The Federal Employers' Liability Act, insofar as it deals with
the subjects to which it relates, is paramount and exclusive, and
recovery under it can be had only in the mode prescribed, and by
and for the persons in whose favor it creates and bestows a right
of action.
The Federal Employers' Liability Act contains no definition of
who are to constitute the next of kin to whom it grants a right of
recovery, and the absence of such definition indicates the purpose
of Congress to leave the determination of that question to the
state law.
Page 240 U. S. 490
There is no merit in the contention that Congress intended that
the term "next of kin" was used in the Employers' Liability Act in
its common law significance, and as excluding all persons not
included in that term under the common law. The ruling of the state
court in this case that the next of kin of an intestate who was
illegitimate were his half brothers and sisters legitimately born
of the same mother excludes by implication the possibility of an
asserted father's being the parent and person entitled to recover
under the Employers' Liability Act.
167 N.C. 14 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction and application of the
Employers' Liability Acts of 1908 and 1910 and the determination of
who are the next of kin entitled to maintain an action thereunder
are stated in the opinion.
Page 240 U. S. 491
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The trial court, on the verdict of a jury, entered judgment
against the plaintiff in error for the sum of $800 for the
negligent killing of Capehart, who was one of its employees, and
this writ of error is prosecuted to reverse the action of the court
below affirming such judgment. 167 N.C. 14. At the time of his
death, Capehart was a minor, and was employed by the defendant
company as a switchman. The accident occurred in North Carolina on
an interstate freight train moving from a point in North Carolina
to one in Virginia. The suit to recover was specifically based on
the Employers' Liability Act of April 22, 1908, 35 Stat. 65, c.
149, as amended April 5, 1910, 36 Stat. 291, c. 143, and as both
parties concede that that act was applicable, that subject may be
put out of view.
Page 240 U. S. 492
The deceased was a natural or illegitimate child, born in North
Carolina, and the next of kin for whose benefit the administrator
sued, he having been qualified at the alleged domicil of the
deceased in North Carolina, were three minor children of the
deceased's mother, the issue of a marriage by her contracted after
his birth, she, the mother, being dead at the time of the accident.
There was no question in the court below as to nonliability because
of an absence of negligence, since, as pointed out by the court,
the sole contention pressed upon it for reversal was that the
damages for the death had been awarded to persons who were not
entitled to the recovery as next of kin under the act of Congress,
even although they were the next of kin by the law of the state.
Thus, the court said:
"The sole contention of the defendant requiring our
consideration is that the expression 'next of kin,' as used in
§ 1 of this act [the act of Congress], is to be construed by
the common law, disregarding the state law defining those
words."
After then quoting from the state statute on the subject, the
court further said:
"It is very clear that, in North Carolina, the two half brothers
and the sister of the intestate are his next of kin. It seems to us
immaterial whether it were formerly otherwise in this state, either
by statute or the common law before any statute. The question is,
who was the 'next of kin' at the time of such death in the state
where the wrongful death occurred?"
Proceeding to examine and decide this question, it was held that
next of kin for the purpose of the recovery under the act of
Congress were the next of kin as established by the law of the
state where the right to recover obtained. And it is the
correctness of this ruling which we are alone called upon to
consider, since, despite the great number of assignments of error
which are made, they all, in last analysis, depend upon that
question. We need not stop to review the assignments to demonstrate
this fact, since in argument they are all stated as embracing the
solution of three
Page 240 U. S. 493
inquiries which, as we shall see when we consider them, will be
virtually disposed of by deciding the single question concerning
the correctness of the ruling of the court below as to the next of
kin under the statute. The three questions thus stated are in
substance as follows: first, whether the minor children, who, under
the law of North Carolina, were the next of kin of their natural or
illegitimate brother, because of their common motherhood, were the
the next of kin under the act of Congress?; second, if, in the
absence of a parent, they were so, would the proof of the existence
of an asserted father of the deceased make such person his parent
within the act of Congress, excluding the right of the next of kin
to recover the damages?; third, if the minor brothers and sister
were next of kin under the act of Congress, had they such
dependency on the deceased as gave them any right to recover under
the act?
We consider the questions separately.
1. There can be now no question that the act of Congress,
insofar as it deals with the subjects to which it relates, is
paramount and exclusive. It is therefore not disputable that
recovery under the act can be had alone in the mode and by and for
the persons or class of persons in whose favor the law creates and
bestows a right of action.
Second Employers' Liability
Cases, 223 U. S. 1;
Mich. Cent. R. Co. v. Vreeland, 227 U. S.
59;
Taylor v. Taylor, 232 U.
S. 363;
Seaboard Air Line v. Horton,
233 U. S. 492,
233 U. S. 501.
But this is irrelevant, since the controversy concerns only the
meaning of the act, which it is conceded, when rightly interpreted,
is entitled to exclusive operation.
Plainly the statute contains no definition of who are to
constitute the next of kin to whom a right of recovery is granted.
But as, speaking generally, under our dual system of government,
who are next of kin is determined by the legislation of the various
states to whose authority that subject is normally committed, it
would seem to be clear that the absence of a definition in the act
of Congress
Page 240 U. S. 494
plainly indicates the purpose of Congress to leave the
determination of that question to the state law. But, it is urged,
as next of kin was a term well known at common law, it is to be
presumed that the words were used as having their common law
significance, and therefore as excluding all persons not included
in the term under the common law -- meaning, of course, the law of
England as it existed at the time of the separation from the mother
country. Leaving aside the misapplication of the rule of
construction relied upon, it is obvious that the contention amounts
to saying that Congress, by the mere statement of a class -- that
is, next of kin -- without defining whom the class embraces, must
be assumed to have overthrown the local law of the states and
substituted another law for it; when conceding that there was power
in Congress to do so, it is clear that no such extreme result could
possibly be attributed to the act of Congress without express and
unambiguous provisions rendering such conclusion necessary. The
truth of this view will be made at once additionally apparent by
considering the far-reaching consequence of the proposition, since,
if it be well founded, it would apply equally to the other
requirements of the statute -- to the provisions as to the
surviving widow, the husband and children, and to parents, thus,
for the purposes of the enforcement of the act, overthrowing the
legislation of the states on subjects of the most intimate domestic
character, and substituting for it the common law as stereotyped at
the time of the separation. The argument that such result must have
been intended, since it is to be assumed that Congress contemplated
uniformity -- that is, that the next of kin entitled to take under
the statute should be uniformly applied in all the states, after
all comes to saying that it must be assumed that Congress intended
to create a uniformity on one subject by producing discord and want
of uniformity as to many others.
But we need go no further, since the want of merit in the
Page 240 U. S. 495
contention is fully demonstrated by authority. In
Hutchinson
Investment Co. v. Caldwell, 152 U. S. 65, the
matter under consideration was § 2269 Rev.Stat., giving to the
heirs of a deceased preemptor who had died before completing his
entry the right to perfect the same, the statute providing:
"But the entry in such cases shall be made in favor of the heirs
of the deceased preemptor, and a patent thereon shall cause the
title to inure to such heirs, as if their names had been specially
mentioned."
The controversy was whether the word "heirs" under the statute
should be taken in its common law meaning, and therefore not to
give a right to complete the entry to illegitimate children who had
been recognized by their father, the preemptor, and who were his
heirs under the law of the State of Kansas, where the land was
stipulated and where the deceased preemptor was domiciled. The
Court said:
"We are unable to concur with counsel for plaintiffs in error
that the intention should be ascribed to Congress of limiting the
words 'heirs of the deceased preemptor' as used in the section to
persons who would be heirs at common law (children not born in
lawful matrimony being therefore excluded), rather than those who
might be such according to the
lex rei sitae, by which,
generally speaking, the question of the descent and heirship of
real estate is exclusively governed. If such had been the
intention, it seems clear that a definition of the word 'heirs'
would have been given, so as to withdraw patents issued under this
section from the operation of the settled rule upon the subject. .
. . But it is contended that the word 'heirs' was used in its
common law sense, and it is true that technical legal terms are
usually taken, in the absence of a countervailing intent, in their
established common law signification; but that consideration has no
controlling weight in the construction of this statute. Undoubtedly
the word 'heirs' was used as meaning, as at common law, those
capable of inheriting, but it does not follow that the question
as
Page 240 U. S. 496
to who possessed that capability was thereby designed to be
determined otherwise than by the law of the state which was both
the situs of the land and the domicil of the owner."
Pp.
152 U. S. 68-69.
And there is no ground for taking this case out of the rule thus
announced upon the theory that the controversy involved the title
to real estate, contracts concerning which are governed by the law
of the situs, since we are dealing here with the subject of next of
kin, which, so far as legislative power is concerned, under our
constitutional system of government, is inherently local and to be
determined by the rules of the local law. And this is well
illustrated by
Blagge v. Blach, 162 U.
S. 439, which involved a controversy as to the
distribution of French spoliation claims awarded under an act of
Congress providing
"that in all cases where the original sufferers were adjudicated
bankrupts, the awards shall be made on behalf of the next of kin
instead of to assignees in bankruptcy. . . ."
Without going into detail concerning the controversy in that
case, it suffices to say that, if the next of kin entitled to take
under the act of Congress had been ascertained under the rule of
the common law, there would have been one result, and if determined
by the law of the state controlling distributions, another and
different result followed. Coming to determine the significance of
the words "next of kin" from the act itself and its context, the
Court said:
"And we are of opinion that Congress, in order to reach the next
of kin of the original sufferers, capable of taking at the time of
distribution, on principles universally accepted as most just and
equitable, intended next of kin according to the statutes of
distribution of the respective states of the domicil of the
original sufferers."
2 and 3. The suggestion, rather than contention that, if the
state law be held applicable to determine next of kin, the right
should have been recognized to seek to trace the paternity of the
illegitimate child, so as to make the
Page 240 U. S. 497
asserted father the parent under the statute, might well be
disposed of by saying that no such contention seems to have been
urged in either of the courts below. But, aside from this, the
entire want of merit of the proposition is at once demonstrable
from a two-fold point of view: (a) because it was necessarily
foreclosed by the ruling of the court below as to the state law
concerning the next of kin and the right of the brothers and sister
of the illegitimate child to inherit from him solely because of a
common motherhood -- a ruling which excluded by necessary
implication the right now contended for; (b) because, as no
provision, either of the state law or of the common law, supporting
the asserted right is referred to, the suggestion may be taken as
simply a typical illustration of the confusion of thought involved
in the main proposition relied upon which we have previously
adversely disposed of.
Insofar as it is suggested that there was no proof tending to
show a dependent relation between the next of kin who were
recognized and the deceased, so as to justify recovery under the
statute, it suffices to say that it was expressly foreclosed by the
finding of the jury, sanctioned by the trial court, and was not
questioned in the court below, and at all events involves but a
controversy as to the tendencies of all the proof, foreclosed by
the action of both courts, which we would not reverse without a
clear conviction of error, which, after an examination of the
record on the subject, we do not entertain.
Great Northern Ry.
v. Knapp, 240 U. S. 464.
Affirmed.