166 S.W.2d 64 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1942
Affirming.
On February 5, 1940, while riding in an automobile on a public highway in Garrard county, as an invitee of defendant and appellee, Leslie Scarsella — the owner and then operator of the automobile — Helen Vassill, as the result of a collision with another automobile, was instantly killed, she then being a young lady 16 years of age, and residing with her father in his home in Cincinnati, Ohio, the defendant being a resident of the state of California; therefore, both defendant and deceased were non-residents of this Commonwealth. In due time appellant and plaintiff below, John Vassill, father of deceased, qualified in Hamilton county, Ohio, in which he resided, as personal representative of the estate of his deceased daughter. As such — and without complying with the provisions of Section 3878 of Baldwin's 1936 Revision of Carroll's Kentucky Statutes — he filed this ordinary action in the Garrard circuit court against defendant to recover damages from the latter because of his alleged negligence in the operation of his automobile, then being driven by him, so as to cause the collision, resulting in the *155 death of plaintiff's daughter as an invitee of defendant, to whom he owed the exercise of ordinary care for her safety.
Defendant was brought before the court by serving summons on the Secretary of State of this Commonwealth, pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 80, page 247 of the Session Acts of 1930, and which is now Sections 12-1 to and including 12-7, in our present edition of the Statutes, supra, the validity of which was sustained by this court in the case of Hirsch v. Warren,
On August 4th thereafter, plaintiff in conjunction with a domestic or ancillary administratrix of the deceased — who was appointed as such by the county court of Garrard county on July 30, 1941 — tendered an amended petition setting out the fact of the appointment of the ancillary representative (Frankie Kauffman) and adopted the averments of the original petition, filed solely by the foreign representative and asked that the domestic representative "as ancillary administratrix be permitted to prosecute this action, and that she be made a party plaintiff thereto," ets. Objection was made by defendant to the filing of that amendment upon the ground that more than a year had elapsed from the time of the fatal accident to the deceased and the appointment of the ancillary domestic representative of her estate, and as a consequence more than a year had also elapsed following such accident at the time of the tendering of the amendment. The court sustained the objections of defendant and declined to permit the amendment *156 to be filed, followed by a dismissal of the petition after plaintiff declined to plead further, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.
The prescribed limitations to recover for the wrongful causing of the death of another is, by Section 2516 of our statutes, supra, required to be brought within "one year next after the cause of action accrued, and not thereafter." In the case of Faulkner's Adm'r v. L. N. R. R.,
It is the contention of counsel for plaintiff that although the tendered amendment was offered after the expiration of the limitation period for bringing the action by the proper plaintiff (the ancillary domestic one), and although such proper plaintiff was not qualified to be such until after the expiration of the same period, yet the amendment was not the beginning of a new action by the only one who could maintain it under our law (having its inception from the time of the tendered amendment), but that it related back to the date of the filing of the action by plaintiff as foreign administrator of his deceased daughter, and thereby saved the action from death under the sentence of the limitation statute. The opposite contention is made by counsel for defendant, and which opposing contentions present the first question to be determined.
The personal representative who may bring such an action is one appointed by, or who qualifies in, the proper *157
court in this Commonwealth, and which excludes the right of a foreign representative to maintain such an action, and especially so if he, she or it has not complied with the provisions of Section 3878, supra, of our statutes. Whether that statute applies only to actions to recover debts of a decedent in jurisdictions foreign to that of the appointment of the personal representative, and has no application to recover for injuries or death produced by tortious action committed in foreign jurisdictions, is one not urged or discussed. In any event, the action as originally brought, as we have seen, was shown by the petition to be one which the plaintiff therein had no right in law to maintain, and being such it would logically appear to possess no legal effect whatever, and which this court so held in the somewhat early case of Louisville N. R. R. v. Brantley's Adm'r,
It is, therefore, clear that the original action filed by the foreign administrator as plaintiff, not being maintainable, could not and did not have the effect to toll or suspend the running of the statute of limitations against the maintenance of the action and, of course, did not have the effect to preserve the right of action in favor of some future qualified person to maintain it, after more than a year had expired from the commission of the tort as a foundation of the action. That being true, it would necessarily follow that an attempt after limitation had run to substitute as plaintiff in the cause the name of one possessing legal authority to maintain it in lieu of the one who originally filed it — but possessing no legal authority to do so — would not relate back to the time the original action was filed by the wholly disqualified plaintiff so as to preserve the right of the tardy qualified plaintiff to maintain the action against the local limitation statute. Such interpretation was made and applied by this court in the cases of Faulkner's Adm'r v. Louisville N. R. R. Co., supra; Fentzka's Adm'r v. Warwick Const. Co.,
In the Fentzka case [
Such was the situation in the Fentzka case, which was brought by the public administrator of Jefferson county at a time when the cause of action had not been properly referred to him so as to entitle him to bring it as such public fiduciary. His authority in that respect was later extended to him as the law directs, and he then attempted to file an amended petition after he had been qualified and given the right to do so, but at that time the cause of action had become barred. The situation was, therefore, strictly analogous to what would have happened in this case if the amendment had been tendered by the same plaintiff who filed the original petition, after compliance with Section 3878, supra, of our statutes (if that *159 would confer upon him the right), each of which pleadings would in that event run in his own name and in his same fiduciary capacity. But, under the ruling in the Fentzka case, such practice will not be given the effect of prolonging the period of limitations against the maintaining of the action by the giving of any saving effect to the filing of the original action by one then having no legal authority to file it. In other words, the domestic cited cases deny the right of an interpleader to give his pleading a retroactive effect so as to consider it as reaching back and commencing at the time of the filing of the original action in which he seeks belated appearance for the assertion of some right which he may enforce in the litigation.
The effect of the interpretation referred to is, that the action is commenced at the time the intervening petition is tendered by the one having the right to maintain the action, and that its original filing prior to that time by one not having the right to maintain it, has no effect in prolonging the limitation against the right to maintain it. It, therefore, follows that the action in this case as attempted to be maintained by the ancillary and domestic representative of the deceased was barred by the statute of limitations, and which appeared upon the face of the pleadings in the cause, both filed and tendered.
In such case — and especially where the non-resident administrator (as is the case here) is undertaking to sue for tort committed in Kentucky — we held in the cases supra, and those of Bancamerica-Blair Corp. v. State Highway Commission,
It is vigorously argued by plaintiff's counsel that the 1930 Act, supra, relating to the service of process on non-resident defendants in some way, not made clear to us, had the effect to domesticate, so to speak, the parties to such litigation in which the service therein provided for was made against the non-resident defendant, and which applied to both plaintiff and defendant in an action so brought, although the plaintiff at the time was an acknowledged non-resident of this state. Of course, we cannot agree with any such contention, since that statute did not purport to, nor did it, enact anything except with reference to the service of process against a non-resident defendant. Neither do the cases of Teets v. Snider Heading Mfg. Co.,
Appellant's counsel in his final argument for a reversal of the judgment against his client presses and stresses the two rights guaranteed by the Federal Constitution, one in Amendment XIV, Section 1, thereof *161
guaranteeing due process, and Article IV, Section 2, guaranteeing to the citizens of one State immunities and privileges extended to citizens of the State in which such discrimination is allaged to have been made. Many cases are cited by counsel which he insists support such contention but which a reading of them will demonstrate that counsel is mistaken in his interpretation of them to the situation here involved. On the contrary, it has been the law, as declared by the Courts from the taking effect of our Constitution containing such guarantees, that a reasonable classification may be made against non-residents of the State making the classification, provided the classification is reasonable and the foreign rights attempted to be asserted in the Courts of the State, foreign to the probate appointing Court, may be done within the jurisdiction of the invoked forum. Noonan v. Bradley, 9 Wall. 394, 400,
We therefore conclude that no provisions of the Federal Constitution nor rights conferred by it have been denied the foreign representative in whose fiducial capacity the action was originally brought.
Wherefore, for the reason stated, the judgment is affirmed. *162