This is a diversity suit to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by plaintiff’s decedent between the date of his injury and his death. The District Court, on defendants’ motion, dismissed the suit and plaintiff has appealed.
Decedent, a resident of South Carolina, was injured there September 1, 1958 while operating a power lawn mower made by Starbrand Corporation of Indiana and sold and delivered to decedent by Aldens, Inc., an Illinois mail order corporation. A part of the mower broke off and a piece of metal pierced decedent’s body. As a result of the injury he died October 7, 1958.
The District Court decided that plaintiff’s cause of action based on the South Carolina survival statute
1
was not enforceable in Illinois. It applied the Illinois conflict of laws rule in anticipation of Illinois court action in a like situation, since there was no Illinois case precisely in point to which it could refer
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for controlling precedent. This was its function in this diversity case as “anothther court” Allstate Ins. Co. v. Charneski, 7 Cir.,
We are to decide whether the Illinois conflict of laws rule as interpreted by the District Court offends the Full Faith and Credit clause of the United States Constitution.
Plaintiff relies upon the conflict of laws rule stated by the Illinois Supreme Court in Chicago & E. I. R. R. Co. v. Rouse,
There is no doubt that the South Carolina survival statute is not against good morals or natural justice and no Illinois court would hold that it is, should a situation similar to the one at bar arise. Furthermore, Illinois policy is to keep its courts open to residents and nonresidents alike. James v. Grand Trunk Western R. R. Co.,
Admittedly there is no statute in Illinois which prohibits plaintiff’s cause of action. We think, however, it must be stated that Illinois law is against South Carolina’s survival statute in so far as it creates the cause of action presented by plaintiff, and despite the lack of an Illinois statute we see a virtual prohibition in the conflicts rule of the Illinois cases.
In Holton v. Daly,
We think there is a basic opposition between the South Carolina survival statute and the Illinois policy as expressed by the Illinois courts. Furthermore, we
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think that the opposition may be said to be “antagonistic.” The emphasis by the court in Susemiehl implies this; and the legislature has not since Holton in 1882 changed the rule although it has amended the wrongful death
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and survival
3
statutes on several occasions. It is our opinion that the rule in Illinois against actions of the kind plaintiff presents must be considered a “deep-rooted tradition of the commonweal.” Loucks v. Standard Oil Co.,
The Rouse case, aside from the rule it stated, is distinguishable on its facts. There, both Illinois and Indiana reeognized the basic doctrine of respondeat superior. Here, the doctrines of survival ®f. acti°ns in event of death from the injury are opposed.
In Hughes v. Fetter,
M Plaintiff contends that failure to enforce the survival action in Illinois *would nullify a valid cáuse of action under South Carolina law, Code of Laws South Carolina, § 10-209 (1952), since neither of defendants is amenable to service of process in that state, citing Springs Cotton Mills v. Machinecraft, Inc.,
We need nQt dedde wbether the gouth Carolína statute is procedural rather than gubstantive
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«The history of the Erie doctrine hag been continuaI re_ ^ from conclusionary labeis or me. chanical golutiong and an increasi em. phasisbasbeenpiaCedontheconsideratíon and aecommodation of the basic gtate and federal' policy goals involved. By this standard we must determine this cage/, Allstate Ins. Co. v. Charneski, 7 Cir.,
For the reasons given, we conclude that the Illinois conflict of laws rule as interpreted by the District Court does not offend the Full Faith and Credit clause of the United States Constitution, and the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Code of Laws of South Carolina, § 10-209 (1952).
. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 70, §§ 1, 2 (1961).
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 3, § 339 (1961)
We refer, however, to Grant v. McAuliffe,
