after stating the case. It is contended by appellant’s counsel that inasmuch as the answer admits that lands, of sufficient value to pay the debt, descended from the intestate, Micajah, to his heirs-at-law, which could by proper proceedings issued against them by the said Esther have been subjected to the payment of the debt, her failure to convert such real estate into assets for the purpose is itself a breach of the official bond, rendering her and her sureties alike liable, as if by this means the conversion into assets had been effected.
We do not concur in this view. The defence set up of a full administration has not been, and ought to be disposed of, and. the course pursued by the court, no jury trial being asked, is warranted by the ruling in Ray v. Patton, 86 N. C., 386.
*406Nor was the plaintiff entitled to a judgment, fixing assets in the hands of the administratrix, by reason of the failure of the administratrix to pursue the descended real estate for the purpose of converting it into assets. Lands, which may be sold for this purpose under proper proceedings prosecuted by the personal representative, are not, until such sale and the reception of the moneys arising therefrom, assets for which the sureties to the bond can be held responsible.
“ The real estate,” says Dick:, J., delivering the opinion in Fike v. Green, 64 N. C., 665, “was not assets in the hands of the executors.”
The point is made and expressly decided in the subsequent case of Vaughan v. Deloatch, 65 N. C., 378, in which evidence was offered, and on objection admitted, in the superior court to show that the intestate debtor, whose administrator was a defendant in the action, owned lands at his death which descended to his heirs-at-law, and from which the administrator by proper proceedings for a sale could have derived the means of paying the debt.
reviewing the case on appeal, says: “The only question is, whether real estate is assets to pay debts before the same has been sold and the proceeds received by the administrator? Recent decisions settle the question,” referring to the case recited. “It may be,” he concludes, “that in a case of negligence, the administrator would be liable on his bond for not obtaining license and selling, but that is not before us.”
The present contention is the same as in that case, that the defendants should be charged with assets because these were lands which their principal, the personal representative, took no steps to sell.
JBut the complaint shows that the assets received by the admin-istratrix from the husband’s estate, and adequate to meet the debt, were wasted by her; and if so, she could not maintain a *407proceeding to sell the land. For this devastavit the remedy is upon the bond. Badger v. Jones, 66 N. C., 305; Latham v. Bell, 69 N. C., 135.
Again, the descended lands, according to the statement in the answer accepted as the basis of the plaintiff's motion, remain unalienated in the hands of the heirs-at-law of the intestate, Mieajah, and are accessible to his creditors by proceedings conducted for the purpose of converting them into assets by his proper representative, and this recourse is still open to the plaintiff. Pelletier v. Saunders, 67 N. C., 261.
As a devastavit is charged, the primary liability for the waste or misapplication rests upon the administration bond, and an inquiry into the fact becomes necessary to ascertain which, in the event of no demand for a jury trial being made, a reference is the appropriate step to be taken in order that the necessary information may be obtained, and this course was pursued.
We advert to the omission to make a party to the cause, the administrator de bonis non of the intestate, Mieajah, who, under repeated decisions of this court can alone maintain an action, for the recovery of the unadministered assets, against the former representative, to avoid an inference from our silence that the suit can be supported in his absence from the record. But the point is not presented and we only decide there is no error in the ruling. This will be certified.
No error. Affirmed.