman v. Borden, 10 Wend., 367. And inasmuch as all statutory proceedings for the substitution of constructive notice in the place of the personal service required by the common law must be strictly followed, (Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S., 714; Thompson v. Whitman, 18 Wallace, 457; Cooper v, Reynolds, 10 Wallace, 308), we cannot sanction an irregularity like the present in the face of a direct attack upon it by a motion to Vacate the order of publication. On the ground of this irregularity and in consequence of the defects in the bill of complaint, this motion should have been sustained.
We have deemed it proper thus minutely to enter into the investigation of the various questions involved in this case, for the reason that they are so intertwined that a decision merely vacating the order of publication for irregularity would have left unsolved some points of practice, as well as questions of jurisdiction, that should be determined without unreasonable delay.
For the reasons stated, the order of the special term in this cause will be reversed, and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to vacate the order of publication and the return by the marshal of the summons issued in the cause, and with leave to the complainants to amend their bill as they may be advised, and for such other proceedings as may be proper, not inconsistent with this opinion.