The exceptions to the libel in this case in admiralty present several questions, the most important one of which is whether an Ohio administrator of a deceased seaman may maintain this suit in admiralty in the District Court of the United States for the District of Maryland, under the Merchant Marine Act 1920 (Jones Act) for the alleged negligently caused death of his decedent.
It is alleged in the libel that the seaman, Meredith E. Melvin, was employed as a deckhand on the tug “Pan Two” owned by the Pan American Refining Corporation, and that he was drowned on April 16, 1938 in navigable waters in the State of Louisiana when the tug sank in consequence of alleged negligent navigation whereby the tug came into collision with her tow. The seaman at the time was asleep in his quarters and special emphasis as to negligence is placed on the failure to give him proper warning.
The proceeding is a libel in personam against the Pan American Refining Corporation which has a substantial place of business in Baltimore City, and also in personam against the Pan American Petroleum & Transport Co., Inc,; but in
The more important question in the case is whether the Ohio administrator can maintain the suit here. As to this the libel alleges that Joseph D. Willis was duly appointed administrator of the estate of the deceased seaman, Meredith E. Melvin, by the Probate Court of Lawrence County, State of Ohio, on February 18, 1939, he having shortly theretofore been appointed guardian of the surviving minor child of the seaman, Carol Jean Melvin, by the Court of Common Pleas of Lawrence County, Ohio, in which court on June 29, 1937, the seaman was divorced from his wife, Thelma Willis Melvin.
The respondent’s legal objection to the maintenance of the suit by the Ohio administrator is put on the familiar principle that ordinarily an executor or administrator has no extra-territorial pow-es beyond the State where he is appointed, and therefore may not maintain suits in the courts of other States or of the United States outside of that jurisdiction. Johnson v. Powers,
“By this section if the injury to the employee results in death his personal representative — while not given any right of action in behalf of the estate — is invested, solely as trustee for the designated survivors, with the right to recover for their benefit such damages as will compensate them for any pecuniai-y loss which they sustained by the death”.
The Merchant Marine Act 1920, § 33, 46 U.S.C.A. § 688, provides:
“Any seaman who shall suffer personal injury in the course of his employment may, at his election, maintain an action for damages at law, with the right of trial by jury, and in such action all statutes of the United States modifying or extending the common-law right or remedy in cases of persoqnal injury to railway employees shall apply; and in case of the death of any seaman as a result of any such personal injury the personal representative of such seaman may maintain an action for damages at law with the right of trial by jury, and in such action all statutes of the United States conferring or regulating the right of action for death in the case of railway employees shall be applicable. * * *”
Prior to this Act there was no right of action against the ship or shipowner for the negligently caused death of a seaman. The new right of action in such a case given by the statute according to its literal wording was “an action for damages at law” with the right of trial by jury; but in Panama R. Co. v. Johnson,
“The words ‘in such action’ in the succeeding clause are all that are troublesome. But we do' not regard them as meaning that the seaman may have the benefit of the new rules if he sues on the law side of the court, but not if he sues on the admiralty side. Such a distinction would be so unreasonable that we are unwilling to attribute to Congress a purpose to make it. A more reasonable view, consistent with the spirit and purpose of the statute as a whole, is that the words are used in the sense of ‘an action to recover damages for such injuries,’ the emphasis being on the object of the suit rather than the jurisdiction in which it is brought. So we think the reference is to all actions brought to recover compensatory damages
It will be noted that the Merchant Marine Act above quoted gives the right of action to “the personal representative of such seaman” without other description; and makes applicable to the action the provisions of law contained in the federal statutes relating to actions for death in the case of railway employees, known as the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. §§ 51-59. Section 51 also gives the right of action in case of death of the employee to the “personal representative” without further description, but “for the benefit of the surviving widow or husband and children of such employee; and, if none, then of such employee’s parents ; and, if none, then of the next of kin dependent upon such employee, for such injury or death,” etc.
It is clear that the beneficiaries of the action are not the estate of the decedent but only the classes of dependents who are named in the statute. In this respect the law is of a kindred nature to actions for negligently caused death under state statutes frequently referred to as Lord Campbell’s Act, which involve somewhat different procedural provisions in different States, but generally have the feature in common that the recovery is for the benefit of a prescribed class rather than for the benefit of the decedent’s estate. In accordance therewith this court permitted a Virginia administrator to sue at law in this court under the Virginia statute embodying Lord Campbell’s Act. Rose v. Phillips Packing Co., Inc., D.C.,
The failure to distinguish between the special, character of the personal representative as a trustee in these classes of cases and the ordinary common-law functions of an executor or administrator, has caused diversity of judicial opinion with respect to the right of a foreign administrator to maintain the suit. See 2 Md.Law Review, 168. With respect to cases arising under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, especially as the statute gives the right of action to the personal representative without further description, there has been uncertainty as to who is the personal representative authorized to sue. In Brown v. Boston & Maine R. R.,
In giving the right of action to the personal representative without further description, Congress evidently intended to confer the right upon the lawfully and properly appointed executor or administrator of the decedent, Briggs v. Walker,
As the statute does not define who the personal representative shall be, that is whether a domiciliary or an ancillary administrator, and as the statutes of the several States vary in their requirements as to the appointment of an administrator, it is of course possible in any given case that two or more persons may assert the right to maintain separate and independent suits in different jurisdictions as “the personal representative”. And it was developed at the hearing on the exceptions in this case that the respondent’s objection to defending the libel here was really based on the expectation that it would also have to defend a suit in Virginia by an administratrix of the decedent appointed in that State. This possible multiplicity of suits on the same cause of action is not properly presented by the exceptions to the libel in this case, which alleges that the administrator here suing has been duly appointed by the Ohio Probate Court. Of course it is not reasonable to assume that Congress intended to give the right of action to two or more personal representatives appointed in different States. The right is given to “the personal representative” of the deceased seaman. I construe this clearly to mean the lawfully and properly appointed personal representative; and therefore if in any particular case the respondent disputes the status of the complainant libellant as the personal representative, that defense can of course be presented by proper answer in the nature of a plea in abatement.
It is conceivable that two different district courts might each determine different complainants to be the personal representative, and if the respective complainants both recover judgments against the respondent, it would be in danger of paying twice for one cause of action. This possibility was considered in the Anderson case, supra, where, in the trial court, District Judge Sanford (later Mr. Justice Sanford
But even this does not wholly meet the anticipated embarrassment of the respondent in the particular case. It is here said that the pending suit in this court is by an Ohio administrator for the benefit of the decedent’s infant daughter, while the Virginia suit will maintain the right of the decedent’s mother as administratrix to recover for her benefit and for the benefit of the decedent’s wife. In neither case can the complainant properly recover unless there is proof of the existence of some dependent within the classes mentioned in the statute which, in the order of priority, are (1) surviving widow or husband and child, (2) parents, and (3) if none, then next of kin. If none of these classes survive the suit must fail. Lindgren, Administrator, v. United States,
The above discussion as to the possibilities of future developments in one or the other of the'two cases is submitted in answer to the respondent’s contention that the foreign administrator may not maintain this suit. All that is now decided on this point is that the foreign administrator, alleged in the libel to have been duly appointed-by the Probate Court in Ohio, has authority to maintain this suit, and the exceptions to the libel on the ground merely that he is an administrator appointed by the court of another State must be overruled.
