delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff in error'and defendant in error are respectively the widow and father of one Howard Taylor, a resident of Orange County, State of New York, who through the negligence of the Erie Railroad Company met with an accident which caused his death.
Plaintiff, in error was appointed the administratrix of his estate with right to prosecute any right of action granted by special provision of law as such administratrix. She brought suit, as such administratrix, against the Railroad Company for damages, alleging the employment of her husband in interstate commerce upon a train running from Port Jervis, New York, to Jersey City, New Jersey, the negligence of the Railroad Company as the cause of his death, and that the action was brought under the-act of Congress of April 22, 1908, c. 149, 35 Stat. 65, entitled "An Act relating to the Liability of Common Carriers by Railroad to their Employes in Certain Cases,” known as the Employers’ Liability Law.
By permission oí „ne Surrogate of Orange County, she compromised with the railroad, accepting a judgment for $5,000.
Defendant'in error filed a petition in the Supreme Court of Orange County for an order directing plaintiff in error to pay over to him one-half of the net proceeds of the judgment in accordance with the statute of distribution of the .State. The motion was denied and an order was entered determining that plaintiff in error, as widow of the deceased, was entitled to receive and retain for her own use all of the net proceeds of the judgment. The order was reversed by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court and the judgment of reversal, on appeal to the Court of Appeals, was affirmed and the record re *366 mitted to the Supreme Court. This writ of error was then prosecuted.
The Appellate Division' was of opinion that the law of the State gave the right of action and determined the distribution of the proceeds of the judgment. Considering the act of Congress and its provisions, the court was of the view that the act of Congress “should be construed as one granting a new remedy under certain circumstances, where none, or a less adequate one, existed under the state laws, and as not intended to supplant or abrogate a right of action of practically equal extent existing under the laws of the State.” The court further said, “It is only on the theory that this act of Congress constitutes the exclusive rule applicable to the facts of the case before us that the order of the Special Term [the order under review] can be upheld. If the remedy afforded by our laws be concurrent with that provided by Congress, then we think that our public policy will not permit an administratrix appointed by our courts under our laws, to use the Federal statute simply for the purpose of defeating our statute of distribution of personal property.” The Court of Appeals expressed the opinion that the case presented a case of conflict between the Federal and state statutes and determined that the state statutes must prevail. It was said that the power of Congress “to regulate interstate commerce must end somewhere, and as far as employés of common carriers engaged in interstate commerce are concerned, it appears to us that it must end with the death of the employé.” And considering that the consequences of a contrary doctrine would give Congress power over the distribution of real estate which might happen to be purchased by the earnings of an employé in interstate commerce, the court declared that the act of Congress in so far as. it attempted to distribute the funds in controversy was “invalid and unauthorized.” There were dissenting, opinions expressed. The judgment of the *367 Appellate Division of the Supreme Court was affirmed and the record was remitted to the Supreme Court to be proceeded upon according to law and the judgment of the latter court was entered conformably thereto.
We have had many occasions to declare the comprehensive and exclusive power which Congress possesses over interstate commerce. And starting with that power as a factor, we have only to consider the breadth and meaning of the act of Congress.
Section 1 provides that every common carrier by railroad, while engaged in interstate commerce, “shall be liable in damages to any person suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commercé, or, in case of the death of such employé, to his or her personal representative, for the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and children of such employé; and, if none, then of such employé’s parents; and, if none, then of the next of kin, dependent upon such employé, for such injury or death resulting in whole or in part from the negligence of any of the officers, agents, or employés of such carrier,” or by reason of any defect in its instrumentalities.
Section 6, as amended by the act of April 5, 1910, c. 143, 36 Stat. 291, provides that the jurisdiction of the . courts of the United States shall be concurrent with that of the courts of the several States, and if the action be brought in a state court it shall not be removed to a court of the United States.
.Section 9, as amended by the same act, c. 143, 36 Stat. 291, is as follows:
“That any right of action given by this Act to a person suffering injury shall survive to his or her personal representative, for the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and children of such employé, and, if none, then of such employé’s parents; and, if none, then of the next of kin dependent upon such employé, but in such cases there shall be only one recovery for the same injury.”
*368
The act has come up for consideration in a number of cases. In
Mondou
v.
New York, New Haven & Hartford R. R. Co.,
In
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry.
v.
Wulf,
In
Michigan Central R. R. Co.
v.
Vreeland,
The same view was expressed in
American Railroad Co.
v.
Didrickson,
In
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co.
v.
McGinnis, Administratrix,
In
St. Louis,
Iron
Mountain & Southern. Ry. Co.
v.
Hesterly,
These cases were all brought under the statute as originally enacted and before the amendments of 1910. Section 1, however, was not amended, and in St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v. Hesterly, supra, it was said that the amendment of April 5, 1910, which added § 9, quoted above, “in like manner allows but one recovery, although it provides for survival of the right of the injured person.”
. It is clear from these decisions that the source of the right of plaintiff in error was the Federal statute; and this whether the cause of action is based on the first section of the act or on § 9, added in 1910. From plaintiff in error’s complaint against the Railroad Company it is not clear whether she counted on § 1 alone or . on that and § 9. If under § 1, the cause of action was not derived from the deceased in the sense of a succession from him. As said in one of the cited cases, her cause of action was “one beyond that which the decedent had, — one proceeding upon altogether different principles.” It came to her, it is true, on account of his death but because of her pecuniary interest in his life and the damage she suffered by his death. It was her loss, not that which his father may have suffered. The judgment she recovered was for herself alone. He had no interest in it.. Any loss he may have suffered was not and could not have been any part of it, as we have seen.
*371 If the action included a right under § 9, the recovery was for her benefit exclusively as the widow of the decedent. The language of the section is that the right of action given to.the employé survives to his personal representatives for the benefit of his parents only when there is no widow.
Judgment reversed arid cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
