The right of action for wrongful death is purely statutory. It may be brought only “by the executor, .administrator, or collector of the decedent.” G.S. 28-173. A widow, -a© such, -has no right of action for the death of -her husband.
Howell v. Comrs.,
Prior to the enactment of Chapter 246, Sess. Laws of 1951 (now codified as G.S. 1-53(4)) which amended G.S. 28-173, the institution of an action for wrongful death within one year after such death was a condition precedent to maintaining the action. All other requirements of the section were .also strictly construed. See annotation to G.S. 28-173. The amendment removed the time limitation as a condition annexed to the cause of action and made it a two-year statute of limitations.
McCrater v. Engineering Corp.,
The ma.j ority rule is that an amendment which changes the capacity in Which a plaintiff sues does not change the cause of action so as to let in the defense of the statute of limitations. Annot.,
It is true that in the caption of the complaint 'and summons plaintiff did not designate herself as administratrix. When a suit is brought ■by a fiduciary he should indicate his representative capacity in the caption off the pleadings, but the .character in which a party sues must be determined from the complaint and not from the caption.
Refining Co. v. Bottling Co.,
Bennett v. R. R., supra, involved an action for .wrongful death commenced by the widow of the decedent-on July 4, 1910. An examination of -the record of that case reveals (,as the reported case doeis- not) that she alleged in her 'complaint that ishe had been 'duly appointed as ad-ministratrix. The complaint itself had no caption but in the caption of *692 the summons the plaintiff’s name appeared only as .an individual. On Maircih 11, 1912, the defendant moved to dismiss 'because plaintiff “failed to file a 'complaint in .this action as required by statute.” The plaintiff then -moved to amend the summons by adding the word “ad-ministratrix” after her name. The judge allowed this motion. The Supreme Court reversed mud dismissed the action saying that the effect of the amendment was “to- change the entire character of the action and to convert that which iwa;s the individual action of Mary E. Bennett into one by ¡her in her representative capacity as administratrix.” The 'court held this could not be done more than a year after the death. On the record the Bennett case appears -to have been wrongly decided.
-Ordinarily an -amendment of -process and pleadings may be allowed in the discretion of the court to correct a misnomer or mistake in ¡the name of a party where the amendment does not amount to a substitution or entire change -of parties..
Bailey v. McPherson,
However, the right to amend i-s not the primary question 'here. The difficulty in this case As that at the time plaintiff filed her complaint alleging that she was the -duly -appointed administratrix of Graves, that allegation was denied and it was not true. At that time the cause of -action for wrongful death was not barred -by the- applicable two-year -statute of limitations. When -her letters were actually issued, however, her intestate had -been dead more than- five year's. It -is obvious, therefore, that unless -the plaintiff’s appointment as administratrix related back to the institution of this action, -or to the time the order adjudicating her right to letters w.as -signed, it cannot survive defendant’s denial oif the -allegations in paragraph one of the complaint.
In ¡order to .protect property rights and to protect one Who, prior to Ibis appointment, has acted to preserve -the estate, .it is the universal rule that all previous acts o-f the personal representative prior to his appointment Which were beneficial -in nature to the estate and which would h-a-ve been within the scope of his -authority had he been duly -qualified,
me
validated up-o-n- his appointment which relates -back to -the death -of the -intestate for this purpose.
Jones v. Jones,
Althongjh the appointment o-f an ladmin-istrator relates back to- the date o-f the death of decedent for many purposes, the courts are not *693 in -accord -as -to -whether it will relate back iso- as to- validate an action brought prior to- the appointment.
In Gatfield agt. Hanson, et al, 57 How. Pr. (N.Y.) 331, the heirs, mot purporting to -act for the estate, instituted the action to collect a mortgage which decedent owned at the -time of her death. Thereafter one of them was appointed administrator. In -dismissing the action, the court-said: “As John H. Gatfield had no- legal title or right to the mortgage when the action was -commenced, his subsequent -appointment cannot uphold the suit. The question- is, what -right had he when he instituted the suit? His -subsequent appointment as administrator de bonis non cannot give validity to -an- action commenced before the -appointment.
In
Pearson v. Anthony,
Iowa,
In
Clinchfield Coal Corporation v. Osborne’s Adm’r.,
In
Griffin v. Workman,
Fla.,
In
Anderson v. Union Pac. R. Co.,
Utah,
It is a long established rule in the Federal courts that a lack of letters of administration may be cured, and an objection to. want of capacity to sue, may be avoided by amendment or by substitution of the proper party at any time before hearing. Later appointments of this mature will relate back and validate the proceedings from the beginning regardless of the statute of limitations.
Lopez v. United States, supra; Deupree v. Levinson,
A case on all fours with the instant case is
Douglas v. Daniels Bros. Coal Co.,
. (T)he motion -to dismiss, was based upon a mere technicality. The plaintiff having fully qualified as administrator, before the case was reached for trial, every right of the defendants upon the merits of the case was fully preserved, and in no possible aspect could the delay in perfecting the bond and receiving the letters of administration prejudice the defense of the defendants ■upon the real meritorious question involved in the controversy, which -was whether or not the defendants’ negligence was the cause of the death.” Douglas v. Daniels,62 Ohio App. 1 ,22 N.E. 2d 1003 .
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Ohio sustained the Court of Appeals, saying:
“The amendment corrects the allegations of the petition with ■respect to plaintiff’s capacity to sue and relates to the right of action as contradistinguished from the cause of action. A night of action is remedial, while a cause of action is substantive, and an amendment of the former does not affect the substance of the latter. See 1 Bouv. Law Dict., Rawles Third Revision, page 295; Pomeroy’s Code Remedies, 5th Ed., 526 et seq., Section 346 et seq.; 1 Cyc., 642. An amendment which does not substantially change the cause of action may be made even after the statute of limitations has run.
“We hold that where a widow -institutes an action as administra-trix, for damages for the wrongful death of her husband, under the mistaken belief that «he had been duly appointed and had qualified as such, thereafter discovers her error and amends her petition so as to- show that she was appointed administratrix after *696 the expiration of tike 'Statute of limitation applicable to such action, the amended petition will relate tack to the date of the ■filing -of it)he petition, and) the action will be deemed commenced within the time limited by statute.”
This case was the subject of an annotation in 123 A.L.R. 768 (1939) in which the commentator stated that mo other case had been found which involved the question of an amendment to a complaint after Imitation had run-, so as to allege the subsequent valid 'appointment of a plaintiff who. had professed to bring the action initially in his representative capacity as executor or administrator..
The Ohio Court has since made it 'dear that the doctrine of relation back validates only those actions of .a personal -representative which ■are for tire benefit of the estate. Where it was discovered that letters -otf .administration had been applied for but not issued to -the
defendant administrator
until after the expiration of the statute of limitations
m
to a tart -action against the estate, the -court held there was no relation back.
Wrinkle v. Trabert,
We think that the reasoning of the Ohio Court in Douglas v. Daniels Bros. Coal Co., supra, is sound -and -applicable to -the facts of the instant oas-e. Unlike Pearson v. Anthony, supra, our case -was not instituted by one pretending to be -the administrator. Plaintiff, in good faith, and with some reason, -albeit mistakenly, believed herself to- be the duly appointed administratrix of the estate of Paul Junior Graves -at the time she instituted the suit. Prior to the filing of the complaint plaintiff had -applied- for appointment; the Clerk 'had entered an order adjudging that she was entitled to letters of administration upon taking (the oath and giving the -bond. She had taken the oath, signed the bond as principal, and left it with the Clerk pending the signature o-f the surety. The bond recites that it was signed, sealed, and delivered in the presence of Madge C. Parker, Assistant Clerk of -the Superior Court of Guilford County on August 7, 1958. The signature of the surety w-as the -only remaining requirement for the issuance of letters. It is noted that .the claim for wrongful death was -the only ¡asset of the estate and at that stage of the proceedings -a nominal bond would have sufficed.
The basis of defendant’s motion to dismiss the action is wholly technical. He ih-ais in nowise been prejudiced iby the course of events. We 'therefore hold -that, when issued, plaintiff’© letters related back to the commencement of the action which was brought for the benefit of the estate prior to the bar of the statute of limitations, and- that the complaint may properly be amended to allege ¡the true facts. However, we must not be understood as holding that -one who has never applied for letters or Who, having applied, had no reasonable grounds for be *697 lieving •that be bad been duly appointed, nan institute an action for wrongful death, or any other ■cause, upon a false allegation of appointment .and thereafter validate that allegation by a subsequent appointment. We think that the Iowa Court 'correctly dealt .with a pretender.
For the reasons stated, the order of the court below dismissing the action is
Reversed.
