Decedent, who met his death in Idaho from the wrongful act of
defendant railroad company left a wife and mother who, under the
laws of Idaho, were his sole and equal heirs. The wife qualified as
administratrix in Tennessee, and, having obtained power from the
probate court of that state, to settle with defendant, sued as
administratrix in Washington and recovered, without contest, a
judgment which was paid. The mother applied in the Tennessee
probate court for one-half of the recovery, but the demand was
contested by the wife successfully. The mother had already sued in
Idaho, and defendant set up the judgment in Washington, but the
Idaho state court held that the mother's right was not barred, as
the administratrix did not represent her in the Washington suit.
Held that
While the right given by the law of one state may be enforceable
in another state, if the law is not opposed to its policy, when so
enforced, as the liability springs from the law of the enacting
state, it is governed thereby.
When suit is brought in another jurisdiction, such provisions of
the law of the place of the wrongful act as are merely procedural
may be treated as nonessential, but the obligation itself has its
source in that law, and if it is an action for damages for wrongful
death, that law must be looked to, to determine not only what the
obligation is, but to whom it runs and the persons for whose
benefit recovery may be had.
The statute of Idaho giving a remedy for the wrongful death, as
construed by the highest court of the state, is similar to Lord
Campbell's Act in that the recovery is not for the benefit of the
estate of the decedent, but for the benefit of his heirs as
established by the law of the state.
The attempt of the mother to obtain a part of the proceeds of
the Washington judgment did not, as her right to do so was
successfully denied, amount to a ratification.
Page 237 U. S. 488
The Idaho court was not bound to regard the Washington judgment
as having been prosecuted by or on behalf of the mother, and, in so
doing, did not fail to give to such judgment full faith and credit
under the Constitution of the United States.
23 Idaho 642 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the right of enforcement in one a
liability created under the statute of another state and the extent
to which a judgment recovered by an administratrix may affect a
claim by an heir of the intestate, are stated in the opinion.
Page 237 U. S. 492
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
Mary Elizabeth Whitley, the defendant in error, recovered
judgment in the District Court for the county of Kootenai, Idaho,
for the sum of $5,500 as damages for the death of her son, A. P.
Whitley, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the
railroad company, the plaintiff in error. The supreme court of the
state affirmed the judgment (23 Idaho 642), and this writ of error
is prosecuted. It is assigned as error that the court failed to
give due faith and credit, as required by the federal Constitution,
to a judgment recovered in the State of Washington by Josephine
Whitley, as administratrix of the estate of the deceased A. P.
Whitley, for the same cause of action.
The facts upon which the question arises are these: the railroad
company operates an electric railway between the City of Spokane,
in the State of Washington, and Coeur d'Alene, in the State of
Idaho. On July 31, 1909, A. P. Whitley, a passenger, was killed in
a collision at or near La Cross or Gibbs Station, Idaho, and the
court found that his death was caused by the defendant's
negligence. The law of the State of Idaho provided:
"When the death of a person, not being a minor, is caused by the
wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs or personal
representatives may maintain an action for damages against the
person causing the death."
(Rev.Codes, § 4100.) The deceased at the time of his death,
was a resident of Shelby County, Tennessee. He was survived by his
wife, Josephine Whitley, and his mother, Mary Elizabeth Whitley,
the defendant in error. Under the Idaho law, they were his sole
heirs. In September, 1909, the railroad company entered into an
agreement with Josephine Whitley, promising to pay to her the sum
of $11,000 on account of the death of her husband, of which $1,500
was paid at once and the remainder was to be paid
Page 237 U. S. 493
upon her appointment as administratrix in Tennessee. Thereupon,
in October, 1909, Josephine Whitley obtained from the probate court
of Shelby County, Tennessee, letters of administration upon her
husband's estate, and by that court was authorized to settle with
the railroad company for the sum above stated. Shortly after, on
October 25, 1909, the mother of the deceased brought the present
action against the railroad company in the State of Idaho.
Josephine Whitley, having refused to join as a party plaintiff, was
made a defendant. She was not within the jurisdiction of the Idaho
court, and did not appear; under order of that court, a copy of the
summons and complaint was served upon her without the state.
In view of the commencement of this suit, the railroad company
refused to carry out the agreement with Josephine Whitley, and she,
as administratrix (in November, 1909), brought an action against
the company in the superior court of the State of Washington to
recover the sum of $9,500 alleged still to be due. In her complaint
she set forth her appointment as administratrix, the negligence of
the defendant causing the death of the intestate, the statute of
Idaho, the settlement for $11,000 authorized by the probate court
of Tennessee, and the partial payment. It was not alleged that the
mother, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, was an heir under the laws of
Idaho, where the cause of action arose, or that any recovery was
sought on her behalf. The railroad company, in its answer, denied
the wrongful act and set forth as an affirmative defense that the
mother had sued in Idaho, was one of the heirs, and was entitled to
maintain her action, and that, if the plaintiff succeeded, the
defendant would be exposed to a double recovery. The administratrix
replied, alleging that she had full authority under the laws of
Idaho to agree to a settlement of the claim, and that the
settlement would be a bar to a recovery in the Idaho action. Mary
Elizabeth Whitley
Page 237 U. S. 494
was not a party to the Washington suit, and no attempt was made
to bring her in. It was swiftly determined, without contest.
Service of the answer was acknowledged on November 16, 1909, and
the reply was served on November 17, 1909. The cause was brought to
trial on November 18, 1909; the pleadings were filed shortly after
9 o'clock on the morning of that day; at 9:45 o'clock findings were
filed (with a conclusion of law overruling the defense of the
railroad company), and at 10 o'clock on the same morning judgment
was entered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $9,500.
The railroad company at once paid to Josephine Whitley the
amount of the judgment, and she removed this amount to the State of
Tennessee. In the early part of the year 1910, the mother presented
her petition to the probate court of Shelby County, Tennessee,
alleging that the administratrix had recovered by compromise the
sum of $11,000, and that the petitioner, as an heir under the Idaho
law, was entitled to one-half. The demand was contested, and the
petition was dismissed. On appeal to the Supreme Court of
Tennessee, the judgment was affirmed; it was held that the fund
recovered by the administratrix was "to be distributed in
accordance with the laws of the State of Tennessee, and not the
laws of the State of Idaho," and that the mother had no interest in
the proceeds of the recovery.
After these proceedings, the railroad company amended its answer
in the present suit in Idaho, and pleaded in bar the Washington and
Tennessee judgments. These defenses the Idaho court overruled, and,
as we have said, the mother recovered judgment for $5,500.
In determining the question now presented, it is apparent that
the fundamental consideration is that the right to recover damages
for the killing of the decedent was created by the Idaho statute.
That right could be enforced in another state if the enforcement
was not
Page 237 U. S. 495
opposed to its policy (
Dennick v. Railroad Company,
103 U. S. 11;
Texas & Pacific Ry. v. Cox, 145 U.
S. 593), but, wherever enforced, the liability sprang
from the Idaho law, and was governed by it. Where suit is brought
in another jurisdiction, it has been held that such provisions of
the law of the place of the wrongful act as can be deemed to be
merely procedural may be treated as nonessential (
Stewart v.
Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., 168 U. S. 445;
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. v. Sowers,
213 U. S. 55;
Tennessee Coal, Iron & R. Co. v. George, 233 U.
S. 354), but it is clear that the obligation itself has
its source in that law. We must look to the Idaho statute to
determine what the obligation is, to whom it runs, and the persons
by whom or for whose benefit recovery may be had.
Slater v.
Mexican National R. Co., 194 U. S. 120,
194 U. S.
126-127;
Western Union Telegraph Company v.
Brown, 234 U. S. 542,
234 U. S.
547.
The construction of that statute by the Supreme Court of Idaho,
with respect to the nature of the right of action created, is in
accord with the accepted view of statutes similar to Lord
Campbell's act. The recovery authorized is not for the benefit of
the "estate" of the decedent; the proceeds of the recovery are not
assets of the estate. Where the personal representative is entitled
to sue, it is only as trustee for described persons -- the "heirs"
of the decedent. The action, says the Supreme Court of Idaho, is
allowed upon the theory that the wrongful killing of the ancestor
"works a personal injury to his heirs." They are the sole
beneficiaries. The "heirs" are those who, under the laws of Idaho,
take in cases of intestacy; here, it is conceded that these heirs
were the widow and mother of the deceased, taking equally. 23
Idaho, pp. 659, 662. It may also be premised that, when suit is
duly brought by the trustee under such a statutory trust, it is a
necessary and conclusive presumption that the trust will be
executed and that the rights of the beneficiaries
Page 237 U. S. 496
as fixed by the statute which created the obligation will be
recognized by all courts before whom the question of distribution
may come.
Dennick v. Railroad Company, 103 U. S.
11,
103 U. S. 20. It
follows necessarily that, if Josephine Whitley, as administratrix,
was authorized to sue on behalf of the mother, and she recovered as
trustee by virtue of that authority, the Washington judgment
constituted an adjudication of the mother's right, and as such
would be entitled to full faith and credit in other states,
including Idaho; in that case, the fact that the Tennessee court
subsequently denied the right of the mother to her share as one of
the beneficiaries would present simply the case of an erroneous
determination which could not operate to destroy the estoppel of
the judgment. Judicial error on a trustee's accounting does not
disturb the rights which have become fixed in suits prosecuted by
the trustee against third persons.
The question, then, is one of jurisdiction -- that is, whether
the mother, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, was represented by the
administratrix in the Washington suit. The mother was not a party
to that suit, and if she was not represented by the administratrix,
the Washington court was without jurisdiction as to her, and the
Idaho court was not bound to treat the judgment as a bar to her
recovery in the present suit.
Thompson v.
Whitman, 18 Wall. 457,
85 U. S. 463,
85 U. S. 469;
National Exchange Bank v. Wiley, 195 U.
S. 257,
195 U. S. 270;
Haddock v. Haddock, 201 U. S. 562,
201 U. S. 573;
Fauntleroy v. Lum, 210 U. S. 230,
210 U. S. 237.
The matter is not one of mere form or procedure, and it is manifest
that the authority of the administratrix to represent the mother
without her consent, if that authority existed, could be derived
only from the Idaho statute. Not only did the Tennessee court deny
that the Tennessee law conferred the right to represent the mother,
but the State of Tennessee was powerless to confer it contrary to
the statute which gave the cause of
Page 237 U. S. 497
action. The same is true with respect to the State of
Washington, where the suit was brought, and there, it may be
observed, it has been held under the local statute giving (as does
that of Idaho) the right of action for the wrongful killing of the
decedent to "heirs or personal representatives" that the personal
representative is not entitled to recover unless it be shown that
the designated beneficiaries have sanctioned the bringing of the
action.
Copeland v. Seattle, 33 Wash. 415, 421;
Koloff
v. Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry., 71 Wash. 543,
550-551.
The Supreme Court of Idaho, having authority to construe the
Idaho statute, has held that the administratrix did not represent
the mother, and consequently that the mother's right was not
barred. The court thus expressed its conclusion:
"It clearly appears then, first, that the respondent in this
case, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, had no right of action and no claim
whatever under the laws of the State of Tennessee; second, that she
was never made a party to the action prosecuted in the State of
Washington, and that the action there prosecuted was not prosecuted
for her or in her interest or on her behalf, and that she was
neither accorded representation there in person nor by trustee,
administrator, or other representative. She has therefore clearly
never been a party to the Washington judgment, and is not bound by
that judgment. (
Galveston, H. & A.S. R. Co. v. Kutac,
72 Tex. 643.)"
23 Idaho, p. 658.
It is left to the plaintiff in error to contend, in substance,
that the Idaho court sustained the right of a personal
representative -- that is, of a duly appointed administrator -- to
sue under the Idaho statute for the benefit of the "heirs," but
denied credit to the judgment in question, recovered in virtue of
that right, simply because of the subsequent decision of the
Tennessee court in refusing to permit the
Page 237 U. S. 498
mother to participate in the proceeds of the recovery, and
extracts from the opinion of the Idaho court are quoted in support
of the argument. It seems to us that this is too narrow a view of
the decision of the state court. We think that the decision, taken
in its full scope and with its necessary implications, involves the
construction of the statute to the effect that the "heirs" are
entitled to sue on their own behalf, and that the statute does not
give to an administrator or personal representative an independent
right of action, or authority to bind the heirs without their
sanction, but an administrator is authorized by the statute to sue
only on their behalf and with their consent. As has been said,
similar words in the statute of the State of Washington have been
similarly construed.
See Copeland v. Seattle, supra,
(cited in the opinion of the Idaho court);
Koloff v. Chicago,
Milwaukee & Puget Sound Ry., 71 Wash. 543, 550-551. And,
under that construction, there is no basis for the conclusion in
the present case that the mother was represented in the Washington
suit, and that she was bound by the judgment there recovered. It is
insisted that the mother ratified by endeavoring to obtain in
Tennessee a share of the recovery. But this was a wholly barren
proceeding. The administratrix resisted the petition, denying in
effect that she had represented the mother in the Washington suit
and asserting that the mother had no interest whatever in that
action or the proceeds. The court upheld this contention of the
administratrix, and the mother took nothing. Neither the position
of the widow nor that of the railroad company was changed in any
respect, and it cannot be said that this unsuccessful attempt
altered the mother's rights.
It is apparent that the railroad company cooperated with the
administratrix in securing the judgment in her favor, without
bringing the mother in as a party, and without demanding that proof
of authorization of the suit by
Page 237 U. S. 499
the mother should be furnished. Had the railroad company made
such a demand, there is no reason to believe that it would not have
been sustained. Relying upon what appears to be an erroneous
construction of the Idaho statute, it preferred to facilitate the
administratrix in obtaining the recovery in the absence of the
mother, and without its being shown that the suit was brought in
her interest and with her authority, and the predicament in which
it now finds itself is due solely to its own conduct.
Judgment affirmed.