23 Idaho 642 | Idaho | 1913
— This is an appeal from a verdict and judgment awarding the respondent, Elizabeth Whitley, the sum of $5,500 damages on account of the death of her son, A. P. Whitley.
The facts which it is necessary for the court to consider in determining the validity of this judgment are novel and unusual. The respondent is a citizen and resident of the state of Texas. The appellant is a Washington corporation, with its principal place of business at Spokane, and owns an electric railway which it operates between Spokane and Coeur d’Alene, Idaho.
On July 31, 1909, A. P. Whitley, a son of respondent and a resident and citizen of the state of Tennessee, was a passenger on appellant’s train, and through the negligence of appellant’s employees Whitley was killed. The accident and consequent death of A. P. Whitley occurred in Idaho near Coeur d’Alene. At the time of his death A. P. Whitley left a surviving wife, Josephine Whitley, who was at the time a resident and citizen of the state of Tennessee. In September, 1909, the appellant, whom we shall hereafter designate as the “railroad company,” entered into an agreement with Josephine Whitley to pay the sum of $11,000 for and on account of the death of her husband, and thereupon paid her the sum of $1,500, with the understanding that she should apply for and receive letters of administration of the estate of A. P. Whitley from the proper court in the state of Tennessee, and that upon presenting proof of her appointment she would be paid the balance of $9,500. Thereafter, and on October 2; 1909, Josephine Whitley was duly and regularly appointed by the probate court of Shelby county, Tennessee, administratrix of the estate of A. P. Whitley, deceased, and she thereupon applied to the court for permission, as administratrix,
Thereafter the case at bar was brought to issue in the district court of Kootenai county, Idaho, and the trial of the cause was commenced on September 9, 1912, subsequently resulting in a judgment in favor of the respondent herein.
The railroad company has at all times admitted its negligence in causing the death of A. P. Whitley and its liability to respondent in damages for his death. In the present case, however, it pleaded the judgment of the superior court of Spokane county, Washington, as a bar and defense to the right of Mary Elizabeth Whitley to recover in this case, and it also pleaded the judgment of the Tennessee court as a bar to the respondent’s right of recovery in this ease.
The various contentions made by the railroad company when reduced to their last analysis are to the effect that a recovery having been made by Josephine Whitley as administratrix of the estate of A. P. Whitley, deceased, is a bar to any subsequent recovery by an heir of A. P. Whitley under the death statute of Idaho, and that under the constitution of the United States, sec. 1, art. 4, and sec. 905 of the Revised Statutes, the judgment entered in the superior court of Spokane county, Washington, and the judgment of the supreme court of Tennessee must “have such faith and credit given to them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the state from which they are taken, ’ ’ and that accordingly the Idaho courts must hold that this matter has been adjudicated and that no further action can be maintained thereon.
We will consider the more important subdivisions of appellant’s contention separately as they are treated in the briefs.
(1) It is contended that Josephine Whitley, being an heir of A. P. Whitley, deceased, was a necessary party to this action, and that while she was made a party defendant she was not served personally and that service outside the state did not give the court jurisdiction as to her. Under sec. 4105, Rev. Codes, of this state, where the consent of a necessary
Another reason exists and is decisive in this particular case. It clearly appears that under the laws of Idaho, the respondent herein, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, and Josephine Whitley are the only heirs of A. P. Whitley, deceased. Josephine Whitley has prosecuted an action in the courts of Washington on this same cause of action and has recovered, and under the. decision of the supreme court of Tennessee the entire recovery there had inured to her individual benefit as the sole heir under the laws of Tennessee of A. P. Whitley, deceased. She can have no further recovery. It was therefore unnecessary to make her a party, either plaintiff or defendant, in this particular action in order to bind her by the judgment and preclude her further recovery. We agree with the railroad company that, as a general rule, these actions cannot be split up and one action be prosecuted by one heir and another action by another heir, or one action by the personal representative of the deceased and another action prosecuted by the heirs, provided the question or objection is timely raised in a proper manner. (St. Louis etc. Ry. Co. v. Needham, 52 Fed. 371; 3 C. C. A. 129; McBride v. Berman, 79 Ark. 62, 94 S. W. 913; Whelan v. Rio Grande R. R. Co., 111 Fed. 326; Salmon v. Rathjens, supra; Copeland v. City of Seattle, supra; Galveston H. & S. A. R. Co. v. Kutac, supra.)
In this ease it appears that there was in fact no election of remedies. Mary Elizabeth Whitley evidently thought she was pursuing a lawful remedy when she made application to the probate court of Shelby county for a share in the receipts from' the Washington judgment, but the supreme court of that state held that she had no remedy, that she was not.an heir and that no recovery had ever been had on her behalf or for her benefit. In fact, the court held that the action which Josephine Whitley as administratrix had prosecuted in the Washington court had not been prosecuted for or on behalf of Mary Elizabeth Whitley, and that Josephine Whitley was not a representative or trustee of or for Mary Elizabeth Whitley in the prosecution of that action. This case is very different from the state of facts considered in Jones v. Stewart, 62 Neb. 207, 87 N. W. 12, and Jones v. First Nat. Bank, 3 Neb. Unof. 73, 90 N. W. 912, and in noting the distinction we do not mean that we approve the line of reasoning adopted in both of those cases.
Another thing that should not be lost sight of in this case is that no attempt at election has ever been made as against the railroad company. Mary Elizabeth Whitley was not a party to the action prosecuted in the superior court of Spokane county, and was not brought into the case, and, on the other hand, the railroad company was not a party to the proceeding in the Tennessee court, and so the respondent herein has never attempted to pursue but a single remedy against the railroad company. Both respondent and the appellant have never met in court until in this action.
(3) It is contended by the railroad company that the judgment herein in favor of Mary Elizabeth Whitley in substance and effect denies the “full faith and credit” to the Washington and Tennessee judgments which is commanded by the constitution of the United States, sec. 1, art. 4, and see. 905 of the. Eev. Statutes of the United States. If it does, it is clearly void. We understand it to be the absolute duty of the courts of this state to give to the judgments and judi
In order to reach a proper solution of this question, it is necessary to consider the character and binding effect of the judgments pleaded in the respective courts where rendered and entered. In the first place, the action prosecuted by Josephine Whitley as administratrix against the railroad company in the superior court of Spokane county, Washington, was based on an Idaho statute which was set up in the complaint and upon an accident which occurred in the jurisdiction of Idaho. The party plaintiff in that action was not a resident of the state of Washington and so pleaded in her complaint. She was a foreign administratrix. The respondent in this action, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, was never made a party to the Washington action, and the only way in which it could be said that she was bound by the judgment in that case is upon the theory that under the laws of Idaho she was an heir of A. P. Whitley, deceased, and that the foreign administratrix, Josephine Whitley, was prosecuting the action in the Washington court as trustee for all the heirs of A. P. Whitley, deceased. Mary Elizabeth Whitley may have supposed, and evidently did suppose, that such was the ease, and that when judgment should be obtained she would be declared by the courts to be an heir and therefore a cestui que trust in that fund. It must be remembered that the Washington court never at any time has determined who were the heirs for whom Josephine Whitley was suing or whom, she represented as administratrix and trustee. While the judgment was entered in Washington, the fund was apparently never subjected to the Washington jurisdiction. The fruits of the
It clearly appears then, first, that the respondent in this case, Mary Elizabeth Whitley, had no right of action and no claim whatever under the laws of the state of Tennessee; second, that she was never made a party to the action prosecuted in the state of Washington, and that the action there prosecuted was not prosecuted for her or in her interest or on her behalf, and that she was neither accorded representation there in person nor by trustee, administrator or other representative. She has, therefore, clearly never been a party, to the Washington judgment and is not bound by that judgment. (Galveston H. & A. S. R. Co. v. Kutac, 72 Tex. 643, 11 S. W. 127.) The Tennessee judgment, as heretofore observed, is in no manner a bar to the prosecution by Mary Elizabeth Whitley of her statutory cause of action in the state of Idaho against the railroad company that committed the injury and caused the damage.
This brings us to a consideration of the nature of this cause of action and the status of respondent in the courts of Idaho.
It has been held that a personal representative of the decedent cannot maintain such an action without alleging and proving that the decedent has left surviving him an heir. (Serenson v. Railway Co., supra; Jones v. Leonardt, 10
We are aware that it has been suggested in a California case (Redfield v. Oakland Consolidated Ry. Co., 110 Cal. 277, 42 Pac. 822, 1063), that the word “heirs,” as used in sec. 377 of the California Code of Civil Procedure, corresponding to sec. 4100 of our Bev. Codes, does not mean heirs such as are
It is argued by respondent that the Washington judgment was of no effect, for the reason that Josephine Whitley never took out any letters of administration in that state and that a foreign administrator, acting solely under authority of an appointment in a foreign jurisdiction, has no right to maintain an action under the laws of the state of Washingtom Counsel cite the case of Barlow & Shepherd v. Coggan, 1 Wash Ter. 257, in which the Washington court held to the view maintained by respondent. That position seems to be sustained by the weight of authority. (Dennick v. Central R. R. Co., supra; Maysville Street etc. Co. v. Marvin, supra; Hall v. Southern Ry. Co., 146 N. C. 345, 59 S. E. 879.) See, also, cases cited by this court in Anthes v. Anthes, 21 Ida. 305, 121 Pac. 553, wherein this court considered the question here discussed. We have heretofore held, however, and we think correctly so, that although a foreign administrator has no authority to sue outside of the state where he receives his appointment, still the objection goes rather to his capacity to sue or maintain an action than to the sufficiency of the cause of action or the jurisdiction of the court, and that such question
No legal reason is shown why this judgment should be reversed or disturbed. The judgment is affirmed, with costs in favor of respondent.