Plaintiff’s decedent, while a resident of Chicago, on April 28, 1947, was injured at Warsaw, Indiana, while riding as a passenger on defendant’s train running from Pittsburgh, through Ohio and Indiana to Chicago. He continued to live in Illinois until July 7, 1948, when he removed to Ohio, where he died September 6, 1948. Plaintiff, appointed and qualified administrator in Illinois, instituted suit in the United States District Court in Illinois, to recover damages because of decedent’s death, claimed to have been caused by the injury, relying upon diversity of citizenship for jurisdiction. Defendant’s special defense going to the power of the court to entertain the suit was overruled; the ensuing trial resulted in judgment against defendant, from which this appeal has been taken.
At the outset we are confronted with the question as to whether the District Court should have sustained defendant’s objection to its authority to entertain and dispose of the cause of action asserted by plaintiff. Chapter 70, Section 2 of the Illinois Revised Statutes, authorizing suits to recover damages for deaths, contains this proviso: “Provided, further, that no action shall be brought or prosecuted in this State to recover damages for a death occurring out
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side of this State where a right of action for such death exists under the laws of the place where such death occurred and service of process of such suit may be had upon the defendant in such place.” Indiana at that time had a statute permitting maintenance of such suits. Burns’ Indiana Statutes, Sec. 2, Par. 404; Memphis & C. Packet Co. v. Pikey,
The District Court, relying on our decisions in Stephenson v. Grand Trunk Western R. Co., 7 Cir.,
The courts of the United States are of limited jurisdiction, possessing only such powers as are either expressly or by necessary implication conferred on them; the policy of the statute conferring jurisdiction on the ground of diversity of citizenship calls for strict construction. Thomson v. Gaskill,
Since the Stephenson and Davidson decisions by this court, the Supreme Court has made it clear, we think, that the authorities upon which we relied in those cases are no longer decisive. Thus, in Ragan v. Merchants Transfer & Warehouse Co.,
In Woods v. Interstate Realty Co.,
With these authoritative pronouncements in mind, we turn to the situation confronting the District Court in the case at bar. The Illinois statute expressly forbids maintenance of an action by an administrator for wrongful death occurring in another state where the plaintiff has a remedy in the jurisdiction where the death occurred and can obtain service of process upon the defendant. Under the decisions of the Supreme Court, when a case comes into the District Court under the diversity statute, that court is only another court enforcing the cause of action which, in the absence of diversity, would' necessarily have been brought in the state court. If the District Court should have authority to entertain and dispose of a suit barred in the state court, it would mean that a citizen suing a nonresident corporation and having a claim of more than $3,000 would have a right of action in the federal court while a plaintiff similarly situated but having a claim for only $2,000 would have no standing in either state court or federal court. To hold that the District Court may entertain the suit under such circumstances, would create obvious discrimination between two citizens, giving one a remedy and leaving the other wholly devoid of right of action. Such a result is clearly beyond the intent of the Supreme Court’s decisions.
We conclude that under the Illinois statute, to which we are bound to give full credit, it was error upon the part of the District Court to strike the special defense averring facts which, if true, would have closed the door upon plaintiff's claim both in the state court and in the federal court. At the time we decided the Stephenson and Davidson cases there were what we considered authoritative precedents impelling our conclusions. However, since their decision, the Supreme Court has spoken in no uncertain terms, its language being such, we are convinced, as we have pointed out, as to undermine their basic reasoning. Thus, Interstate Realty Co. v. Woods, 5 Cir..
Nor do we think this means that the state statute has impaired the federal jurisdiction. Federal diversity jurisdiction, created by the Congressional act, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, is limited in the absence of other grounds for jurisdiction, to cases which the state court might entertain. In other words, implicit in the diversity statute, is the limitation resulting from the Supreme Court’s interpretation of diversity jurisdiction. If, as the court says, the federal court, sitting in diversity cases, is only another court enforcing the remedies cognizable by the state court, the limitation upon diversity jurisdiction is inherent in the act creating Federal jurisdiction solely upon the accident of diversity. No new remedies are created by the statute; it merely lodges in another court the authority to enforce remedies cognizable in the state court. The federal court, by congressional intent, as the Supreme Court rules, is just the same as that of the state court (provided diversity exists), no more arid no less. If, as has been suggested, diversity jurisdiction has been limited, that limitation arises not from action of the state but exists inherently in the federal statute itself as authoritatively interpreted.
Plaintiff insists, however, that defendant, in paragraph II of its answer, in which it questioned the right of the District Court to entertain the suit, did not properly raise the issue. The averments- are that plaintiff ought not to maintain its action because the death of plaintiff’s intestate occurred outside of the state of Illinois and in-the state of Ohio. The irijury itself,, as *645 we have seen, occurred in Indiana and after this injury, claimed to have been caused by the wrongful act of defendant, plaintiff’s intestate’s death occurred in Ohio. Defendant asserted further that the laws of the state of Indiana provide for an action for wrongful death, that service of process might have been procured upon it within that state and that, in view of the Illinois statute providing that no action shall be brought within Illinois for a death occurring outside of the state, if a right of action for such death exists under the law of the state where death occurred and service of process of such suit may be had, the District Court was without right to entertain and dispose of the suit. Plaintiff insists that defendant’s answer, in order to have barred the suit in the District Court, should have asserted that a remedy existed in Ohio as well as in Indiana. 1 For solution of this question, we must look to the law of Illinois.
The statute of Illinois formerly provided that no action should be “brought or prosecuted” in that state to recover damages for a death occurring outside of the state, whereas the present statute has added a further provision that in order to prevent maintenance of such an action there must be a remedy in the state where the death occurred. In considering the former statute, in Crane v. Chicago & Western Indiana Railroad Co..
“We are of opinion the proviso to section 2, * * * must be construed to mean that no action shall be brought in this State to recover damages for a death where the wrongful act, neglect, or default causing the death occurred outside of this state. To construe said proviso to mean that, notwithstanding the wrongful act that caused the death occurred in this state, if the injured party was removed to another State before death resulted and there died from such injuries no action could be maintained in this state, would appear so absurd and contrary to the ends of justice that such construction should not be placed upon the language used unless it is so plain and unambiguous that it will admit of no other rational construction. * * *
“In this case the appellant’s intestate was injured by the wrongful act of the appellee’s lessee in this state, for whose wrongful act the appellee is responsible. William Frank was taken to a hospital just across the state line and died in the state of Indiana. Had he returned to this state and there died, *646 it must be conceded his personal representatives could maintain this action. While the action could only be maintained in case of the death of William Frank, the wrongful act of the appellee’s lessee, and not the death resulting from such act, is the foundation of the action. We think it obvious that the object of the legislature in passing the provision of section 2 above referred to, was to prevent the bringing of actions in the courts of this state to recover damages for personal injuries resulting in death where the wrongful act causing it occurred outside of the limits of this state, and not to prevent the bringing of actions to recover damages for personal injuries where the wrongful act, neglect, or default took place in this state although the death occurred outside of the state.”
In Carroll v. Rogers,
The law in other jurisdictions is, quite generally, the same. Thus an editorial note in 133 A.L.R. Annotated, p. 268, concludes that “where the question relates to the choice between the law of the place in which the fatal injury was inflicted and the law of the place in which the resulting death took place, it is settled * * * by practically all the decisions * * * that the place of the tort within the contemplation of the rule that the law of the situs of the tort governs, is the place where the fatal injury was inflicted and not the place where the resulting death occurred. * * * So, * * * the court in Van Doren v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 3 Cir., 1899,
The judgment is reversed and remanded with directions to entertain the special defense pleaded and to proceed in accord with the announcements herein contained.
On Motion to Amend the Mandate.
Plaintiff moves to amend our mandate issued July 28, 1950, which reversed the judgment and remanded the cause with directions to entertain the special defense pleaded and, in doing so, to proceed in accord with the announcements of our opinion. Upon that mandate, the cause stands at issue upon the complaint and the answer. Plaintiff now asks us to direct the District Court to transfer the cause to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, pursuant to Section 1406(a), Title 28 U.S.C.A. That section has no applicability to the present situation. However, Section 1404 gives the parties the right to a transfer under the conditions specified therein.
We think we are without power to grant the motion. The record discloses that defendant made a similar timely motion to- *647 transfer the cause to Ohio. To this plaintiff objected, insisting that the Northern District of Illinois was the more convenient forum. The court, exercising its discretion, denied the motion. The propriety of that action was not questioned in the appeal to this court; it was not included in appellant’s “errors relied upon for reversal.” Consequently we had no right to and did not consider it, and have at this time no greater power than we had then.
Whether such a motion, made after remand, should be allowed, whether the court should vacate its former order denying a similar motion, are questions not before us but lying wholly within the discretion of the District Court. That discretion is not lodged in the Court of Appeals; we can only review the decision of the District Court when and if made to determine whether the court’s discretion has been abused. We may not tell the trial court ahead of time how to exercise its discretionary powers. See Schoen v. Mountain Producers Corp., et al., 3 Cir.,
The motion is denied.
Notes
. In view of the accepted rule that federal courts will take judicial notice of the laws of any state of the union whether statutory or the result of judicial decisions, it would seem that, in view of- the fact that Ohio does provide such a remedy, the court would have been justified in taking judicial notice of that statute. We think. it extremely doubtful that, even though there is no plea of lack of authority to proceed, the District Court, taking judicial notice of all state statutes, could enter judgment when the Illinois statute says there shall be no judgment.
