Nolan brought an action against Aaron C. Fisher in his lifetime, which culminated in a judgment against his executors, the same being affirmed by this court in 111 Mich. 56. Thereupon the relator garnished the executors, but the circuit court dismissed the proceedings, after disclosure, upon the ground that garnishment would not lie against executors.
It is a general rule that property in custody of the law is not subject to attachment or garnishment. The law *117does not permit one court to assume control over the representative of another court, or the property confided to his charge. By this it is not meant that personal remedies against the individual may not be sought, but that any proceeding in the nature of an action in rem, whereby it is sought to reach the property which another court has taken possession of, is forbidden. Thus replevin from an officer holding under order of the court of chancery is punishable as a contempt. Even suits against a receiver in his representative capacity are forbidden, though the court appointing the receiver may, on cause shown, permit them. The probate court has not even this power respecting its officers, who can only be sued in the manner pointed out by statute, and a garnishee proceeding is not included among statutory proceedings against executors and administrators in Michigan, though it is in some States. That administrators and executors are exempt from this process is the general rule. In Rood, Garnishm. § 27, it is said:
‘ ‘ ‘ When property or money is in custodia legis, the officer holding it is the mere hand of the court. His possession is the possession of the court. To interfere with his possession is to invade the jurisdiction of the court itself. And an officer so situated is bound by the orders and judgments of the court, whose mere agent he is, and he can make no disposition of it without the consent of his own court, express or implied.’ In re Cunningham, 9 Cent. L. J. 208. These principles have been applied in numerous cases to various classes of legal custodians, and in accordance with them it has been held that clerks of courts, trial justices, registers in chancery, masters in chancery, receivers, trustees appointed by a court of chancery, assignees in bankruptcy, trustees for creditors under a general assignment pursuant to insolvent laws, other trustees appointed to dispose of property and apply the avails according to the orders of the court, sheriffs, constables, and other ministerial officers, and their bailees and assistants, justices of the peace, executors, administrators, and guardians, cannot be charged as garnishees by reason of any property or money which they hold or any debts which they owe merely as such officers.”
*118, In his next section the author says that- — ■
“In a few of the States, - while these principles are recognized as sound, they have been considered inapplicable to certain of the cases above mentioned, either generally or in view of the peculiar provisions of the statute governing the conduct of the particular officer. Among these may be mentioned sheriffs and constables, clerks in chancery courts, justices of the peace, administrators, and executors.”'
Among the cases cited by the author is Hardesty v. Campbell, 29 Md. 533, where the decision rests upon the Code. In the Alabama cases the question is not raised, and, though the jurisdiction over an administrator seems conceded, it rests upon a statute, which is not quoted. Against the few States, the author cites to the contrary cases involving administrators, from Massachusetts, Maine, Arkansas, West Virginia, Rhode Island, Delaware, Vermont, Indiana, and Missouri, to say nothing of a cloud of analogous cases relating to other officers.
Mr. Shinn, in his treatise on Attachment and Garnishment (section 510) says:
“In the absence of special statute, it was an undisputed rule of law that an executor or administrator could not, in his official capacity, be held liable as a garnishee at suit of a creditor of the decedent, or of one who was a legatee or distributee or other creditor of the estate. He is not then considered to be a ‘debtor.’ Neither is he an agent, factor, attorney, or trustee of such creditor, because he. derives his authority from the law, and is obliged to execute it according to law. And it was said that to subject executors and administrators to the process of garnishment might destroy the whole operation and intention of our law of administrators.”
He admits, however, that in many States this rule has been changed by statute, and a long list of cases is given. It goes without saying that decisions based upon a statutory right of garnishment are not to be considered as authority for changing the general rule, unless by analogy a similar construction should be indulged. The author says of the administrator’s liability, where he may be garnished, that—
*119“In States permitting an executor or administrator to be made a garnishee, he may be held as such whenever the person to whom he is to pay the legacy or distributive share may maintain an action at law against such executor or administrator. After a court has decreed a distribution of the proceeds in the hands of the administrator, such administrator may be held as garnishee. Some statutes permit an executor or administrator to be made a garnishee during the pendency of the settlement of the estate, but no judgment can be rendered against him until a settlement is made, unless he assent to the legacy or admits assets to pay the amount claimed out of the distributive share. Until the distributive shares are ascertained, they cannot be secured by garnishment. In other words, when it is uncertain whether the administrator will have a surplus in his hands or not, he cannot be held as garnishee.” 2 Shinn, Attachm. § 511, and cases cited.
In 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 1139, a paragraph denying the liability concludes as follows, after citing Brooks v. Cook, 8 Mass. 246:
“The court held that, as the administrator derived his authority from the law, * * * he was not liable to process of this kind, and such has been the almost uniform current of authority, including cases as to executors as well.”
The language of Mr. Rood, who is quoted in support of the doctrine that “the great preponderance of modern authorities * * * holds that, when the purposes of the court have been fully accomplished in respect to the particular funds, by a final decree or order for payment of the same to the defendant by such officer, or his becoming directly and absolutely accountable to the defendant therefor without such order, such property or credit may be reached by garnishing such officer” (Rood, Grarnishm. § 32), if approved, should not be applied to this case, for the probate court is not shown to have made a decree or order for payment, nor have the executors become directly and absolutely accountable to the principal defendant. Such liability becomes fixed when distribution is ordered under sections 5925 to 5931 of 2 Howell’s Annotated Statutes. It does not rest in the authority of other *120tribunals to determine the status of a fund in the custody of the probate court.
It is said that in Cohnen v. Sweenie, 105 Mich. 643, this court held that a receiver might be garnished with permission of the court that appointed him. The exercise of discretion by a court of chancery having jurisdiction of the fund is a very different thing from the power of other courts to determine what shall be done with it. That case does not rule this. I am unable to see the propriety of holding that the liability or nonliability of an executor becomes a question of fact, dependent upon the quantity of assets and ability of the executor to pay, to be tried by jury or otherwise in as many courts as there are garnishing creditors, to the embarrassment of the settlement of estates, and the overthrow of one of the best-settled rules of general application known to the law.
The writ is denied, with costs.
Montgomery and Moore, JJ., concurrred with Hooker, J.