39 Kan. 56 | Kan. | 1888
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question presented for decision here is, whether plaintiff has set up and shown a right of action in her favor against the railroad company maintainable in the courts of this state. Her husband, as is alleged, was injured upon the railroad of the defendant company on September 17, 1885, through the negligence of its servants, and he died on September 23, 1885. The injury and death occurred in Mis
By other courts it is held that the right of action in such cases does not depend on whether it is a statutory or common-law right; but where a right of action becomes fixed and a legal liability incurred under the statute law of a state, such action is transitory, and the liability may be enforced in the courts of any state which has jurisdiction of such matters, and can obtain jurisdiction of the parties. (Dennick v. Rld. Co.,
In some, and perhaps most of the cases last cited, the right of a court of one state to enforce such a legal liability incurred under a statute of another state, is placed on the ground that the statutes of both states are similar. The statutes of Kansas and Missouri are far from being identical. In Kansas, the right of action accrues to the personal representative of the deceased, for the benefit of the widow and children, or next of kin; while in Missouri, the right of action is refused to the personal representative, but is granted to the husband or wife, (if action is instituted within six months,) to the exclusion of the children. If the husband or wife fails to bring the action within that time, the minor children, if there are any, have the sole right to bring it for their own benefit. In Kansas, the personal representative may recover for the loss inflicted according as the proof may show, to an amount not exceeding ten thousand dollars, and the amount recovered inures to the exclusive benéfit of the widow and children, if any, or next of kin, to be distributed in the same manner as the personal property of the deceased. In Missouri, certain designated relatives recover a fixed amount of five thousand dollars, regardless of what the proof may show to be a just compensation to them for the death of the person killed; and it is in the nature of a penalty; the language of the statute being that defendant “shall forfeit and pay for every person or passenger so dying the sum of five thousand dollars.” The dissimilarity of these statutes has already been referred to and pointed out. [McCarthy v. Rld. Co., supra; Vawter v. Mo. Rac. Rly. Co., 84 Mo. 679.)
Other of the cases proceed upon the theory that a liability incurred under a statute of one state for such injury, may be enforced in another state, notwithstanding the common law