The plaintiff, a resident of Pennsylvania, sued under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, as administratrix appointed in that state of onе, Briggs, her husband, likewise a resident of Pennsylvania, who was killed while in the defendant’s employ. She originally sued without ancillary letters grantеd in New York; but she later secured these based upon a petition which did not however allege that Briggs had had any personаl property in that state other than the cause of action here in suit. At the trial the defendant admitted liability, but challenged the plaintiff’s capacity to sue either as domiciliary, or as ancillary, ad-ministratrix. As to the first, it invoked the usual doctrine that the court of another state will not recognize a domiciliary administrator who has not secured ancillary letters; as to the second, it alleged that the Surrogate of New York County who had appointed the plaintiff, had had no jurisdiction. § 45(3) of the New York Surrоgate’s Act. The judge sustained both these objections, but took a verdict for the plaintiff, and then directed judgment for the defendаnt. The plaintiff does not seek to sustain her appeal upon the theory that her ancillary letters were valid under New Yоrk law, and for that reason alone we shall not consider whether it was proper to disregard those letters; we shall therе *842 fore confine ourselves to the only question debated: i. e., whether a domiciliary administrator may sue upon the right of action created by the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, in the court of a state other than that of domicil.
The plaintiff asks us to reverse the judgment on the authority of our decision in Cooper v. American Airlines, Inc.,
In Anderson v. Louisville & Nashville R. Co.,
Although the domiciliary administrator by taking out ancillary letters may sue in a court of the state which grants them, he may be unable, аs in the case at bar, to secure them under the probate law of the only state where he can get jurisdiction over thе defendant; or under the law of that state where he can most conveniently sue. Particularly, when we consider that the Federal Employers’ Liability Act has been extended to seamen, the impediment of such a limitation upon his authority appeаrs to be serious and unj-ust. Indeed, the authority of the domiciliary administrator to sue outside the domicil would seem, as a new question, to be quite
*843
as well grounded as that of an ancillary administrator to sue in his own state. If §51 creates a new right for the benefit of those mentioned, it would seem that it might be deemed vested in the “representative” of their domicil, who might therefore sue anywhere, likе a trustee. If, on the other hand, the “representative” is merely the “nominal plaintiff” as he was called in Stewart v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co., supra,
Judgment reversed; judgment to be entered for the plaintiff on the verdict.
