
    M. G. Richbourg and others, vs. H. & C. Richbourg.
    
      Defendants administrators, were held not entitled to setoff against a balance found, on accounting, to be due by them to a dis-tributee of the estate, a debt due to one of them individuallyt by the distributee.
    
    •'¡The complainants were distributees of the estate of Davici Richbourg, deceased, of which the defendants were administrators, and the bill was filed for an account and to compel the defendants to pay over the balance in their hands.
    On reference of the accounts to the commissioner, he reported a balance due to complainants; of which Mary G.Rieb-Vohrg (now Dunlap,) having since the commencement of the-
      suit married II. S. Dunlap) was entitled to one third, .He further reported that II. S. Dunlap, the husband of the complainant, was indebted to C. Riehbourg, one of the defendants, by a note; the amount of which the commissioner recommended to be deducted from the balance due by the administrdtors to Dunlap and wife. . The case came before the court on exceptions to the commissioner’s report.
   Chancellor Desaussure.

Tn this case the commissioner reports that the sum of one hundred and thirty-nine dollars, forty-one cents, is due by the administrators to the complainant. But that the sum of one hundred and two dollars, seventy-two ■cents, must be deducted, being the amount due on a note of H. S. Dunlap, the husband of M. G. Riehbourg. b he defendant excepts to the report, on the ground that the debt of one hundred and two dollars seventy-two cents, is due by Dunlap to one of the administrators in his private capacity, and not as administrator of the estate. If the debt had been due to the estate in the hands of the administrator, there would have been ground to sustain the report; but being due to the administrator in his private capacity, it cannot be supported. It is therefore ordered and decreed that the exception be sustained, and that the report be amended accordingly.

From this decree the defendants appealed, and contended that although it should be conceded, that the act of the legislature on the subject does not authorize the setting off of individual claims against representative responsibilities, and the contrary, yet it is within the powers of this court to allow it, when necessary to the purposes of justice.

But it is not clear that the case comes within the exception of the Discount Act, respecting the individual and representative rights of executors and administrators. That exception was intended to apply.to the adjustment of accounts between the executor and strangers — debtors and creditors of the estate — and not between the executor and legatee. It was designed to protect the estate for the benefit of the legatee, which might otherwise be exhausted by the debts of the executor. But when the legatee stands indebted to the executor ipdividu* ally, and seeks to take the estate out of his hands, the rea'sclc does not apply. In fact, the halarice remaining in the hands of the executor, after the settlement of the estate, is his personal debt to the legatee. Decree affirmed by the whole court.

Haynesworth, for appellant.

Mayrant, contrary.  