Opinion
Plaintiff Mitsui Bank appeals an order quashing service of summons on defendant Karen Tucker, administratrix of the estate of Oral W. Tucker, Jr., deceased, for lack of personal jurisdiction.
*430 But for the fortuity of death, the propriety of California jurisdiction would be unchallenged.
On July 6, 1982, California residents Oral Tucker and his business associate, William Aubry, borrowed $30,000 from Mitsui’s San Diego, California office. Oral lived in San Diego, his principal place of business was in San Diego, and he intended to use the loan money for that business in California. The loan was to be repaid in San Diego.
When Oral died on September 7, 1982, his wife Karen, who had moved from California to Arizona the previous week, was appointed administratrix of his estate in Maricopa County, Arizona. Mitsui filed a creditor’s claim with the Arizona court for the balance on the note, but it was denied for procedural reasons. Mitsui then sued Karen in her representative capacity in San Diego County Superior Court. Karen appeared specially in the San Diego proceeding, asking the court to quash service of summons (Code Civ. Proc., 1 § 418.10) on the ground, among others, that California did not have personal jurisdiction over her. The superior court quashed service for lack of personal jurisdiction, stating “there is no suable entity within the jurisdiction of this Court in connection with the potential liability of the estate of Oral W. Tucker, Jr.”
Mitsui contends the court erroneously quashed service of summons based upon an atavistic common law concept: A foreign personal representative lacks capacity to bring, and is immune from, lawsuits outside the state of his appointment
(Canfield
v.
Scripps
(1936)
Karen contends even if jurisdiction over her is constitutional, section 1913 overrides section 410.10’s broad jurisdictional grant. Section 1913 (enacted in 1872) reads in pertinent part: “The effect of a judicial record of a sister state is the same in this state as in the state where it was made, except that . . . the authority ... of an executor or administrator, does not extend beyond the jurisdiction of the government under which such person was invested with authority. ” This statute codified a common law rule “that an executor or administrator, as such, has no power which he can employ extraterritorially.”
(Lewis
v.
Adams
(1886)
Even if the statute as originally enacted immunized foreign representatives, the Legislature abridged such immunity in 1959 when it enacted Vehicle Code section 17452 (nonresident motorists causing accidents in California, or their personal representatives, subject to long-arm jurisdiction of
*432
California court), and eliminated it in 1969 by enacting section 410.10. This conclusion is consistent with the modern jurisdictional trend away from artificial immunity and with California’s sound public policy of protecting California creditors by providing them with a convenient forum in which to adjudicate their claims
(Robertson
v.
United States Nat. Bank
(1965)
For these reasons, Karen Tucker, as administratrix of Oral Tucker’s estate, is subject to personal jurisdiction in California.
The order is reversed.
Cologne, J., and Staniforth, J., concurred.
Respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 25, 1984.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise specified.
Numerous states have statutes which by their express terms authorize suits against foreign representatives; however, these states’ long-arm statutes delineate specific areas in which their courts may assert jurisdiction, unlike California’s broadly worded statute. (See, e.g., N.M. Ann. Stat. § 45-4-302 (1978 ed.); Ohio Rev. Code Ann., § 2113.70 (1976 ed.) p. 366; Okla. West’s Ann. Stat. (1965 ed.) tit. 58, § 262; N.J. Stats. Ann., § 3A:2A-62 (West Supp. 1983); S.D. Ann. Codified Laws, § 30-15-5 (1976 ed.); N.D. Cent. Code, § 30.1-25-02 (1974 ed.).) See generally Uniform Probate Code section 162 (Am.Jur.2d, New Topic Service); Restatement Second Conflict of Laws, section 358 and comments.
