This is а wrongful death action arising from a car-truck accident which occurred on highway 280 south of Toledo, Ohio, on July 29,1964. 1 The deceased, Arthur Odell Cannon, was the passenger in a car driven by Felix Walls; he was a residеnt of Detroit, Michigan.
The complaint in this case was filed on behalf of Margie Cannon as administratrix of the estate of the decedent; James and Margie Cannon as the parents of decedent; Jacqueline Kay Allen as decedent’s posthumous illegitimate child; and Gladys Allen as the intended wife of the deceased. This suit came to trial as a consolidated case with Walls v. Transamerican (see footnote 1, supra). Before selection of the jury, dеfense counsel made a motion to dismiss all parties plaintiff except the administratrix of decedent’s estate. Defendant argued that under the Ohio wrongful death statute 2 the only proper plaintiff is the administratrix of decedent’s estate. The court subsequently granted defendant’s motion and at the same time denied plaintiffs’ motion to amend their pleadings to include a claim of damages for the pain and suffеring decedent endured between the accident and his death.
Plaintiffs appeal these rulings and raise three issues which we shall deal with ad seriatim. Plaintiffs first argue that it was error for the trial judge to dismiss all parties exceрt the administratrix upon an oral motion made on the date of trial since defendant made no attack against the pleadings prior to that time. We find no error. “Parties may *316 be added or dropped by order of the court on motion of any party * # * at any stage of the action and on such terms as are just.” GCR 1963, 207.
Plaintiffs also argue that it was unfair of the trial court to refuse to permit plaintiffs to amend their pleаdings to include the suffering borne by decedent prior to his death. Such matters rest with the discretion of the trial judge. GCR 1963, 118.1. We do not feel that it was an abuse of discretion to deny the motion given that it was made when the case came up for trial. Upon remand following this decision the circumstances will be changed and the trial judge would again be free to exercise his discretion should a similar motion be made. We note that GCR 1963, 118.1 provides that such motions should be freely granted.
The final assignment of error involves the status of the alleged posthumous illegitimate child of decedent. This argument raises serious constitutional questions which werе not briefed by either party, but which, in the interest of justice, we feel compelled to consider.
The Ohio wrongful death act (Ohio Revised Code § 2125.02), under which this suit was brought, provides in pertinent part:
“An action for wrongful dеath must be brought in the name of the personal representative of the deceased person, but shall be for the exclusive benefit of the surviving spouse, the children, and other next of kin of the decedеnt.”
In order to determine the status of the alleged posthumous illegitimate child of decedent, we must resolve two issues: first, whether, in Ohio, a child may bring suit for injuries which are alleged to have occurred prior to his birth, and, second, whether the fact of the child’s illegitimacy will preclude it from recovering for the wrongful death of its father.
*317
Regarding the first issue, the Ohio courts have held that an action may he maintained for the wrongful death of a viable unborn child which is subsequently stillborn as the result of prenatal injuries.
Stidam
v.
Ashmore
(1958), 109 Ohio App 431 (
On the basis of these holdings by the Ohio cоurts, it is clear that if the child here in question had been a posthumous legitimate child of decedent, he would have been a proper beneficiary under the Ohio wrongful death statute.
Having determined that the fаct that the child is posthumous is not a bar to his status as a beneficiary under a wrongful death action in Ohio, we must now consider the second issue: whether the fact of his illegitimacy will bar his recovery under such a suit. In a case directly on point, the Court of Appeals of Ohio determined that the word “children” within the wrongful death statute referred only to legitimate children, and therefore a posthumous illegitimate child was not еntitled to participate in an action for the wrongful death of its putative father.
Bonewit
v.
Weber
(1952), 95 Ohio App 428 (
However, the Supreme Court of the United States has recently held that it is a violation of the Equal Protection Clause оf the Fourteenth Amendment for a state’s wrongful death statute to deny illegiti
*318
mate children a cause of action for the wrongful death of their mother while granting such an action to legitimate children.
Levy
v.
Louisiana
(1968),
Scarcely one month after these decisions by the United States Supreme Court, the Supreme Court of Ohio ruled that an illegitimate child does not have a right to support from its putative father. In reaching this decision, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled that the
Levy
case was limited to the mother-child relationship, and was therefore inаpplicable in a case regarding the rights of an illegitimate child against its putative father.
Baston
v.
Bears
(1968), 15 Ohio St 2d 166 (
Subsequеnt comments upon, and constructions of, the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Levy
and
Glona
lends support to the argument made by the minority in
Bastón.
Two subsequent comments on the
Levy
decision by Mr. Justice Douglas, the author of the majority opinions in both
Levy
and
Glona,
and one subsequent comment on the
Levy
decision by Mr.
*319
Justice Marshall make it clear that Mr. Justice Douglas did not intend that thosе decisions should be read to refer solely to the mother-child relationship, but rather that they should be read to mean that discrimination between children solely on the basis of their legitimacy or illegitimacy is an invidious discrimination and contrary to the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In
King
v.
Smith
(1968),
“The other day in a comparable situation we held that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment barred discrimination against illegitimate children. We held that they cannot be denied a cause of action because they were conceived in ‘sin,’ that the making of such a disqualification was an invidious discriminаtion. Levy v. Louisiana [citation omitted].”
In
Dandridge
v.
Williams
(1970),
“Indeed, governmental discrimination between children on the basis of a factor over which they have no control — the number of their brothers and sisters — bears some resemblance to the classification between legitimate and illegitimate children which we condemned as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause in Levy v. Louisiana.”
Finally, in
United States
v.
Vuitch
(1971),
Furthermore, the Supreme Court’s decision in
Levy
has been cited as authority for the proposition
*320
that an illegitimate child may not be denied a cause of action for the wrongful dеath of its father merely because it is illegitimate;
Hebert
v.
Petroleum Pipe Inspectors, Inc.
(CA 5, 1968), 396 F2d 237;
Schmoll
v.
Creecy
(1969), 54 NJ 194 (
We therefore conclude that the interpretation placed upon the Levy decision by the Supreme Court of Ohio in Bastón was erroneous. It is cleаr, both from the subsequent comments of Mr. Justice Douglas, and from subsequent interpretations of the Levy decision by other courts, that the United States Supreme Court’s decision in that case is not limited to the rights of illegitimates in rеlation to their mother, but rather stands for the proposition that distinguishing between the rights of children on the basis of their legitimacy or illegitimacy with regard to either parent is an invidious discrimination and runs afoul of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We are of the opinion that had this case arisen in the courts of Ohio, the courts of that state would have decided not to follow the rule of the Bastón casе, and would grant the illegitimate child a cause of action for support against its putative father, and by the same token a cause of action for the wrongful death of its putative father.
However, suсh a conclusion does not form an essential part of our decision here. The courts of
*321
this state are not bound by the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution to recognize a cause of аction which is permissible in another state, but which runs afoul of the public policy of this, state.
Kircher
v.
Kircher
(1939),
Since both the child’s mother and its putative father were residents of this state, we further hold that the pаternity of the child should be established according to the laws of Michigan.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The circumstances of this accident are irrelevant to our disposition of this case. They are fully set forth in our opinion in the companion case of
Walls
v.
Transamerican Freight Lines
(1971),
The case was tried under the law of Ohio. No argument regarding the propriety of the application of Ohio law is raised.
