With jurisdiction based solely on diversity of citizenship, this
action was brought in a Federal District Court in New York to
recover under the California Wrongful Death Statute for the death
in California of a passenger on an airplane operated by a
California corporation. Applying what it believed to be applicable
California law, as declared by its intermediate appellate
tribunals, the District Court dismissed the action as barred by
limitations, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: the judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated,
and the case is remanded to that Court for reconsideration in the
light of a considered dictum of the Supreme Court of California,
announced after the ruling of the District Court and not brought to
the attention of the Court of Appeals, which might lead to a
different result. Pp.
365 U. S.
293-296.
Reported below: 276 F.2d 280.
PER CURIAM.
This action was brought in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of New York to recover damages for the
wrongful death of Jasper W. Hall, a resident of South Carolina, who
was killed in California in the crash of an airplane operated by
defendant-respondent Transocean Air Lines. Plaintiffs, petitioners
here, are
Page 365 U. S. 294
the decedent's South Carolina-appointed administrator,
decedent's widow, and decedent's minor child, who sues through the
widow, her mother, appointed her guardian
ad litem by the
District Court. Federal jurisdiction was predicated solely on
diversity of citizenship -- the administrator being a New York
resident, the widow and child South Carolina residents, the airline
a California corporation with its principal place of business in
California -- and the substantive basis of the claim was
California's Wrongful Death Statute, Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 377,
made applicable by the New York choice of law rules,
see
Baldwin v. Powell, 294 N.Y. 130, 61 N.E.2d 412, which govern
this diversity action.
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
304 U. S. 64;
Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., 313 U.
S. 487. The defendant, by its answer, set up the Statute
of Limitations, and subsequently moved for summary judgment on the
ground that the action was time-barred. Enforcing the one-year
limitations period deemed controlling under Cal.Code Civ.Proc.
§ 340, brought into operation by New York's "borrowing
statute," N.Y.Civil Practice Act, § 13, the District Court
held that the Statute had run as to the widow, and hence that the
child and the administrator were also barred under the California
doctrine, announced by California District Courts of Appeals in
Sears v. Majors, 104 Cal. App. 60, 285 P. 321, and
Haro v. Southern P. R. Co., 17 Cal.
App. 2d 594, 62 P.2d 441, that, where one beneficiary of a
wrongful death claim is time-barred, all beneficiaries are
time-barred, the cause of action being "joint." 173 F. Supp. 114.
There was no decision on this precise point by the Supreme Court of
California; that court had left
Sears and
Haro
undisturbed.
See also Gates v. Wendling Nathan
Co., 27 Cal. App. 2d
307, 81 P.2d 173;
Glavich v. Industrial Accident
Commission, 44 Cal. App. 2d
517, 112 P.2d
Page 365 U. S. 295
774 (dictum). The District Court's order granting the motion for
summary judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit. 276 F.2d 280. We granted certiorari. 363 U.S.
836.
The writ brought here several points decided adversely to
petitioners below. We need discuss only one issue, for its
determination disposes of the case. The
Sears and
Haro cases, regarded by the District Court and the Court
of Appeals as controlling the effect upon a claim for wrongful
death of the running of the Statute of Limitations upon one but not
upon another of the decedent's heirs (the latter being under a
limitations-tolling disability), were decided in 1930 and 1936,
respectively, and
Gates in 1938, by California District
Courts of Appeal. In December, 1959, the Supreme Court of
California, en banc, decided
Leeper v.
Beltrami, 53 Cal. 2d
195, 1 Cal. Rptr. 12, 347 P.2d 12, 22, which, in a considered
dictum construing Cal.Code Civ.Proc. § 352, stated:
"If the cause of action were a joint one, the statute would be
tolled as to both. 'If an action not severable is not barred as to
one of the parties on account of his infancy at the time the cause
of action arose, it is not barred as to either of the other
parties.'"
Id., 53 Cal. 2d at 208-209, 1 Cal. Rptr. at 22, 347
P.2d at 22.
This case was handed down after the District Court's ruling
granting summary judgment for respondent in the present litigation,
and only shortly before argument in the Court of Appeals. It was
not brought to the attention of, and was not considered by, that
court. Inasmuch as the view expressed therein by the highest court
of California may be decisive of an issue critical to petitioners'
claims, and inasmuch as the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
is charged with mandatory appellate review in the present case,
that court should decide what relative weights, as authoritative
sources for ascertaining
Page 365 U. S. 296
California law, the New York Court of Appeals would accord to
the
Sears-Haro line (direct holdings of District Courts of
Appeal between 1930 and 1933) and to
Leeper (a considered,
relevant dictum of general scope by the California Supreme Court in
1959). We set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand
to that court for reconsideration of the case in light of the new
factor introduced by
Leeper v. Beltrami, supra.
So ordered.