These proceedings cannot be maintained under the Acts of 1863 and 1864, “ For the relief of Landlords,” for the plaintiff as administrator cum testcmento annexo, has no interest in the premises. A personal representative has no control of the freehold estate of the deceased; unless it is vested in him by a will, or where there is a deficiency of personal assets and he obtains a license to sell real estate for the payment of debts. The control derived from a will may be either a naked power of sale or a power coupled with an '.interest. The hem of the testator is not divested of the estate which the law casts upon him, by any power or trust until it is executed: Ferrebee v. Proctor, 2 D. and B., 439.
*411The authority given to a personal representative to sell land for the payment of the debts of the deceased, is a mere-naked power,' and confers no title or interest in the estate. He is merely an agent of the Court and acts under its direction in the execution of the power, and after the sale is made and confirmed, the Court may designate some other person to make the title to the purchaser. Eev. Code, ch. 46,. sec. 49.
In this case the land in question was devised by the testator to his widow. There is a pending contest respecting, the probate of the will, and no title can pass to the devisee until the will is duly proved and allowed by the proper Court: Eev. Code, ch. 119, sec. 20. The title of the land descended to the heirs of the testator, subject to be divested in favor of the devisee, when the will is duly admitted to probate. In England it is not necessary to the validity of a devise that it be admitted to probate in the Eclesiastical Court. It is regarded as a conveyance and must be duly proved in a Court of Common Law, when the devisee seeks to assert his title against the heir or any other adverse claimant. A devise breaks the descent and passes the title to the devisee immediately upon the death of the devisor. In this country,, probate is necessary to the validity of a devise, and until this requisite is complied with, the title to land devised must necessarily pass to the heir, as the fee cannot be in abeyance. In the case before us, as matters now stand, the heirs of the testator can-alone take advantage of the acts for the relief of landlords above referred to.
It was also insisted at the bar by the counsel for the defendant, that the plaintiff cannot maintain his suit for the reason that his general letters of administration are null and void, as there is a pending contest respecting the probate of the will, and that the Court only had power under such circumstances to appoint an administrator pendente Ute.
*412The will was admitted to probate in common form, and that probate was valid until it was set aside: Etheridge v. Corprew’s, Exr., 3 Jon. 14. As there was no executor named in the will, the Court had the power to appoint the plaintiff administrator eum testamento annexo. As the Court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and the particular case, the appointment is valid until properly revoked: Hyman v. Gaskins, 5 Ire. 267. The revocation of the probate in common form did not have the effect of annulling the administration which was properly granted. The case of Slade v. Washburn, 3 Ire. 557, is not analogous to the one before us. In that case the Court exceeded its jurisdiction, and. its action was properly declared to be null and void; but in our case the Court acted within the scope of its legitimate authority. If the will is hereafter established in solemn form, there will be no grounds for the revocation of the letters of administration of the plaintiff; but if the will is set aside, the case may be different.
There is no error.
Peb Cubtam. Judgment affirmed.