after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
The Court of Appeals was of opinion that the action could not be maintained under the statute of the District of Columbia, because that authorizes recovery only in. case the injury causing death is done within the limits of the District, nor under the Maryland statute because of 'the peculiar form of remedy prescribed therein, citing in support of the latter contention
Pollard
v. Bailey,
“The individual liability of stockholders in a corporation for the payment of its debts is always a. creature of statute. At common law it does not exist. The-statute which creates it may also declare the purposes of its creation, and provide for the manner of its enforcement. . . . The. liability and the remedy were created by the same statute. This being so, the remedy provided is exclusive of all others. A general liability created by statute without a remedy may be enforced *448 ’ by an appropriate common law action. But where the provision for tbe liability is coupled with a provision for a special remedy, that remedy, and that alone, must be employed.”
To like effect was cited
Fourth National Bank
v.
Francklyn,
Notwithstanding the ability with which the arguments in support of this conclusion aré presented in the opinion of the Court of Appeals, we are unable to concur therein. A negligent act causing death is in itself, a tort, and, were it not for the rule founded.on the maxim
aotio personalis moritur cum
persona, damages therefor could have been recovered in an action at common law. The case differs in this important feature from those in which a penalty is imposed for an act in itself not wrongful, in which a purely statutory delict is created. The purpose of the several statutes passed in the States, in more or less conformity to what is known as Lord Campbell’s act, is to provide the means for recovering the damages caused by that which is essentially and in its nature a tort. Such statutes are not penal, but remedial, for the benefit of the persons injured by the death. An action to recover damages for a tort is not local but transitory, and can as a general rule be maintained wherever the wrongdoer can be found.
Dennick
v.
Railroad
Company,
What are the differences between the two statutes? As heretofore noticed, the substantial purpose of these various statutes is to do away with the obstacle to a recovery caused by the death of the party injured. Both statutes in the case at bar disclose that purpose. By each the death of the party injured ceases to relieve the wrongdoer from liability for damages caused by the death, and' this is its main purpose and effect. The two statutes differ as to the party in whose name the suit is to be brought. In Maryland the plaintiff is the State; in this District the personal representative of the deceased. But neither the State in the one case nor the personal representative in the other has any pecuniary interest in the recovery. Each is simply a nominal plaintiff. While in the District the nominal plaintiff is the personal representative of the deceased, the damages recovered do not become part of the assets of the estate, or liable for the. debts of the deceased, but are distributed among certain of his heirs. By neither statute is.there any thought of increasing the volume of the deceased’s estate, but in each it is the award to certain prescribed heirs of the damages resulting to them from the taking away of their relative.
For purposes of jurisdiction in the Federal courts regard is had to the real rather than to the nominal party.
Browne
v.
Strode,
Another difference is that by the Maryland statute the jury trying the cause apportion the damages awarded between the parties for whose benefit the action is brought, while by the statute of the District the distribution is made according to the ordinary laws of distribution of a decedent’s estate. But by each the important matter is the award of damages, and the manner of distribution is a minor consideration. Besides, in determining the amount of the recovery the jury must necessarily consider the damages which each beneficiary has sustained by reason of the death. By neither statute is a fixed sum to be given as a penalty for the wrong, but in each the question is the amount of damag'es. It' is true that the beneficiaries of such an action may not in every case be exactly the same under each statute, but the principal beneficiaries under each are the near relatives, those most likely to be dependent on the party killed, and the remote relatives can seldom, if ever, be regarded as suffering loss from the death.
We cannot think that these differences are sufficient to render the statute of Maryland in substance inconsistent with the statute or public policy of the District of Columbia, and so, within the rule heretofore announced in this court, it must be held that the plaintiff was entitled to maintain this action in the courts of the District for the benefit of the persons designated in the statute of Maryland. The judgment will be
Reversed, and the ease remanded for a trial upon the merits.
