Rita Susan Parkerson, Executrix of the Estate of Carl R. Parkerson, M.D., appeals the District Court’s 1 decision that Dr. Parkerson’s civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985 & 1986 did not survive his death during the pendency of the action. We affirm.
I.
This case arose out of an unsuccessful criminal prosecution charging Dr. Parker-son with violating 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) by distributing scheduled drugs not in the usual course of medical practice and for which there was no legitimate medical need. Even before his acquittal on all counts, Dr. Parkerson filed suit against Don Carrouth, a pharmacist and manager of Consumer’s Discount Pharmacy, and Malone & Hyde, Inc., which does business in Garland County, Arkansas as Consumer’s Discount Pharmacy. In his complaint, Dr. Parkerson alleged that Carrouth maliciously reported false information about Dr. Parkerson’s prescribing practices to the Arkansas State Pharmacy Board and other persons connected with the Arkansas Diversion Investigation Unit; that Carrouth conspired with employees of Malone & Hyde, the Pharmacy Board, the Investigation Unit, and the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration to deprive Dr. Parker-son of his medical license and Controlled Substance Registration Certificate (CS registration) in violation of his rights “as guaranteed under the Civil Rights Act of 1964”; 2 and that as a direct result of the alleged conspiracy, he was indicted, arrested, and imprisoned, and was coerced into surrendering his medical license and his CS registration. The complaint states claims for libel, slander, malicious prosecution, and intentional injury to Dr. Parkerson’s medical practice, and seeks damages for his claimed monetary loss and for the anxiety and mental anguish he allegedly suffered.
Dr. Parkerson died before the case came to trial. Pursuant to Rule 25(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, defendants .filed a suggestion of death. Mrs. Parkerson responded and the District Court entered an order substituting her, as executrix of Dr. Parkerson’s estate, as plaintiff in her late husband’s action. Thereafter, defendants moved to vacate the order granting the substitution and moved to dismiss the action. The court granted those motions and entered judgment dismissing the case on the ground that the *1451 action did not survive Dr. Parkerson’s death. Mrs. Parkerson then moved to alter that judgment and for leave to file a First Amended and Supplemental Complaint, which deleted the libel and slander claims. The District Court denied Mrs. Parkerson’s motions, and this appeal ensued.
II.
This case involves the Arkansas survival statute and the Arkansas decisions construing it.
3
Statutes allowing the survival of actions were intended to modify the traditional rule that an injured party’s claim was extinguished upon the death of either party.
Robertson v. Wegmann,
Mrs. Parkerson argues that if this case were presented to the Arkansas Supreme Court, it would allow this action to survive Dr. Parkerson’s death. Arkansas law broadly permits actions to survive when they are based on “wrongs done to the person or property of another”. Ark.Stat. Ann. § 27-901. 4 However, the statute also recognizes two exceptions to this general rule: “Nothing in the preceding section shall be so construed as to extend its provisions to actions of slander or libel.” Ark. Stat.Ann. § 27-902. Mrs: Parkerson contends that the statute plainly includes all claims asserted in the original complaint, except those for libel and slander, and in the First Amended and Supplemental Complaint.
The District Court, based on its examination of Arkansas law, held that Dr. Parkerson’s action did not survive his death. The able and experienced District Judge’s determination of this question of local law is entitled to considerable deference.
See Gary Braswell & Associates v. Piedmont Industries, Inc.,
The District Court relied primarily upon
Arkansas Life Insurance Co. v. American National Life Insurance Co.,
An earlier Arkansas case construing the Arkansas statute governing the survival of actions also supports the District Court’s decision. In
Ward v. Blackwood,
Mrs. Parkerson contends that no issue of character or of guilt or innocence is involved here because a jury acquitted Dr. Parkerson of all the criminal charges that were brought against him. We believe this is too narrow and simplistic a view of the evidence that the parties would elicit at trial. To prevail on the malicious prosecution claim, Mrs. Parkerson must show, among other things, that defendants had no probable cause to believe that Dr. Parkerson had committed or was committing a crime.
See, e.g., Crockett Motor Sales, Inc. v. London,
Mrs. Parkerson argues that the Arkansas Supreme Court would change its construction of the statute in light of modem trends. We must reject this argument because she does not direct our attention to any case, and we are not aware of any, in which the Arkansas Supreme Court has
*1453
overruled, reached a result inconsistent with, or even questioned the holdings of
Ward
or
Arkansas Life.
To the contrary, the court cited
Arkansas Life
approvingly in
Mason v. Funderburk,
Finding Mrs. Parkerson’s arguments unpersuasive, we see no reason why we should not defer to the District Court’s ruling on the point of Arkansas law in question. Indeed, in view of the Arkansas decisions discussed above, we believe it would be difficult to reach any conclusion other than the one the District Court reached, i.e., that Dr. Parkerson’s action did not survive his death.
III.
Mrs. Parkerson contends that if Arkansas law bars the survival of this action, and we hold that it does, then Arkansas law is inconsistent with the federal civil rights laws. Her arguments are directed primarily toward distinguishing the facts of
Robertson v. Wegmann,
does not mean that a § 1983 plaintiff (or his representative) must be allowed to continue an action in disregard of the state law to which § 1988 refers us. A state statute cannot be considered “inconsistent” with federal law merely because the statute causes the plaintiff to lose the litigation. If the success of the § 1983 action were the only benchmark, there would be no reason at all to look to state law, for the appropriate rule would then always be the one favoring the plaintiff, and its source would be essentially irrelevant. But § 1988 quite clearly instructs us to refer to state statutes; it does not say that state law is to be accepted or rejected based solely on which side is advantaged thereby.
Id.
at 593,
Mrs. Parkerson points out that the Louisiana statute at issue in
Robertson
is more hospitable to survival of claims after a plaintiff’s death than is the Arkansas law in the present case. In Louisiana, for example, actions for defamation and malicious prosecution survive the deaths of plaintiffs who are survived by one or more close family members. The Court in
Robertson
noted that the decedent had not left any family who could benefit from the section 1983 goal of compensating injured persons. Mrs. Parkerson correctly notes that Dr. Parkerson left family members who could benefit from an award of damages. Finally, she argues that this case exceeds the bounds delineated in
Robertson,
where the Court noted that “[a] different situation might well be presented ... if state law ... significantly restricted the types of actions that survive.”
Id.
at 594,
We find these arguments unpersuasive in light of the analytical approach announced in Robertson, which we read as requiring, in keeping with section 1988, that we test state law by looking to the policy underlying the federal civil rights laws. Robertson does not require courts to compare the laws of one state with those of another state, or to ask whether someone could benefit from survival of the action, or to use some as yet undefined measure to determine whether a state rule on the survival of actions is overly restrictive. Rather, the question to be answered is whether the state law that mandates the nonsurvival of the action is inconsistent with the purposes of the federal civil rights laws. Having considered that question, we *1454 are unable to conclude that the Arkansas survival law fails the Robertson test.
We note that the Supreme Court has stated that the federal civil rights laws have four basic purposes: (1) to override state laws fostering discrimination, (2) to provide a remedy where state law is inadequate, (3) to provide a remedy where state law is adequate in theory but unavailable in practice, and (4) to provide a remedy in federal courts supplementary to any available state remedy.
See Monroe v. Pape,
Although in Robertson the Supreme Court did not specifically address the purposes of the federal civil rights laws as announced in Monroe, we think that such a review is appropriate in this case to show that the Arkansas law at issue in the present case is not inconsistent with those purposes. The first purpose enumerated in Monroe is easily dismissed as inapplicable here: Mrs. Parkerson does not contend that the Arkansas survival law fosters discrimination. The remaining three Monroe purposes, however, must be considered. Essentially, these three purposes focus on the adequacy of state remedies for wrongs that also are federal civil rights violations and on the federal interest in assuring a remedy for the violation of a federally protected right. Since- Arkansas law provided a remedy to Dr. Parkerson for all the wrongs alleged in his complaint, we fail to see that the Monroe purposes have not been fulfilled. He could have brought his lawsuit in state court as a garden-variety tort claim. In that sense, even as to him the available (and chosen) alternative of a civil rights action is a redundancy, albeit an attractive one because of the provision for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Mrs. Parkerson was not the object of defendants’ allegedly wrongful activities and would not have had standing to bring in her own name the action brought by Dr. Parkerson. That Arkansas law restricts standing to maintain a malicious prosecution suit so that the death of the injured party abates his action does not mean that the Arkansas remedy is inadequate or unavailable in practice. What is at issue here is not the adequacy of the remedy that Arkansas law afforded Dr. Parkerson, but whether his cause of action survived his death. We believe that the latter question is far-removed from the fundamental concerns expressed in Monroe v. Pape that underlie and animate the civil rights laws.
In
Robertson,
the Supreme Court focused on the deterrence aspect of the federal civil rights laws and on the goal of compensating victims of civil rights violations. The Court noted that actions under the federal civil rights laws have an important role in deterring intentioní 1 wrongdoing.
As to the compensatory purpose of the federal civil rights laws, the Court observed in
Robertson
that the section 1983 goal of compensating the injured “provides no basis for requiring compensation of one who is merely suing as the executor of the deceased’s estate.”
Id.
at 592,
The Court concluded in
Robertson
that it could find nothing in section 1983 “or its underlying policies to indicate that a state law causing abatement of a particular action should invariably be ignored in favor of a rule of absolute survivorship.”
Id.
at 590,
[Wjhatever the value of nationwide uniformity in areas of civil rights enforcement where Congress has not spoken, in the areas to which § 1988 is applicable Congress has provided direction, indicating that state law will often provide the content of the federal remedial rule. This statutory reliance on state law obviously means that there will not be nationwide uniformity on these issues.
Mrs. Parkerson does not assert a constitutional basis for her attack upon the Arkansas survival law, and absent an infirmity of constitutional dimensions in that law, it is not for a federal court to say that a rule established for Arkansas by its lawmakers is unreasonable or unwise. We recognize that state lawmakers may perceive the existence of sound reasons for abating certain kinds of claims upon the death of the party allegedly injured. These reasons may include the difficulties of proof in certain cases where the decedent’s actions or intentions are a critical factor,
see Thompson,
We conclude that the Arkansas law of survival is not inconsistent with the federal civil rights laws and we affirm the judgment of the District Court.
Notes
. The Honorable Oren Harris, Senior District Judge for the Western District of Arkansas.
. It is not apparent from Dr. Parkerson’s complaint precisely what section of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 it is that the complaint relies upon.
. It is well established that 42 U.S.C. § 1988 requires courts to apply state law to questions of survival of federal civil rights actions as long as the state law is not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.
See Robertson
v.
Wegmann,
An exception to this general rule is the provision in 42 U.S.C. § 1986 that permits survival of an action against a person who had the power to prevent or aid in preventing a wrong actionable under the civil rights acts and who neglected or refused to do so. The action survives, however, only if the victim died as a result of the wrong. In the instant case, this provision does not apply because Mrs. Parkerson makes no claim that her husband died as a result of the wrongs that defendants allegedly committed.
. Section 27-901 provides in full:
For wrongs done to the person or property of another, an action may be maintained against the wrongdoers, and such action may be brought by the person injured, or, after his death, by his executor or administrator against such wrongdoer, or, after his death, against his executor or , administrator, in the same manner and with like effect in all respects as actions founded on contracts.
