after stating the case. It is difficult to conceive how any cause could be conducted with so much irregularity, and so little regard to that precision which should attend the proceedings of our courts, as to make it doubtful what forum had cogniaance of it; and yet so inconsistent has been the action of the parlies to this cause, and. so contradictory many of the orders taken during its progress, that it is brought here for us to determine, not the rights of the parties involved, but the point whether it is pending in the court of probate or in the superior court proper. Indeed the counsel for the defendant devoted his entire aguraent to the proposition that it had ceased to have a foot-hold in any court; that by force of the consent order of spring term, 1875, and the order of fall term, 187@, “ it had been cast out *388of the superior court,” and that the probate court acquired no-jurisdiction because of the laches of the plaintiff in having it placed upon the docket of that court.
If the subject matter of the action were such that the two courts had concurrent jurisdiction, it would not be difficult to determine the matter, for such has been the conduct of the parties in assenting either expressly or by a clear implication to the jurisdiction of both tribunal's, that either one of them might very properly have assumed control of the action and considered it to its determination. The rule is, that when a court has jurisdiction of the subject matter, then the consent of the parties can give it jurisdiction over the particular action, and that this consent may be implied as a legal inference from their conduct. But of the subjeet matter of the action now under consideration, the jurisdiction of the two courts is not concurrent; on the contrary, the probate court has none, while that of the superior court is exclusive.
We presume it will hardly be contended that an admin-trator can be required at the suit of a creditor of his intestate to sell lands for assets, when upon his own petition for a like purpose he could not procure a license to sell them. And it has been decided by this court in several cases that no such license would be given under circumstances like those alleged in this complaint. The statute in defining what lands may be sold by an administrator for assets, includes not only the lands whereof his intestate died seized, but all that he may have conveyed with intent to defraud his creditors, and all rights of entry and of action, and all other rights and interest in lands which he may devise, o-r by law would descend to his heirs. As was decided in Rhem v. Tull, 13 Ired., 57, very soon after the adoption of the statute, no part of this description fits the lands sought to be reached by this action. The intestate did not die seized of them, no-r did he ever convey them with intent to *389defraud his creditors. There is no right or interest in them of any kind or character whieh he could devise, or which upon his death could descend upon his heirs. The right of the creditors to reach these lands is entirely independent of the statute, and existed as well before as after its enactment. It is a right to follow their debtor’s money which by a fraudulent contrivance has been put into them, and it is one that can only be enforced in a court possessing an original equitable jurisdiction, such as does not attach to a court of probate under our system. Smitherman v. Allen, 6 Jones Eq., 17; Wall v. Fairley, 77 N. C., 105.
Our conclusion then on this part of the case, is, that the probate court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action, and that the consent of the parties nor t,he order-of the judge of the superior court could confer it upon that court; and therefore the order of the probate judge docketing the cause, if done with a view of his taking cognizance thereof, was void, and the judgment of the superior court affirming the same, was erroneous, and especially that part of it which directed a writ of procedendo to issue to the probate court.
This disposes of the only point raised by the appeal, and it is therefore not incumbent on us to consider the further-one, of w’hat is to become of the action. But as we have a, decided opinion in regard to it, which may save the parties from loss of time and useless litigation, we venture to express it, and leave it to their election to be governed by it or not.
Since the order made wdth the consent of the parties at spring term, 1875, sending the eause to the probate court, they have never ceased to treat the cause as one pending in the superior -court. At fall term, 1875, the defendant obtained leave to file his answer at the following term, which was declared tobe the trial term. At spring term,'1876, he filed his answer in the court during- the term, and applied for leave to take depositions. At fall term, 1878, the *390plaintiff bad leave of the court to take depositions. At spring term, 1879, the defendant obtained leave to file another answer, and it was expressly stated on the court docket that the cause was continued without prejudice to either party, and that all irregularities were waived. If. the jurisdiction of a court could ever be made, by the consent of the parties clearly and unequivocally expressed, to attach any cause, surely that of the superior court of Transylvania county must have attached to this one.
It is true that after all this, the judge who presided in t'hat court at the fall term, 1879, did sign an order declaring he considered the case as not properly upon the docket of the court,but he made no order dismissing it, nor indeed any order affecting any substantial right of either party, which could afford sufficient ground for an appeal. Bui suppose he had done so. The defendant even after this recognized Ihe cause as pending in the superior court, for at spring term, 1880, he filed an affidavit in the cause, in that court, as the basis for a rule on the.plaintiff to file a new prosecution bond, or justify the old, on or before a given day, or Ms cause should stand dismissed. Dismissed from where ? from the superior court, that court ■which at his instance was making the order? Under all these circumstances, it does not occur to this court that there can be any room for doubting that the cause was properly on the docket of the superior court in 1879, and that it should be so considered now, to be proceeded in according to the course of the court.
It is therefore considered that the order of the superior court affirming the action of the probate court in the premises and directing a writ of procedendo to issue to that court, is erroneous, and that it he so certified, that the parties may proceed in the cause as they may be advised.
Error. Reversed.