This Court has jurisdiction to review the judgment on writ of
error under § 709, Rev.Stat., if the opinion of the highest
court of the state clearly shows that the federal question was
assumed to be in issue, was decided adversely, and the decision was
essential to the judgment rendered.
The right to sue and defend in the courts of the states is one
of the privileges and immunities comprehended by § 2 of Art.
IV of the Constitution of the United States, and equality of
treatment in regard thereto does not depend upon comity between the
states, but is granted and protected by that provision in the
Constitution, subject, however, to the restrictions of that
instrument that the limitations imposed by a state must operate in
the same way on its own citizens and on those of other states. The
state's own policy may determine the jurisdiction of its courts and
the character of the controversies which shall be heard
therein.
The statute of Ohio of 1902 providing that no action can be
maintained in the courts of that state for wrongful death occurring
in another state except where the deceased was a citizen of Ohio,
the restriction operating equally upon representatives of the
deceased whether they are citizens of Ohio or of other states, does
not violate the privilege and immunity provision of the federal
Constitution.
73 Ohio St. 1 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 207 U. S. 146
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error directed to the Supreme Court of the
State of Ohio. The plaintiff in error is the widow of Henry E.
Chambers, who, while in the employ of the defendant in error as a
locomotive engineer, and engaged in the performance of his duty,
received injuries from which he shortly afterwards died. Both
husband and wife were, at the time of the injuries and death,
citizens of Pennsylvania, and the wife has since continued to be
such. The injuries and death occurred in Pennsylvania. The widow
brought an action in the court of common pleas of the State of Ohio
against the defendant railroad, alleging that the injuries were
caused by its negligence. In that action, she sought to recover
damages under certain parts of the Constitution and laws of
Pennsylvania printed in the margin,
*
which provided for the recovery of damages
Page 207 U. S. 147
for death. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment in the court
of common pleas, from which, by petition in error, the case was
removed first to an intermediate court and then to the supreme
court of the state. There it was insisted by the defendant that the
action could not be maintained in the courts of Ohio. The supreme
court sustained this contention, reversed the judgments of the
court below, and entered judgment for the defendant. A statute of
Ohio provided that
"whenever
the death of a citizen of this state has been
or may be caused by a wrongful act, neglect, or default in another
state, territory, or foreign country, for which a right to maintain
an action and recover damages in respect thereof is given by a
statute of such other state, territory, or foreign country, such
right of action may be enforced in this state within the time
prescribed for the commencement of such action by the statute of
such other state, territory, or foreign country."
There was no other statutory provision on the subject. The
supreme court held that the action authorized by this statute for a
death occurring in another state was only when the death was that
of a citizen of Ohio; that the common law of the state forbade such
action, and that, as the person for whose death damages were
demanded in this case was not a citizen of Ohio, the action would
not lie. The plaintiff brings the case here on writ of error,
alleging that the statute thus construed and the judgment
Page 207 U. S. 148
based upon that construction violate Article IV, § 2,
paragraph 1, of the Constitution of the United States, which
provides that "the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all
privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states." This
allegation presents the only question for our consideration.
The defendant objects to our jurisdiction to reexamine the
judgment because the federal question was not properly and
seasonably raised in the courts of the state. But it clearly and
unmistakably appears from the opinion of the supreme court that the
federal question was assumed to be in issue, was decided against
the claim of federal right, and that the decision of the question
was essential to the judgment rendered. This is enough to give this
Court the authority to reexamine that question on writ of error.
San Jose Land & Water Company v. San Jose Ranch Co.,
189 U. S. 177;
Haire v. Rice, 204 U. S. 291.
In the decision of the merits of the case there are some
fundamental principles which are of controlling effect. The right
to sue and defend in the courts is the alternative of force. In an
organized society, it is the right conservative of all other
rights, and lies at the foundation of orderly government. It is one
of the highest and most essential privileges of citizenship, and
must be allowed by each state to the citizens of all other states
to the precise extent that it is allowed to its own citizens.
Equality of treatment in this respect is not left to depend upon
comity between the states, but is granted and protected by the
federal Constitution.
Corfield v. Coryell, 4 Wash. C.C.
371, 380, per Washington, J.;
Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418,
79 U. S. 430,
per Clifford, J.;
Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.
S. 107,
133 U. S. 114,
per FULLER, C.J.;
Blake v. McClung, 172 U.
S. 239,
172 U. S. 252,
per HARLAN, J.
But, subject to the restrictions of the federal Constitution,
the state may determine the limits of the jurisdiction of its
courts and the character of the controversies which shall be heard
in them. The state policy decides whether and to what
Page 207 U. S. 149
extent the state will entertain in its courts transitory
actions, where the causes of action have arisen in other
jurisdictions. Different states may have different policies, and
the same state may have different policies at different times. But
any policy the state may choose to adopt must operate in the same
way on its own citizens and those of other states. The privileges
which it affords to one class it must afford to the other. Any law
by which privileges to begin actions in the courts are given to its
own citizens and withheld from the citizens of other states is void
because in conflict with the supreme law of the land.
The law of Ohio must be brought to the test of these fundamental
principles. It appears from the decision under review (and we need
no other authority) that, by the common law of the state, the
courts had no jurisdiction to entertain actions to recover damages
for death where the cause of action arose under the laws of other
states or countries. This rule was universal in its application.
The citizenship of the persons who brought action or of the person
for whose death a remedy was sought was immaterial. If the death
was caused outside the state and the right of action arose under
laws foreign to the state, its courts were impartially closed to
all persons seeking a remedy, entirely irrespective of their
citizenship. The common law, however, was modified by a statute
which, as amended, became the statute under consideration here. By
this statute, the courts were given jurisdiction over certain
actions of this description, while the common law was left to
control all others. A discrimination was thus introduced into the
law of the state. The discrimination was based solely on the
citizenship of the deceased. The courts were open in such cases to
plaintiffs who were citizens of other states if the deceased was a
citizen of Ohio; they were closed to plaintiffs who were citizens
of Ohio if the deceased was a citizen of another state. So far as
the parties to the litigation are concerned, the state, by its
laws, made no discrimination based on citizenship, and offered
precisely the same privileges to citizens of
Page 207 U. S. 150
other states which it allowed to its own. There is therefore at
least a literal conformity with the requirements of the
Constitution.
But it may be urged, on the other hand, that the conformity is
only superficial; that the death action may be given by the foreign
law to the person killed at the instant when he was
vivus et
mortuus, and made to survive and pass to his representatives
(
Higgins v. Railroad, 155 Mass. 176); that in such cases
it is the right of action of the deceased which is brought into
court by those who have it by survivorship, and that, as the test
of jurisdiction is the citizenship of the person in whom the right
of action was originally vested, and the action is entertained if
that person was a citizen of Ohio and declined if he was a citizen
of another state, there is, in a real and substantial sense, a
discrimination forbidden by the Constitution.
If such a case should arise, and be denied hearing in the Ohio
courts by the Ohio law, then, as the denial would be based upon the
citizenship of that person in whom the right of action originally
vested, it might be necessary to consider whether the Ohio law did
not, in substance, grant privileges to Ohio citizens which it
withheld from citizens of other states. But no such case is before
us. The Pennsylvania statute which created the right of action
sought to be enforced in the Ohio courts has been construed by the
courts of Pennsylvania. The applicable section is section 19 of the
act of 1851. Of it the Pennsylvania court said in
Fink v.
Garman, 40 Pa. 95:
"The 18th section was apparently intended to regulate a common
law right of action by securing to it survivorship; but the 19th
section was creative of a new cause of action, wholly unknown to
the common law. And the right of action was not given to the person
suffering the injury, since no man could sue for his own death, but
it his widow or personal representatives. It was not survivorship
of the cause of action which the legislature meant to provide for
by this section, but
Page 207 U. S. 151
the creation of an original cause of action in favor of a
surviving widow or personal representative."
This is the settled interpretation of the act.
Mann v.
Weiand, 81 1/2 Pa. 243; Pennsylvania Railroad v. Bock,
93
Pa. 427; Engles' Estate, 21 Pa.C.C. 299;
McCafferty v.
Pennsylvania Railroad, 193 Pa. 339. It appears clearly,
therefore, that the cause of action which the plaintiff sought to
enforce was one created for her benefit and vested originally in
her. She has not been denied access to the Ohio courts because she
is not a citizen of that state, but because the cause of action
which she presents is not cognizable in those courts. She would
have been denied hearing of the same cause for the same reason if
she had been a citizen of Ohio. In excluding her cause of action
from the courts the law of Ohio has not been influenced by her
citizenship, which is regarded as immaterial. We are unable to see
that, in this case, the plaintiff has been refused any right which
the Constitution of the United States confers upon her, and
accordingly the judgment is
Affirmed.
* Sections 18 and 19 of the Act of April 15, 1851, are as
follows:
"SEC. 18. No action hereafter brought to recover damages for
injuries to the person by negligence or default shall abate by
reason of the death of the plaintiff; but the personal
representatives of the deceased may be substituted as plaintiff,
and prosecute the suit to final judgment and satisfaction."
"SEC. 19. Whenever death shall be occasioned by unlawful
violence or negligence, and no suit for damages be brought by the
party injured, during his or her life, the widow of any such
deceased, or, if there be no widow, the personal representatives,
may maintain an action for and recover damages for the death thus
occasioned."
Sections 1 and 2 of the Act of April 26, 1855, are as
follows:
"SEC. 1. The persons entitled to recover damages for any injury
causing death shall be the husband, widow, children, or parents of
the deceased, and no other relative, and the sum recovered shall go
to them in the proportion they would take his or her personal
estate in case of intestacy, and that without liability to
creditors."
"SEC. 2. The declaration shall state who are the parties
entitled in such action; the action shall be brought within one
year after the death, and not thereafter."
By § 21, Article III, of the Constitution of the State of
Pennsylvania of 1874, it is provided as follows, to-wit:
"SEC. 21. No act of the General Assembly shall limit the amount
to be recovered for injuries resulting in death, or for injuries to
person or property, and in case of death from such injuries the
right of action shall survive, and the General Assembly shall
prescribe for whose benefit such actions shall be prosecuted."
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, concurring:
Although I do not dissent from the reasoning of the judgment, I
prefer to rest my agreement on the proposition that, if the statute
cannot operate as it purports to operate, it does not operate at
all. I do not think that it can be presumed to mean to give to all
persons a right to sue in case the Constitution forbids it to make
the more limited grant that it attempts.
Connolly v. Union
Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S. 540,
184 U. S. 565.
Apart from the statute, no one can maintain an action like this in
Ohio. I may add that I do not understand that there is anything in
the judgment that contradicts my opinion as to the law.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE WHITE and
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, dissenting:
The plaintiff in error, Elizabeth M. Chambers, a citizen of
Pennsylvania, sought by this action against the Baltimore and
Page 207 U. S. 152
Ohio Railroad Company, in the Common Pleas Court of Mahoning
County, Ohio, to recover damages on account of her husband's death
in Pennsylvania in 1902 -- his death having been caused, it was
alleged, by the negligence of the defendant railroad company while
operating a part of its line in Pennsylvania. The railroad company
was brought into court by due service of summons, and there was a
trial resulting in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff
for $3,000. The case was carried upon writ of error to the Circuit
Court of Mahoning County, and the judgment was there affirmed. That
judgment of affirmance was reversed by the Supreme Court of Ohio,
with directions to enter judgment for the railroad company.
That the laws of Pennsylvania give a right of action in favor of
the widow of a deceased whose death is "occasioned by unlawful
violence or negligence" is not disputed. It is equally clear that
the present plaintiff's cause of action is not local, but is
transitory, in its nature, and, speaking generally, can be
maintained in any jurisdiction where the wrongdoer may be found and
be brought before the court.
Dennick v. Railroad Company,
103 U. S. 11;
Stewart v. B. & O. R. Co., 168 U.
S. 445.
By a statute of Ohio (1902) in force when this action was
brought, it was provided that
"whenever the death of a citizen of this state has been or may
be caused by a wrongful act, neglect, or default in another state,
territory, or foreign country, for which a right to maintain an
action and recover damages in respect thereof is given by a statute
of such other state, territory, or foreign country, such right of
action may be enforced in this state within the time prescribed for
the commencement of such action by the statute of such other state,
territory, or foreign country."
95 Ohio Laws 401. By a previous statute (1894), suits of that
kind were allowed in Ohio when death was caused by a wrongful act,
negligence, or default in another state if such suits were allowed
in the state where the death occurred. But that statute, as stated
by the court in this case, was repealed by the above act of 1902.
So that the
Page 207 U. S. 153
court in the present case held that the act of 1902 changed the
former law in two essential particulars:
"1. It dispenses with the condition that the state in which the
wrongful death occurs shall enforce in its courts the statute of
this State of like character. 2. It in terms limits the right
therein given to maintain an action in this state for wrongful
death occurring in another state, to actions for causing the death
of
citizens of Ohio, where as original section
6134
a gave such right without limitation or restriction as
to citizenship."
Again, the court said:
"Having regard, then, to the scope and effect of the provisions
of the section amended, and to the special character of the
amendments made, we think it clear that the legislature, by the
adoption of amended § 6134
a [the act of 1902],
undertook and intended thereby to limit and restrict the right to
recover in the courts of this state for a wrongful death occurring
in another state, to those cases where the person killed was at the
time of his death, a citizen of Ohio."
That there may be no mistake as to the decision, I quote the
official syllabus of the present case, which, by the law of Ohio,
is to be taken as indicating the point actually in judgment:
"No action can be maintained in the courts of this state upon a
cause of action for wrongful death occurring in another state,
except where the person wrongfully killed was a
citizen of the State of Ohio."
73 Ohio St. 1.
It thus appears that the final judgment in this case for the
railroad company rests upon the distinct ground that the courts of
Ohio cannot, under the statute of that state, take cognizance of an
action for damages on account of death occurring in another state
and caused by wrongful act, neglect, or default,
except
where the person wrongfully killed was a citizen of Ohio. In that
view, if two persons, one a citizen of Ohio and the other a citizen
of Pennsylvania, traveling together on a railroad in Pennsylvania,
should both be killed, at the same moment and under precisely the
same circumstances, in consequence of the negligence or default of
the railroad company, the courts of Ohio are closed by its statute
against any suit
Page 207 U. S. 154
for damages brought by the widow or the estate of the citizen of
Pennsylvania against the railroad company, but will be open to suit
by the widow or the estate of the deceased citizen of Ohio,
although, by the laws of the state where the death occurred, the
widow or estate of each decedent would have, in the latter state, a
valid cause of action.
Is a state enactment having such effect repugnant to the clause
of the federal Constitution, Art. IV, § 2, which declares that
"the citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and
immunities of citizens in the several states?" Will not that
constitutional guaranty be shorn of much of its value if any state
can reserve, either for its own citizens or for the estates of its
citizens, privileges and immunities which, even where the facts are
the same, it denies to citizens or to the estates of citizens of
other states?
It is not necessary to fully enumerate the privileges and
immunities secured against hostile discrimination by the
constitutional provision in question. All agree that among such
privileges and immunities are those which, under our institutions,
are fundamental in their nature. I cordially assent to what is said
upon this point in the opinion just delivered for the majority of
the Court. The opinion says:
"In the decision of the merits of the case, there are some
fundamental principles which are of controlling effect. The right
to sue and defend in the courts is the alternative of force. In an
organized society, it is the right conservative of all other
rights, and lies at the foundation of orderly government. It is one
of the highest and most essential privileges of citizenship, and
must be allowed by each state to the citizens of all other states
to the precise extent that it is allowed to its own citizens.
Equality of treatment in this respect is not left to depend upon
comity between the states, but is granted and protected by the
federal Constitution. . . . The privileges which it [the state]
affords to one class it must afford to the other. Any law by which
privileges to begin actions in the courts are given to its own
citizens and withheld from the citizens of other
Page 207 U. S. 155
states is void, because in conflict with the supreme law of the
land."
These views are supported by the former decisions of this and
other courts. In the leading case of
Corfield v. Coryell,
4 Wash.C.C. 371, 380, Mr. Justice Washington said:
"The inquiry is what are the privileges and immunities of
citizens in the several states? We feel no hesitation in confining
these expressions to those privileges and immunities which are, in
their nature, fundamental, which belong, of right, to the citizens
of all free governments, and which have at all times been enjoyed
by the citizens of the several states which compose this Union,
from the time of their becoming free, independent, and sovereign.
What these fundamental principles are it would, perhaps, be more
tedious than difficult to enumerate."
Among the particular privileges and immunities which are clearly
to be deemed fundamental, the court in that case specifies the
right "
to institute and maintain actions of any kind in the
courts of the state."
In
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168,
75 U. S. 180,
the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Field, said:
"It was undoubtedly the object of the clause in question [Const.
Art. IV, § 2] to place the citizens of each state upon the
same footing with citizens of other states, so far as the
advantages resulting from citizenship in those states are
concerned. It relieves them from the disabilities of alienage in
other states; it inhibits discriminating legislation against them
by other states; it gives them the right of free ingress into other
states, and egress from them; it insures to them in other states
the same freedom possessed by the citizens of those states in the
acquisition and enjoyment of property and in the pursuit of
happiness, and it secures to them in other states the equal
protection of their laws. It has been justly said that no provision
in the Constitution has tended so strongly to constitute the
citizens of the United States one people as this. Indeed, without
some provision of the kind removing from the citizens of each state
the disabilities of alienage in the other states, and giving them
equality of privilege with citizens of
Page 207 U. S. 156
those states, the Republic would have constituted little more
than a league of states; it would not have constituted the Union
which now exists."
So, in
Ward v.
Maryland, 12 Wall. 418,
79 U. S. 430,
the Court, after referring to
Corfield v. Coryell, above
cited, and speaking by Mr. Justice Clifford, stated that the right
"to maintain actions in the courts of the state" was fundamental,
and was protected by the constitutional clause in question against
state enactments that discriminated against citizens of other
states.
Referring to the cases just cited, and to the constitutional
clause in question, Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the Court in
the
Slaughter-House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 77,
said:
"Its sole purpose was to declare to the several states that
whatever those rights, as you grant or establish them to your own
citizens, or as you limit or qualify, or impose restrictions on
their exercise, the same, neither more nor less, shall be the
measure of the rights of citizens of other states within your
jurisdiction."
In
Cole v. Cunningham, 133 U.
S. 107,
133 U. S. 144,
the present CHIEF JUSTICE, speaking for the Court, said:
"The intention of section 2 of Article IV was to confer on the
citizens of the several states a general citizenship, and to
communicate all the privileges and immunities which the citizens of
the same state would be entitled to under the like circumstances,
and this includes the right to institute actions."
In the more recent case of
Blake v. McClung,
172 U. S. 239,
172 U. S. 256,
the Court said:
"We must not be understood as saying that a citizen of one state
is entitled to enjoy in another state every privilege that may be
given in the latter to its own citizens. There are privileges that
may be accorded by a state to its own people in which citizens of
other states may not participate except in conformity to such
reasonable regulations as may be established by the state.
For
instance, a state cannot forbid citizens of other states from suing
in its courts, that right being enjoyed by its own people, but
it may require a nonresident, although a citizen of another state,
to give bond for costs, although such bond be not required of a
resident. Such
Page 207 U. S. 157
a regulation of the internal affairs of a state cannot
reasonably be characterized as hostile to the fundamental rights of
citizens of other states. . . . The Constitution forbids only such
legislation affecting citizens of the respective states as will
substantially or practically but a citizen of one state in a
condition of alienage when he is within or when he removes to
another state, or when, asserting in another state the rights that
commonly appertain to those who are part of the political community
known as the people of the United States, by and for whom the
government of the Union was ordained and established."
These cases, I think, require the reversal of the judgment of
the supreme court upon the ground that it denies to the plaintiff a
right secured by the Constitution of the United States. The statute
of Ohio, we have seen, closes the doors of the courts of that state
against the present plaintiff alone because her deceased husband
was not, at the time of his death, a citizen of Ohio. Thus, every
citizen of Ohio, when in another state for whatever purpose, is
accompanied by the assurance on the part of his state that its
courts will be open for suit by his widow or representative if his
death, while in another state, is caused by the negligence or
default of another person or company. But that privilege is denied
by the Ohio statute to the representative of citizens of other
states meeting death under like circumstances. Indeed, if a citizen
of Ohio should go into another state, and, while there,
willfully or by some wrongful act, neglect, or default on
his part, cause the death of someone, although he might be liable
to a suit for damages in the state where death occurred, yet, if
sued for damages in the courts of his own state, he need only plead
in bar of the action in Ohio that the decedent was not at the time
of his death a citizen of Ohio. Such, it seems to me, is the
operation of the statute of Ohio as it is interpreted by the court
below.
The Supreme Court of Ohio, it will be observed, does not base
its judgment upon any common law of the state apart from its
statutes. It says:
"From a consideration of the statutes
Page 207 U. S. 158
hereinbefore referred to, and the former decisions of this
Court, we think it must now be held to be the recognized policy and
established law of this state that an action for wrongful death
occurring in another state will not be enforced in the courts of
this state
except where the person killed was, at the time
of his death, a citizen of Ohio."
It places its judgment on its statutes and judicial decisions,
which it regards as together indicating the policy and law of the
state to be such as to preclude an action for damages except where
the deceased was a citizen of Ohio. That exception, upon whatever
basis it may be rested, must fall before the Constitution of the
United States and be treated as a nullity. The denial to the widow
or representative of Chambers of the right to sue in Ohio upon the
ground that he was not a citizen of Ohio when killed was the
denial, in every essential sense, of a fundamental privilege
belonging to him under the Constitution in virtue of his being a
citizen of one of the states of the Union -- the right to sue and
defend in the courts of justice, which right this Court concedes to
be "one of the highest and most essential privileges of
citizenship." While in life, Chambers enjoyed the right -- and it
was a most valuable right -- of such protection as came from the
rule established in Pennsylvania that, in case of his death in
consequence of the negligence of others, the wrong done to the
deceased in his lifetime could be remedied by means of suit brought
in the name and for the benefit of his widow or personal
representative. But Ohio takes this right of protection from him,
for the Ohio court would have taken cognizance of this action if
the decedent, Chambers, had been, when killed, a citizen of Ohio,
while it denies relief to his widow, and puts her out of court
solely because her husband was, when killed, a citizen of another
state. It thus accords to the Ohio widow of a deceased Ohio citizen
a privilege which it withholds from the Pennsylvania widow of a
deceased Pennsylvania citizen. If the statutes of Ohio had excluded
from the jurisdiction of the courts of that state
all
actions for damages on account of death, a different question would
be presented. But that is
Page 207 U. S. 159
not what Ohio has assumed to do. As already shown, it allows
suits for damages like the present one where the death occurred in
another state,
provided the deceased was a citizen of Ohio, but
prohibits them where he was a citizen of some other state. The
final judgment in this case therefore denies a fundamental right
inhering in citizenship, and protected by section 2 of Article IV
of the Constitution. The Constitution is the supreme law of the
land. But it would not be supreme if any right given by it could be
overridden either by state enactment or by judicial decision. In
Higgins v. Central New England &c. Railroad, 155 Mass.
176, 180, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, after
referring to transitory causes of action which did not exist at
common law, but were created by the statute of another state and
passed to the administrator of the deceased, said:
"When an action is brought upon it here, the plaintiff is not
met by any difficulty upon these points. Whether our courts will
entertain it depends upon the general principles which are to be
applied in determining the question whether actions founded upon
the laws of other states shall be heard here. These principles
require that, in cases of other than penal actions, the foreign
law, if not contrary to our public policy, or to abstract justice
or pure morals, or calculated to injure the state or its citizens,
shall be recognized and enforced here, if we have jurisdiction of
all necessary parties, and if we can see that, consistently with
our own forms of procedure and law of trials, we can do substantial
justice between the parties."
The statute of Pennsylvania which gave the plaintiff, as widow
of the deceased, a right to sue for damages does not offend natural
justice or good morals, nor is it calculated to injure the citizens
of any state, not even those of Ohio, nor can it be said to offend
any policy of that state which has been made applicable equally to
its own citizens and citizens of other states. The case is plainly
one in which Ohio attempts, in reference to certain kinds of
actions that are maintainable in perhaps every State of the Union,
including Ohio, to give to its own citizens privileges which it
denies, under like circumstances,
Page 207 U. S. 160
to citizens of other states. To a citizen of Ohio it says:
"If you go into Pennsylvania, and are killed while there, in
consequence of the negligence or default of someone, your widow may
have access to the Ohio courts in a suit for damages, provided the
wrongdoer can be reached in Ohio by service of process."
But to the citizen of Pennsylvania it says:
"If you come to your death in that state by reason of the
negligence or default of someone,
even if the wrongdoer be a
citizen of Ohio, your widow shall not sue the Ohio wrongdoer
in an Ohio court for damages, because, and only because, you are a
citizen of another state."
This is an illegal discrimination against living citizens of
other states, and the difficulty is not met by the suggestion that
no discrimination is made against the widow of the deceased because
of her citizenship in another state. The statute of Pennsylvania in
question had in view the protection of persons, while alive,
against negligence or default causing death. It must have had that
object in view. I submit that no state can authorize its courts to
deny or disregard the constitutional guaranty that the citizens of
each state shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities
of citizens in the several states.
With entire respect for the views of others, I am constrained to
say that, in my opinion, so much of the local law, whether
statutory or otherwise, as permits suits of this kind for damages
where the deceased was a citizen of Ohio, but forbids such suits
where the deceased was not a citizen of Ohio, is unconstitutional.
The judgment under review should be reversed.