But it has been suggested that the present case is
distinguishable because the assets sought to be distributed were
not collected in Kentucky, but were received as a debt due from the
government at the Treasury Department at Washington, and so
constituted local assets within this District. We cannot yield our
assent to the correctness of this argument. The debts due from the
government of the United States have no locality at the seat of
government. The United States, in its sovereign capacity, has no
particular place of domicile, but possesses in contemplation of law
a ubiquity throughout the Union, and the debts due by it are not to
be treated like the debts of a private debtor, which constitute
local assets in his own domicile. On the contrary, the
administrator of a creditor of the government, duly appointed in
the state where he was domiciled at his death, has full authority
to receive payment and give a full discharge of the debt due to his
intestate in any place where the government may choose to pay it,
whether it be at the seat of government or at any other place where
the public funds are deposited. If any other doctrine were to be
recognized, the consequence would be, that before the personal
representative of any deceased creditor, belonging to any state in
the Union, would be entitled to receive payment of any debt due by
the government, he would be compellable to take out letters of
administration in this District
Page 40 U. S. 7
for the due administration of such assets. Such a doctrine has
never yet been sanctioned by any practice of the government, and
would be full of public as well as private inconvenience. It has
not, in our judgment, any just foundation in the principles of law.
We think that Northup, under the letters of administration taken
out in Kentucky, was fully authorized to receive the debt due from
the government to his intestate, but the moneys so received
constituted assets under that administration for which he was
accountable to the proper tribunals in Kentucky, and that
distribution thereof might have been, and should have been, sought
there in the same manner as of any other debts due to the intestate
in Kentucky.
It has also been supposed that the act of congress of 24 June
1812 may well entitle the appellants to maintain the present suit,
since it places a foreign administrator upon the footing of a
domestic administrator in the District of Columbia. That act
provides that it shall be lawful for any person to whom letters
testamentary or of administration have been or may hereafter be
granted by the proper authority in any of the United States or the
territories thereof to maintain any suit or action, or to prosecute
and recover any claim in the District of Columbia in the same
manner as if the letters testamentary or of administration had been
granted to such person by the proper authority in the said
District. It is observable that this provision is limited by its
terms to the maintenance of suits and the prosecution and recovery
of claims in the District by any executor or administrator
appointed under the authority of any state. It does not authorize
any suits or actions in the District against any such executor or
administrator. Its obvious design was therefore to enable foreign
executors and administrators to maintain suits and to prosecute and
recover claims in the District not against the government alone,
but against any persons whatever resident within the District who
were indebted to the deceased, and to discharge the debtor
therefrom without the grant of any local letters of administration.
In effect, it made all debts due from persons within the District
not local assets, for which a personal representative would be
liable to account in the courts of the District, but general assets
which he had full authority to receive and for which he was bound
to account in
Page 40 U. S. 8
the courts of the state from which he derived his original
letters of administration. Indeed, the very silence of the act as
to any liability of the personal representative to be sued in the
courts of the District for such assets so received would seem
equivalent to a declaration that he was not to be subjected to any
such liability. It fortifies, therefore, rather than weakens, the
conclusion which is derivable from the general principles of law
upon this subject. The same view of the purport and objects of the
act was taken by this Court at the last term in the case of
Kane v. Paul,
14 Pet. 33.
Upon the whole we are of opinion that the circuit court was
right in dismissing the bill for the want of jurisdiction, and
therefore the decree is
Affirmed with costs.