delivered a dissenting opinion.
I verbally dissented from the opinion of the majority of the court in the late case of Woolridge, assignee, v. Page, at Jackson, during last term, in which the question in the main was the same as in the present case. For want of time, I did not prepare a statement of the grounds of that dissent. I now proceed to do so, as well as the objections that occur to me to the present opinion of Judge Cooper.
The question mainly involved is, whether a suit brought against an administrator or personal representa*162tive, for a debt of the deceased, within seven years after his appointment, will operate to save the bar of the statute of seven years, given by the act of 1715, Code, sec. —, and our decisions in favor of the heir, when a proceeding is commenced to subject the land of the heir or devisee, to the payment of the ancestor’s debt.
This is the main question, and was the sole one decided in the case at Jackson, in an opinion by Judge Turney. The opinion of Judge Cooper in the present case is on the same question, and as I understand it, takes the same ground as held by Judge Turney’s opinion, and then adds the additional principle, that the suit must be brought within seven years after the recovery of judgment against the representative; that is, the heir may plead the statute of seven years to the judgment rendered against the representative, and defeat the judgment, if that period has elapsed since its rendition. I cannot agree with the principle announced in either aspect of the question, and proceed to give my reasons for this dissent.
The first proposition as stated by Judge Turney, and equally maintained by Judge Cooper, is as follows: That “ the statute means to bar any such claims as are not demanded by suit commenced within the time prescribed after the death of the ancestor, whether brought against the heir or the representative, and that the proper institution of the suit against the administrator or executor in time, will save the bar of the statute as to realty as well as personalty.”
I may say before commencing the main argument, *163that one leading objection that underlies the whole theory of the opinions is, that they ignore all the distinctions known to our law, as heretofore understood, between personalty and realty, and the broad fact that the administrator or executor represents the personalty alone, while the heir or devisee represents the realty, and that-there is no privity between the two, known to our law. This principle, as I think, is one so well settled, that it ought not to be shaken; and while it is recognized, the conclusions of the opinions can never be made consistent with it. The suit against the personal representative can never in anywise affect the representative of realty, whose title or right the administrator or executor neither holds nor represents.
This conclusion is, however, sought in some way to be sustained by virtue of the provisions of the Code, sec. 2252, that “ Every debtor’s property, except such as may be specially exempt by law, is assets for the satisfaction of all his just debts.” I am totally unable to see the slightest bearing this section can have on the statute of limitations in favor of the heir, when his land is sought to be reached. It applies to all property of the deceased, both personal and real — simply declares it shall be assets. In fact, the provision is but an embodiment of what the law had been considered to be before, under the old act of 5th George II. See Porter’s Lessee v. Cocke, Peck’s R., 31, 32, Cooper’s ed., and cases cited.
But in any aspect you view the section, it does not affect the question before us. Personalty is property, and by the terms of the statute made or recognized *164as assets. Yet its appropriation by suit against the representative is controlled by the period of limitation of two and three- years. Kealty is assets — but, mark you, real assets, notwithstanding this provision. Such assets are only assets sub modo, and their mode of appropriation specifically fixed by the act of 1784, by seire facias, and by an equitable proceeding against the heir under act of 1827, and subsequent acts. Can they be reached in any other way — or by any action against the personal representative? If so, I am not aware of it. The Code having retained these remedies, and it being admitted the realty can only be reached by them, I ask my brethren to explain how it-is, that the same Code that has the provision making them assets — having retained the statute of seven years after death of the testator as the time in which the suit is to be brought to subject- realty — is to be held to have obliterated that period as an independent defense for the heir, and made it dependent upon a suit brought against the personal representative, with whom he has no privity, either in estate or in law? What is there in the language of the section, that can by any mode of construction be held to regulate or affect in the slightest the statute of limitations, or the rights of the heir? What there is to produce this result is beyond my ken to perceive.
But before I proceed with my own views of this question, another objection presents itself to the two opinions. As I understand them, they are irreconcilable the one with the other, and cannot on sound principle stand together. Judge Turney holds, that *165suit brought against the personal representative in time, will preclude the heir. In the first part of the view of Judge Cooper, this is assumed to be correct. But in the second proposition of Judge Cooper, it is laid down, as I understand it, that notwithstanding the suit brought against the personal representative in time, yet the heir may plead the statute of seven years to the judgment when it has been had against the administrator or the executor, and that the suit to subject the realty must be commenced in seven years after the recovery of the judgment. This seems to me to be engrafting a new principle on our jurisprudence as to the statute of limitations.
But to proceed. How can the two views stand together? If the first principle is correct, that suit commenced in time against the personal representative saves the bar of the statute, I am totally unable to see how the statute can be again brought into activity, and made to bar a judgment recovered in a suit commenced in time to defeat its operation. I had always understood, that the commencement of a suit against the proper person was the time to which you must look to ascertain whether the statute of limitation could be interposed against the claim, and not the time when ■a judgment was had in that. suit. The principle on which Judge Cooper’s opinion must stand is, that the commencement of the suit against the administrator, is only a provisional bar to the effect of the statute; it defeats the heir in case the suit of the creditor is commenced within seven years after judgment had against the admintrator, but does not, if commenced after that *166time. This is, in my judgment, either to interpolate a new principle into our law on this subject, one for which I have never seen any authority, or else it is to abandon and overrule the principles so clearly stated by Judge Turney in the first named case.
It is sought to reconcile the two opinions, by saying, that in the Woolridge case, the facts did not raise the question of the bar in seven years after a judgment, consequently the principle was not laid down in reference to a case like the present, where two of these judgments, as I understand it, were more than seven years old before this proceeding was instituted. This much may be admitted, that the facts did not call for, nor did the court decide in terms or in fact on a case such as the present. This cannot relieve the conflict nor reconcile the principle as held in the first case, with that laid down in the present one. For the first musí stand on the principle, announced with such distinctness and emphasis by Judge Turney, that a suit brought against the administrator defeated the bar as to the heir. It could only be put on that ground, and was so put in the opinion. If a suit brought — commenced, defeats the bar as to the heir, then inevitably the judgment in the case is saved from the effect of the bar of that statute, or else you have the principle established in this case, that when you sue a party in time to save the bar, and judgment is had, and you afterwards seek to enforce that judgment, the party bound by the former suit, — so far as the time in which it was brought at least was concerned, — may come in and get the benefit of the *167same statute of limitations against the judgment thus obtained.
Now, if my learned brethren will reconcile this conclusion with any admitted principle known to our law, I will feel, at least, that a most serious difficulty is removed to my agreement with them in their views on this question.
Admit as assumed, that the question of a judgment had on suit commenced against the administrator in time, but not sought to be enforced against the heir, was not before the court in the Woolridge case — yet it seems to me certain, that if such a judgment had existed in the case, as well as the one adjudged, as is the case now, the court could never have announced the rule now laid down, without overruling what they so definitely bald, and thus making the holding on one branch of the case, antagonize the holding in the other — thus announcing two opposite rules in the same case.
In fact, as I think, the logical, legal, and inevitable result of the principle announced in the Wool-ridge case, is, that the judgment against the administrator in a suit commenced against him within the seven years, is conclusive for all time against the heir,, and no statute of limitations exists in his favor whatever, unless it be one barring judgments from the time of their recovery. We have such a statute, Code, sec. 2276, providing, “that the suit on judgments and decrees of courts of record of this or any other State, shall be brought in ten years after the cause of action accrues,” and not within seven, as held in this case. *168The case may not be within the letter oí the statute as judgment is not against the heir, nor is he a party, but seems to me to be clearly within a liberal construction or application of it; at any rate, it is as clear to my mind, as the idea that the heir, who is not a party, and cannot be, to the suit brought against the administrator, shall be bound by the fact, that said suit was commenced within seven years against such administrator. Judge Turney, I may add, is consistent in his opinion, for he argues, that the heir is protected after judgment, by laches of the creditor alone after judgment.
But to return to the main matter. I insist that the two principles announced in the opinions which I am combating, are irreconcilable, and one must inevitably fall. The principle given in the syllabus of Judge Cooper to his opinion, as I understand it, in the first part of it recognizes the one announced by Judge Turney in the Woolridge case, by holding, that a judgment recovered on sui.t commenced within seven years saves the bar, as against the heir and in favor of the creditor, and then adds, to meet the case of the judgments so recovered, “ however, such judgments must be enforced or suit commenced to enforce them within seven years from their rendition, or else the statute will bar them, in favor of the heir;” thus applying a rule, as to judgments on suits properly commenced, to such a case, unknown to our law before.
I see no ground on which the two propositions can stand together, except (as I have said), the one that when . a suit is commenced within time to defeat the *169effect of the statute, and' judgment recovered, because sufficient time had not elapsed at the commencement of the suit, to render the statute effectual, that when yon seek to enforce that judgment, the bar of the same statute may be interposed to defeat your judgment. This is to save the bar, by commencement of a suit against the administrator as against the heir— and then to revive the same statute and set it to running against the judgment. For such a rule, I must insist on having either a statute so enacting in plain terms, or a series of well considered cases, so holding. No such statute is known to me — no such cases have been or can be found, as I think. Until the case is so shown, I must be pardoned if I am compelled to differ with my brethren on this aspect of this question. I had always thought, that a suit properly brought, within the time prescribed by the statute of limitations, effectually shut the party out from pleading that particular statute, and that the judgment stood precisely as well protected as the suit in which it was recovered. As I understand the holding of the majority of the court in this case, this rule is subject at least to one exception, or will be in the future. I defer to th.eir decision, but cannot assent to the principle here announced — for the present at least.
I now proceed to a discussion of the main question as it is assumed in both opinions, that is, that suit brought within seven years against the heir or personal l’epi’esentative, will save the. bar of the statute; or rather that a suit brought within seven years *170against the personal representative, will save the bar of the statute against the heir or devisee, the owner and representative of the realty.
This rule is plain and easy to be understood; the only question is, whether it is sound in principle, and sustained by the analogies of our law, or by authority. It admits, by fair implication, and it is "well settled, and has been since the case of Smith v. Hickman, Cook, 330, that the statute does protect the heirs and distributees as well as the personal representative. In other words, that it was intended for and is a right secured by law to the heir for the defense of his estate. With this admission, I proceed to a discussion of the principle announced, which, as I have said, is the same in the first proposition in the opinion of both my brother judges.
The principle on which the rule stands is, that as to the real estate the administrator or executor represents the heir or devisee, and a suit brought against these representatives within seven years precludes the heir or devisee from interposing the statute. In perfect fairness, it is proper to add that this modifica-' tion or qualification should be given — that, nevertheless, if the judgment so obtained is not sought to be enforced against the heir or devisee within seven years, then the statute will be revived in his favor, and he may plead it to such proceeding. I have attempted to show that these propositions cannot stand together. Is the first one sound and sustainable, is now the question for consideration.
The principle on which the rule stands must be *171that of representation or else the conclusion announced could certainly not have been reached. It is thus stated in the opinion by Judge Turney, “That the institution of a suit against the personal representative in time will save the bar of the statute as to the realty as well as the personalty.” This must inevitably be the principle of the rule, or else it would follow that .a suit commenced against a party who does not represent, is not in privity with him either in law, or by contract or estate, shall bind that third party’s estate. I have but to show that the personal representative does not so represent the heir or devisee, and the conclusion of the opinion falls to the ground. The rule laid down, however, must stand on one or the other propositions, either of representation on the part of the executor or administrator, or that the heir or devisee is bound by suit brought against a party who does not represent him or his estate, and that where he is not a party, nor indeed can properly be so. I am indifferent as to which horn of the dilemma is taken, one or the other position is a logical necessity.
As to the first, that of representation, I assume that by the common law no such representation is known. To state the proposition is to refute it. In any form of' action known to our law, a personal representative is sued as the representative of the “ goods and chattels, rights and credits, of the deceased.” He is always thus impleaded, but never as representative of anything but the personalty — in no case of the realty. Judgments have been as uni*172formly rendered against him in accordance with this character as that suits have been brought, the execution given to be levied of the goods and chattels, rights and credits of the deceased in his hands to be administered, or that may come into his üands in a proper case; and this has been the case from time immemorial, and down to the present time. The uniform language of all text writers, and of all decisions of our own courts, is in accord with this principle, and always recognizes the administrator or executor as representing the personalty alone. In accordance with this, if a party dies pending a suit, a revivor is had against the personal representative if it be for personalty, but against the heir or devisee if it be for realty. Further than this, it has long been •settled that the personal representative is nor responsible for the realty in any way, and if he sells it and gets the proceeds, he and his sureties on his bond are not accountable for such proceeds in his official character. That the bond of an executor only covers the personalty, was settled after most elaborate discussion by Judge Turley in Hughlett v. Hughlett, 5 Hum., 453, and that ‘even in case of lands devised to be sold by the executor for payment of debts, the same rule applied, and, to use Judge Turley’s words, “were not administrable as legal assets; were equitable assets, and only administrable in a chancery proceeding — that neither the oath nor bond of the executor extended to them.” If, then, he does not represent the land so as to be responsible for it in any way, where it is by devise appropriated to payment of debts, under *173a -will where he is executor, much less does he, where it is simply liable under act of 1827, by a proceeding in equity, or under our other statutes making it so liable. In the emphatic language of Judge Reese, 5 Hum., 81, the land does not belong to the personal representative either legally or equitably, in trust or otherwise. He has nothing to do with it.' Shall all this be overturned f This being conceded, as I take will be done, does it not follow that by our law, at least, it is beyond question that the executor or administrator does not represent the realty in auy sense known to our general jurisprudence. If this does not prove the proposition no reasoning or authority could do it. Certainly the form of our judgments should be changed if the principle I am combating is sound. I will assume its correctness in all the aspects I have stated.
In support of the view herein maintained, I cite a statement of the law of our .State on this question from an authority for which I have the highest respect, my brother Cooper himself. Let it be understood, however, that I do not cite this as an estoppel upon him, nor for the purpose of showing any contradiction between the present opinion and that, but simply because I hold the principles stated to be un-answerably correct, and I wish to draw an argument from them on that assumption. In the case of Woodfin v. Anderson, 2 Ch. R., 339, the law of Tennessee is thus stated: “But there can be no doubt of the right of the heirs of the intestate, to whom realty has ascended, to contest the validity of claims so far *174as they are sought to be charged on the realty, although they may have been validly established against the administrator, for there is no privity between them and the personal representative. Garnett v. Macon, 6 Call., 308; Aston v. Munford, 1 Brock, 266; Mason v. Peters, 1 Munf., 437. They may make any defense to the claims which he could make, Sneed v. Mayfield’s heirs, Cooke, 60; Gilman v. Tisdale’s heirs, 1 Yer., 288; Neal v. McCombs, 2 Yer., 10; and they may make other defenses which he could not, Peck v. Wheaton’s heirs, M. & Y., 353.” He then goes on to say that where specific debts are recognized by the administrator in the bill, the heirs made defendants who are adults, are bound by it, and cannot dispute the debts, unless they do so by way of answer and cross-bill; that the rule does not apply to infants, they are not bound by the -averments of the bill, and they must be proven. The infant defendants, he says, might therefore be able to resist the enforcement of claims against their realty which could not be insisted on either by the administrator or the other' heirs. Each heir is entitled to his day in court, and may severally contest the liability of his inheritance for its proportion of the debt. Roberts v. Busby, 3 Hay., 299; Williams v. Leawell, 1 Yer., 83; McCormick v. Gibson, 3 Bland, 508. In this view he held that the claims in contest might be good against the administrator, yet subject to exception on the ground of the statute of limitations by the heir. In this he was strictly correct. I cite at length from the opinion, because it contains a neat summary of the result of our decisions *175on the question, and what I hold to be the law of' our State, as settled by our own decisions. This court followed the precise principles at last term in the case of Taylor v. Taylor, opinion written by myself, in which I cite this opinion of Judge Cooper's, and the heir’s land was held protected by the statute of seven years, although the claims had been admitted by the administrators. Admitting these principles to be correct, and that first there is no privity between the administrator and the heir, on what known principle of law can it be held that a suit commenced against the administrator or personal representative can in any way bind or effect the rights of the heir to his real estate? I confess I am unable to see how this can be done. Second, if the heir is not bound by the result of a suit againfc the administrator, that is, by a judgment, or admission of the debt, nor in fact by any act of his, how can he be debarred from pleading the statute of seven years by simply bringing suit against the administrator within seven years? I confess myself hopelessly in the dark as to how this conclusion can be reached by any process of legal logic, and know of no authority that sustains it. In fact, I think the views of my brethren would be appropriate to a system of law in which the heir is made party to the administration, with power to defend suits, or in which the personal representative should be held as his representative. But as that is not our system, the attempt to interpolate the principle on our jurisprudence will introduce hopeless confusion in our law; but worst of all, as I think, is not to decide what *176the law is, but what it ought to be, and thus legislate, or make the law, which is not our function.
To proceed, if this be admitted, that is, the want of representation at • common law, or by our general jurisprudence, then you must find a statute that creates this representative character, or it cannot be found at all. I ask for such a statute, I know of none myself, and none has been cited tending to support the view maintained.. If not existent by the common law, nor found in our statute law, it has no existence in our law at all. Until such basis shall be presented, I am compelled to hold the principle a new one, and for the first time announced as a part of our jurisprudence; and if this be true, am compelled to protest against it, with my conviction, as unwarranted by authority, and not only unsustained, but in contravention of all established principle and the analogies of our law. The representative character of the administrator, as affirmed in the conclusion of Judge Turney, must be maintained, or his conclusion fails, or else he is driven to - the other position, that a party is bound by a suit instituted against another who does not represent him, and with -whom he has no privity in law, by contract, or in estate, and that in reference to property which that other can never be sued for or called on to defend. I need only say in reference to the last proposition, that it is too clearly an axiomatic principle to need authority, that no man is bound by either the institution of a suit against another, nor a judgment or decree in such suit, unless be be a - party or in privity in some *177way with a party bound, except in cases of proceed ings in rem, or in the nature of such proceedings.
In support of the views here maintained, I add, as conclusive of the argument on this aspect of the question, that by our law there is no suit that can be brought against the administrator or executor by which a judgment is sought or can be had against the land of the heir or devisee. 4s was formerly held, a judgment for a debt of the deceased against the personal representative was not even prima facie evidence of the debt, but in a proceeding against the heir, when contested, had to be proven de novo, so that the suit and judgment against the representative went for nothing. Such is the only logical result of our previous decisions, as well as the common law on this question. We have, it is true, in the last few years modified this, holding, the judgment may be taken as prima facie evidence of the debt, but not conclusive on the heir or devisee, who may deny its existence and disprove it, notwithstanding the judgment. This, practically, is not of much importance. It only shifts the burden to the heir to deny and show the objections to the liability. This being conceded, as it must be, it follows necessarily, it seems to me, that no such suit as may be brought against the personal representative can possibly, have any effect whatever on the rights of the heir or devisee. To do so, it must be held that a party sued for one purpose, that is, to charge the personalty, and who cannot be sued to charge the realty, and failing to plead the statute (admitted to be a protection in some *178cases at least to the heir or devisee), shall bind the realty by reason of such suit. In other words, that a suit against a party who is not called on, and cannot be, to plead the statute of seven years in defense of the realty, shall, nevertheless, preclude the heir or devisee from using that defense. I will be pardoned when I refuse to adopt a conclusion that stands on such a basis, so subversive, as I see it, of all established principles on the subject, as I have always understood the law. I cannot bring myself to believe the administrator or executor represents the heir or devisee, or the realty, nor that a suit brought against a party can bind another who is not a party, nor represented by him, nor in privity with him. Until I can assent to these propositions I am compelled to dissent from the conclusions of my brethren. When I see these principles to be law, I shall yield my assent to them, but not till then. In addition, I am totally, unable to conceive how or on what principle the executor or administrator can be held to represent the heir or devisee as to the defense of the statute of limitations, and yet represents him in nothing else, save alone in capacity specially given by a statute, in a particular case, to make deed in pursuance of the title bond of the ancestor, and even then not after seven years. If the theory of my brethren be correct, and he represents the heir or devisee because the land is assets by our law to pay 'debts under certain circumstances, ought he not to be able to charge or sell that land? Why .require a statute to authorize him to convey in pursuance of a title bond? May *179not the personal representative sell, and give a good title to all assets which he represents? I have always so understood the law — and that he might, even give away these assets and convey a good title at common law.
I see many evils to result from the principle thus announced. A few hard eases may arise where creditors are delayed for over seven years, but they will be very few indeed compared with the number in which the heir’s estate will be swept from him by neglect of the creditor, or by collusion with the representative. Up to the case of Woolridge, we had in our books not more than two such cases, as I now remember, to-wit: the ease in 1 Head, —, and the case of Peck v. Wheaton’s heirs, M. & Y.-may be another. In both cases, however, the heir received the protection of the statute, and the creditor was repelled by this court. We have, in over eight years on the bench, .had but few such cases. In every case where the question had been made, we had given the heir the benefit of the statute, until the Wool-ridge case — notably in at least four cases, unreported, now within my memory, though other questions were in some of the cases, as in the Venable case, still that case was put on that ground clearly, so much •so that Judge McFarland dissented for that reason. I cannot assent to overrule all this for an assumed hard case.
Within what time, then, shall the suit be commenced, or rather when does the cause of action accrue, and when does the statute commence to run^ *180under the statutes referred to, and by our decisions? The language of the sections is important here — secs. 2279 and 2784 of the Code — limiting the time when claims shall be presented to the administrator, fix the time of two and three years from the date of qualification of the representative, and after accrual of the right of action; that is, after the debt becomes due, and a personal representative is in existence to be-sued, as construed by this court. This section applies to suits to be brought against the representative of the personalty alone. But sections 2786 and 2281, giving the seven years’ bar, change this language and use the language, “So that suit be brought within seven years after the death of the debtor, in one case, and in the other seven years after the death of the debtor, notwithstanding any disability existing, otherwise shall be forever barred. It is true section 2281, giving one year after removal of disabilities, provided the suit be brought within seven years, adds, “if the cause of action accrued in the lifetime of the deceased, otherwise in seven years from the time the cause of action accrued,” these last .words being added to the statute as it originally stood, by the revisers, to meet the decisions of our court, especially the case of Caplinger v. Vaden, 5 Hum., 629. I may remark, here that the extent of our decisions up to that period was to construe the language of the statute to mean that it did not commence to run until an administrator was appointed, and till the demand became due. These decisions may be considered adopted by the addition of this clause, but the clause cannot be extended be*181yond this, as I think I shall show, without subverting the whole current of view of our courts on this ■question, as well as doing violence to the language and to the plain general provisions and clearly defined purposes of the Legislature on this as well as the general subject of administration of estates. It ought to be sufficient, on this question, to say that if the revisers had intended that a suit brought against the personal representative should save the bar, this was the appropriate place to have said so, and thus have made their purpose clear. I feel sure that if such purpose had been in their minds it would not have been left open to a construction so doubtful as the one now maintained by my brother judges who differ with me. That seven years was intended to be the time fixed by the original statute after the death of the debtor, is its plain, unmistakable language, and that all claims against the estate were intended to be extinguished, not the remedy barred, has been the uniform holding of our courts. See 2 Swan, 504; Stone v. Saunders, 1 Head, 248, and cases cited; note to T. & S., Code, sec. 2281. That an equitable construction had been given the statute, making the exceptions that an administrator must be appointed, and the demand must have matured against the estate, or be due, had been made is equally certain, and I think it may be conceded that to this extent this construction was adopted by the revisers, and embodied in the language, “or otherwise within seven years from the time the cause of action accrued.” But nothing more was intended and nothing more done, *182and if more is found in the language, it must be worked out on the idea that “they builded wiser than they thought,” or rather contrary to what they thought or said. This is evidenced by the fact that it is clear our statutes contemplate a settlement by the representative of his administration within two years, as a general thing, as shown by the requirement of section 2295, and especially by sections 2311 and 2312, the latter sections forbidding him to hold the estate longer, and giving the distributee or legatee the right to apply to the County, Circuit, or Chancery Court, and compel him, by bill or petition, to pay over his distributive share or legacy, requiring a refunding bond for the security of the creditor, but not the representative. 8 Hum., 374; Code, sec. 2316. This being-so, this settlement will always show the exhaustion of the assets, if the fact be so, and the creditor can at once proceed under the act of 1827. Code, sec. —. If assets are in his hands, then he has his remedy against the administrator, and waste of assets against him and the sureties on his bond. In the meantime, if his claim is in suit it makes no difference, he may still have his claim adjudged under this remedy, and needs no judgment; and the administrator may file a bill to enjoin creditors from proceeding at law, the object of the statute of 1827 being to prevent estates being taxed with the costs of a judgment at law, as was required under act of 1784, giving the sai. fa. against the heir, and settle all claims in one suit, as held in Dulles v. Dead, 6 Yer., —, soon after the passage of the act, or if the personal assets have not. *183been exhausted, yet be insufficient, be may file a creditor’s bill to reach the personal as well as real assets, have the trust administered in chancery, thus fixing a lien on the realty as against the heir, and giving him a chance to contest the claim and maintain his own rights to his land, and not leave him to the mercy of the creditor and administrator, both interested against him, and have his rights fixed and his land swept away by a suit against a party who does not represent him — a suit of which he may never have heard, and legally can have no notice of. In assuming the settlement to be made in two years, I reason on the assumption that the law is complied with and will not' be disregarded, the fair mode of ascertaining what the purpose of the law is. Now if creditors may know the state of the estate in two years, five years from this date, as allowed by the seven years statute, ought to be sufficient for him to proceed against the heir— and it is the creditor’s laches, not the heir’s, that works the ipjury — and such is the principle underlying and sustaining the statute of 1715, as applied to the heir. The creditor has ample remedy now. He did not have under act of 1784, when sci. fa. had to be based on a judgment against the administrator, yet the law was held in favor of the heir then, much more now' should he be protected.
The view I have taken is made almost conclusive by the very next chapter of the Code after the section enacting the seven years statute of limitations. It is entitled, “Disposition of unclaimed assets after seven years.” The language in the old act of 1784, *184ch. 23, Code, see. 2282, and is as follows: “After the lapse of seven years from the grant of administration, if any part of the estate remain unclaimed by the kin of deceased or by creditors, it shall be paid by the administrator into the State Treasury, and remain subject to the claims of next of kin and of creditors without limitation of time.” Why fix the period at seven years, when two and three years had been fixed when suits should be brought against the personal representative debts or demands against him, and he required to settle in two years? Why say the estate thus paid shall be held subject to the demand of next of kin or creditors, without limitation of time? Beyond all question as to the first question, that is, seven years, because it was the period fixed by law for the extinguishment absolutely by statutory prescription of all claims or suits against the personal representative or the heir, or devisee, when the estate was to be considered as finally settled, and the administration closed, by the act of 1715, re-enacted in section 2281, the previous section of the Code.
That this was the policy of our law-makers is further shown by the 'reasoning of our ablest judges in this court whenever the question came up for discussion. To recur to some of our decisions on this subject, and the reasoning of the judges, will serve to put this view in a stronger light than what we have said. In the case of Lewis, Ex’r, v. Hickman’s Heirs, 2 Tenn. R., Coop, ed., 319-20, the question was, whether, under the act of 1794 authorizing executors and administrators to make deeds for lands when the *185deceased had given bond for title, it is said, “This act does not limit the time within which the executor or administrator shall exercise the power given.” But taken in connection with the two acts, that is, the acts of 1715 and 1789, it seems just to infer the Legislalure designed that the representative should make a deed within seven years, and not afterwards. Agreeably to these acts, after seven years the administrator had no power over the estate whereby any act of his could affect the interest of other persons, directly or indirectly,, this being the utmost limit for his management or control where the rights of others are concerned, as the heirs, etc. This shows the view taken at that early day of this statute, and accords precisely with what I maintain in this opinion.
We look now to a few of our cases on this question. I admit that in no case was the direct question, now before us, urged before the court — that is, whether a suit brought against the personal representative within seven years would preclude the heir or devisee — yet I may fairly assume that the reason was, that no lawyer or judge of that time ever dreamed of the point as a material one, whether a suit had been brought against him or had not. The idea that such a suit could affect the heir or devisee in any way had not entered their minds, and would never have occurred to them — in fact, never did occur, as abundantly shown by the cases reported. It is for this reason not directly adjudged, because never presented as a ground for decision. This silence of our eases, however, is a most persuasive argument as to *186how the law was then understood, and that, too, in cases where, if it had been deemed an element to be considered, the cases might most easily have been disposed of on this ground. We must remember we are construing statutes one hundred and fifty years, old, that is, the seven years'’ limitation. Our business is to arrive at their meaning from their language, not to make or readjust our system to what we may deem the demands of the times in which we live. That duty is for the Legislature, not this court.
To return, the case of Peck v. Wheaton’s Heirs, M. & Y., 352, was such a case. A judgment bad been recovered against an administrator on suit' commenced within two years after administration. The court nowhere hints at the idea that this suit or the judgment had any influence in affecting the bar of the statute. They do hold that the bar of the statute of three years, act of 1715, ch. 7, sec. 25, could not be used by the heirs if suit was brought within that time against the administrator. Why not lay down the same rule as to the act of seven years? It was an appropriate time to have done so, if such had been their view of the law.
Again, take the case of Stone v. Saunders, 1 Head, 249. In this case, from the statement made. by the Judge, it was a judgment, or its equivalent, by filing the claim and having it allowed in the County Court in an insolvent estate. After this, certain slaves were recovered by the heirs that belonged to the estate, and a bill filed to have them appropriated to the payment of this debt. The court is particular to-*187give the date of grant of letters of administration— March, 1848; and time of filing the bill — 10th of October, 1857. The court holds, in deciding the question of the bar. of seven years, that the bar was complete, that it applies to heirs as well as administrators, and these holdings had been constantly adhered to, there being no saving or exceptions in the statute. The court counts the time definitely in the opinion as beginning, at the date of the grant of letters of administration, and then adds, there is no exception in favor of a claim filed in insolvent cases, and concludes by saying, that “though the debts may be just, they are lost by the delay and negligence of the creditors, and the defendants have an unincum-bered title to them.” Whatever else may be said of this case, it is unquestionably a case that settles-the rule that the bar of the statute commenced to run from the grant of letters of administration in favor of an heir or devisee. And so I say, where the claim is due. This case must be overturned, or its authority sustains my view on the question now before us. This opinion was the opinion of the court composed of Wright, McKinney and Caruthers, three men who had grown up with and were familiar with our system on this question.
The opinion of Judge McKinney in the case of The State v. Crutcher’s Adm’r, is still more conclusive in favor of this view in its reasoning. He says: “This statute is founded upon just and urgent considerations of public policy. The discouragement of litigation under circumstances which, in many cases, pre-*188elude the attainment of truth or justice, the suppression of frauds and perjuries, in attempts to set up demands against the'estates of deceased persons, when the means of exposing their falsity have perished— the necessity that those who succeed to the rights and property of such deceased persons should be quieted, in the enjoyment of their rights; these, and other reasons which might be stated, strongly sustain the policy of the act of 1715. The period (seven years) is sufficiently long for all creditors, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, to assert their rights; and they have no just grounds of complaint that, after the expiration of the time limited, their rights are declared to be taken away and extinguished; the loss is the consequence of their own laches.” For these reasons the statute was held applicable to the State, and her claim barred, notwithstanding the ordinary statute of limitations did not so run against the soverign power.
This was said in 1852; but the same grounds in vindication of the policy of the statute are presented and enforced by Judge White in 1813, in the case of Smith v. Hickman’s Heirs, Cook R., 334, in which he sustains the applicability of the statute to heirs, though not named in it. ITe insists that it was reasonable the Legislature should think of the heirs, as well as the personal representative, in respect to the debts of their ancestor. “As respects the situation of the heir ' ’after the death of the ancestor,” he says, “reasons for the limitation also existed. The heir cannot be presumed in all cases to know of the transactions of the ancestor. If no lapse of time can *189secure the estate thus descended, the peace of society would he much disturbed. Recoveries might be had of one of many heirs, and suits for contribution take place. If the Legislature deemed it of importance to the peace of society that the time for bringing suits should be limited in case of the proper debts of individuals, for one among many reasons, that vouchers and receipts may be lost or mislaid, there surely is greater reason that the heirs, who cannot be presumed to know the transactions of their ancestor, should be exempt from litigation on that ground, after a certain lapse of time, otherwise they could not know the situation of their affairs. There should be some period when the obligation should cease” — and, we add, that a definite period. We might add the views of other judges to the like effect.
This all accords with the view I have taken of this question. Let us for a moment see how it accords-with the views of the majority opinion in this case.
On the principle given by Judge Turney, a suit may be commenced two years after the grant of letters of administration, may be supposed to “drag its-slow length ” through the courts ' for seven or even ten years, and then the heir be held to answer for the debts ten or twelve years after administration granted; in fact, there is no limit at all to the time when his estate may be subjected, on this view, as the suit commenced against the personal representative saves the bar of the statute in favor of the creditor. Laches, that uncertain criterion, of which the courts can only judge in each particular case, or the time *190of presumption of satisfaction by lapse of time, can alone save the heirs’ estate from liability. Under ■{he rule of Judge Cooper, practically the result is but little better, as the suit against the administrator may go on for seven years — as we see. in the case of Woolridge v. Page-and then the heir has no protection for seven years after the judgment, thus making fourteen years before his land is freed from the liability for his ancestor’s debts. Is this not, by construction, practically to repeal the statute? and would it not be a fairer conclusion at once to say that the heir should take no benefit from it, rather than to give him an illusion and a snare? Mark you, too, that in the latter case he is subjected to the action of a party with whom he has no privity, and who is interested to make his estate liable to avoid personal liability in his own estate, as in the case now before us, where the administrator was liable for ten years on the judgments, and only escapes it on scire facias by this lapse of time — he having failed to plead fully administered, and not having suggested the insolvency of the estate in the County Court, as required by law, and it being too late to do so for his protection now. The same objection lies to the opinion of Judge Turney, the erroneous principles of which we have discussed in the former part of this opinion.
Now look for a moment at the evils attending this view, which is assumed to rest on»the principles of common honesty, and which, as I think, rests alone on the idea of pressure in an assumed hard case, ah was the Woolridge case, possibly.
*191The judgment is held prima facia against the heir as to the' existence of the debt. It would be no better, however, for him if this were • not so held, because, by the end of the period fixed for his liability by these opinions, he will, in almost every case, be deprived of all evidence by which to sustain an attack on the validity of the claims. He may be, and in most cases is, a minor, or at any rate part of the heirs are usually such, a suit is being conducted by parties who do not represent him; he has no control over the suit, even if of age — can neither hasten it or make defense to it; he is not a party or served with notice of its pendency — may never hear of it; yet, at the end of fourteen years, he may be called on to yield bis estate to the satisfaction of the judgment thus obtained.
Which view — mine or that of my brethren — best accords with sound policy, or is least liable to do injustice? I submit this to every candid thinker on the subject, with perfect confidence as to the result.
The creditor is of age, able to prosecute his rights with diligence. The minor, not aware of his danger, and thus disarmed, is deprived of all chance of making a defense except by accident.
It may be said, such cases will seldom occur as against the heir. I may answer, such cases may frequently occur as against him, by collusion or neglect of the administrator, but are far less likely to occur as against, the creditor who has a just claim.
1 feel that these authorities and reasonings abundantly justify the opinion I hold in this case, and *192that if no such statute existed, it would be much wiser on the part of the Legislature to enact one, than for us, by decision,' to overturn it.
I may conclude by saying that the period fixed, of a suit against the administrator binding the heir in the one case, or seven years after the recovery of judgment by the creditor, are both outside of any intimation in the statute, and, as far as I can see, mere arbitrary assumptions of time in order to meet the exigencies of the particular cases. In this view, I see no good reason why seven years after the heir arrived at age if a minor, or any other period, might not have been assumed as well as seven years after a judgment rendered. This would at least have given us a definite period, and not a movable one, depend•ent on the action of the creditor and personal representative. The principles of common honesty, and hardship to the creditor, are invoked in behalf of the creditor. I reply, is it legally. or morally just to the heir or devisee that he shall be bound by the action of parties over whom he has no control, and whp are both interested in most cases against him'?— certainly t'v creditor is so interested in almost all cases. Is it no injustice to him that his estate may be swept away by the result of a suit brought against a party who . does not represent him, and to which he is not a party, and had no right to become a party, or in any way hasten the action of the creditor or shape the defense of the personal representative, and where the representative can never be called on to plead the statute in defense of the realty, be*193cause Re can never be sued to reach it by any proceeding known to our law. He and his land may be in a distant part of the State; the suit he and his friends may never hear of, and if they did, as we have said, could take no part in it one way or the other. Is there nothing to be said in favor of the unprotected orphan, as well as in favor of an active creditor, who has ample means of protection to his rights in his own hands, and seven years in which to enforce them? Surely, in the language of Judge McKinney, this is sufficient time within which he may save himself by proper diligence. At any rate, it is the time fixed by the Legislature, and we have no power to 'change it to meet hard cases. As I see it, the real hardships are all on the side of the heir or devisee. The danger to the creditor is largely fanciful, I think. Our dockets are crowded with cases where heirs have been deprived of their estates by alleged neglect on the part of administrators. We have in eight years had but two — this and the Woolridge case — where the creditor may suffer loss, and I see no evidence in either to clear them from the charge of laches in the prosecution of their claims. By the rule laid down in the two opinions, the statute is practically abrogated as to them, as the heir will never, except by the purest accident, be able to make any defense against the correctness of a judgment had against the representative. Papers and vouchers, if any he had, will be lost, witnesses dead or removed to parts unknown, and so he may be ruined in his estate with no possible means of de*194fending himself. In addition, we may add that the papers and vouchers of the ancestor go into the hands of the personal representative by law, so that the heir or devisee is effectually cut off, except in name, from all defense to any such suit or demand against his estate. The Legislature wisely said seven years ■should give him security, and I insist on carrying ■out the plain mandate.
I conclude by saying, that if the law is defective as it stands, let the Legislature apply the remedy, •not this court. I concede it is defective, and that, as I have before suggested in a former opinion on this subject, a system ought to be devised by which all •estates should be administered in a reasonable time ■and by the same form of proceeding, to which the heir or devisee should be made a party, with the right of making defense to all claims in person when of age, and by guardian or next friend when a minor, and have a chance to be heard in defense of his estate. We have no such system, however, and have no power to make one — it belongs to another department of government. I think I see clearly that in the effort to add to our present system in order to meet an assumed injustice in the particular case, as usually happens, we are liable to do tenfold more injury than we cure; and I know by experience that hard cases, and efforts to meet them, make hard precedents, and lead to ' infinite mischief in the administration of the law. I am unwilling to add to the number of evil precedents in this direction.