thus become creditors of the fund to which the executor or trustee has a right to resort."
But the creditors of the trade carried on by the executor must, as in all other cases of subrogation, depend upon his rights, and in that sense their claims upon the assets of the estate are indirect. This is well shown by the example of an executor who, through his wrongful act, has lost his right of indemnity or has disentitled himself to an indemnity except on terms of making good a loss to the estate. In such a case the creditors of his trade can have no better right (In re Johnson 1 ).
The application of these principles to the present case means that the claims of the trade creditors of the executor to rank before the creditors of the deceased debtor in the administration of his estate in bankruptcy must rest upon the existence in the executor, at the date when the order for administration in bankruptcy was made, of a right to be indemnified out of the assets in respect of those claims or to a lien over the assets. Further, the lien or right of indemnifica- tion must take priority over the rights of creditors of the deceased and, as already explained, that can only be by reason of their own act or conduct.
His Honour Judge Paine thought that the particular creditor in question, the appellant, had given its active assent and for this reason was postponed to the executor's right of indemnity to which the latter's trade creditors are subrogated. It is the correctness of this view that we must decide.
But, it may be asked, how can this question arise in " the adminis- tration in bankruptcy of the deceased debtor's estate" ? (Cf. S. 155 of the Bankruptcy Act 1924-1945.) Is it not the debtor's estate as he left it ? And is not the combined effect of S. 155 (4) and SS. 84-87, to establish an order of priority and subject thereto an equality in which claims upon the assets rank, an order taking no account of the claims of trade creditors of the executor ?
The answer lies in the fact that the executor's lien is a claim upon those assets and that the order for administration does not overreach it. The subject dealt with by S. 155 is the estate of the deceased debtor, that is, the property to which he was entitled at the time of his death SO far as it had not been lawfully dealt with since his death before the order of administration was made and subject to all liens, charges and rights subsisting in other persons Cf. per Chitty L.J. in Hasluck v. Clark 2. Further, in Levy V. Kum
Chah 3, it was said :- When the Bankruptcy Court under-
1(1880) 15 Ch. D. 548, at pp. 552,
2(1899) 1 Q.B. 699, at p. 707.
3(1936) 56 C.L.R. 159, at p. 173.