These actions were brought in Missouri by the appellee, a Missouri administratrix, to recover damages, under a statute of Illinois, for wrongful deaths. The actions were tried together before a jury, which returned a verdict in each case for the plaintiff. From the judgments entered, the defendant has appealed, challenging (1) the capacity of the plaintiff to sue, (2) the ruling of the trial court that a release executed by Lorine Reddin was not a bar to the actions, and (3) the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdicts.
Clarence Reddin was the husband of Lor-ine Reddin, and Mary Elizabeth Reddin was their daughter. As the result of injuries caused by a collision between the automobile in which the Reddin family were riding and a tractor or truck with a semi-trailer attached belonging to the defendant, which collision occurred on a public highway in Illinois on September 2, 1939,-Clarence Reddin and Mary Elizabeth Red-din died.
Lorine Reddin was, on March 16, 1940, appointed by the Probate Court of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, administratrix of the estates of her deceased husband and daughter. Plaintiff commenced these actions in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, asserting that the deaths of her husband and daughter were due to the negligent operation of the defendant’s motor vehicle, and that, by virtue of the wrongful death statute of Illinois (Cahill & Moore’s 1935 Revised Statutes of Illinois, Chap. 70, §§ 1, 2, Ill.Rev.Stat.1941, c. 70, §§ 1, 2), she was entitled to damages “for the exclusive benefit of the widow and next of kin of such deceased person[s],” as provided by that statute. The cases were removed to the court below by defendant because of diversity of citizenship.
1. The first contention of the defendant is that, under the law of Missouri, a Missouri administratrix may not maintain an action in the courts of Missouri based upon the wrongful death statute of another state. If the defendant has the confidence in this contention which it professes, it seems strange that it removed these actions from a state court — which court would, if defendant is right, be bound to dismiss the actions — to a federal court which had already definitely ruled that, under Missouri law, actions under the Illinois wrongful death statute can be maintained in Missouri by an administratrix appointed in Missouri. See Richter v. East St. Louis & S. Ry. Co., D.C.Mo.,
The Illinois wrongful death statute imposes upon a person who negligently causes the death of another in that state an obligation to respond in damages to “the personal representatives of such deceased person,” and provides that an action to enforce the obligation shall be brought by and in the name of the personal representatives, and that any damages recovered shall be for the exclusive benefit of the widow and next of kin of the deceased. It is obvious that there is nothing in the law of Illinois which limits the right to enforce the obligation created to a personal representative appointed in Illinois, or requires that the obligation be enforced only in the courts of Illinois. It seems clear that, unless the laws of Missouri forbid the enforcement of a cause of action for wrongful death arising under the laws of another state, by an administratrix- appointed in Missouri, the plaintiff has the capacity to maintain these actions.
The exact question with which we are confronted was considered by the late Judge Charles B. Faris while a United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, in 1927. No one can question his qualifications to rule upon a question of Missouri law. He was a distinguished lawyer and jurist of that State and had served as a member of its highest court. In Richter v. East St. Louis & S. Ry. Co., supra,
In Husted v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co.,
This probably would have been accepted as the law of Missouri had it not been for certain language used by the Supreme Court of Missouri in Schueren v. St. Louis & N. E. Ry. Co.,
The Supreme Court of Missouri has given this statute full force and effect. Lee v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co.,
The defendant refers to language in the cases of Rositzky v. Rositzky, 1939,
It is our opinion that, under the laws of Missouri, the plaintiff had the capacity to maintain these actions.
2. Did the trial court err in ruling that these actions were not barred by reason of the fact that Lorine Reddin had on September 12, 1939 (prior to her appointment as administratrix), entered into a settlement with the defendant and executed a release of all liability, demands or claims growing out of the accident in which her husband and daughter were killed? The release provided, among other things, as follows: “This instrument is a full and complete release and is to foreclose the said Lorine Redden from making any further claims whatsoever either for herself or because of the deaths of her husband and daughter, or because of the injuries to the said other minor children,
The trial court rejected evidence offered by defendant to establish the defense of release, and ruled out that defense. The wrongful death statute of Illinois conferred no causes of action upon Lorine Reddin and her four minor children as individuals. Lorine Reddin, as an individual, was not the sole beneficiary of the actions authorized by the Illinois statute, and could not release the defendant from the obligations imposed by the statute. See Maney v. Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co.,
3. Was the defendant entitled to directed verdicts? In deciding that question we must assume as established all of the facts that the evidence supporting the plaintiff’s claims reasonably tends to prove, and must draw ih the plaintiff’s favor all the inferences fairly deducible from such facts. Elzig v. Gudwangen, 8 Cir.,
The collision which was the source of these actions occurred about 1 P. M. on September 2, 1939. The Reddin car was traveling easterly on a paved highway in Illinois. The pavement was 18 feet wide with the usual line marking its center. The Reddin car was in the lane south of the line. Approaching the Reddin car, and traveling westerly, was a large motor vehicle belonging to defendant, consisting of a truck or tractor and semi-trailer. The tractor was about 10 feet long and the semi-trailer 22 feet long. The width of the vehicle was about 7 feet 10 inches. If it was traveling in the middle of the north side of the paved portion of the highway, there would be a clearance of about 7 inches from the north edge of the pavement and the same clearance from the center of the pavement. In passing the Reddin car, the left front corner of the semi-trailer collided with the left side of the Reddin car, virtually demolishing that side of the car. After the vehicles had come to rest, the Reddin car was still facing east and was on the right or south side of the center line. Clarence Reddin’s body was lying on the center line beside the car. He had been killed. Mary Elizabeth Reddin, who had been seated behind him in the car, was so badly injured that she died shortly thereafter. The Kroger vehicle was in the ditch on the north side of the highway.
There can be no doubt that the plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the Reddin car was at all times on the south lane, where it belonged. Lorine Reddin was beside her husband in the front seat of the car, holding a two-year old child. Three other children were in the rear seat with Mary Elizabeth. Lorine Reddin testified that she looked down at the child in her lap shortly before the collision; that she looked up and saw a large object in front of her “about middleways of the mark,” “on our side of the highway”; añd that the crash followed. The theory of the defendant that the Reddin car, just prior to the collision,, turned to the left and ran into the front end of the semi-trailer is impaired by the facts that the front endi of the Reddin car was not damaged, that the bulk of the debris resulting from the collision was on the south side of the pavement, and that, although the Kroger vehicle, according to defendant’s evidence,, had immediately prior to the collision, been turned to the right on the north side of the highway and was then off or on its way off the pavement, the Reddin car came to rest on the south side of the center line. We think that the jury reasonably might infer from the evidence most favorable to plaintiff that the front end of the semitrailer angled over the center line into the-path of the Reddin car. To discuss the evidence in detail would serve no useful! purpose. The physical facts do not disprove plaintiff’s claim that the Kroger semi-trailer was partly on the south side-of the highway when the collision occurred and that its being there caused the-collision. This case bears a strong resemblance to the case of Elzig v. Gudwangen, 8 Cir.,
Affirmed.
