The decision in this case turns on whether the one year statute of limitations (KRS 413.120) governing actions for wrongful death, Irwin v. Smith,
“If an action is commenced in due time and in good faith in any court of this state and the defendants Or any .of them make defense, and it is adjudged that the cоurt has no jurisdic- . tion of the action, the plaintiff or his representative may, within three months from the time of that judg- . ment, commence a new action in the proper court. The time between the commencement of the. first and last action shall not be counted in applying any statute of limitation.”
On Februаry 12, 1951, Leander Sieben-har, a resident of Ohio, was killed in an accident in Kentucky. His Ohio administrator brought- suit in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Kentucky against .Grover N. Wise, seeking to recover damages for his death, and this suit was dismissed on July 12, 1951, on the ground that the Ohio administrator could not maintain the suit in Kentucky.
“In the absence, as here, of distinct language to the contrary, the stаte Legislature is to be presumed to have legislated with reasonable reference to all similar conditions that might arise within the state, such as the commencement of cases and their failure for like reasons in a federal court under federal procedure within the state. * * * The very idea of enacting the extension statute was to enlarge the time within which wrongs might be redressed, and so to prevent cases from failing otherwise than upon their mеrits'; such a statute should not be narrowly construed.”
We concur in this construction of the statute, and conclude that a Federal court , in this, state is a “court of this state” for the purpose of the statute.
Concluding that an action instituted in a Federal court in Kentucky is in a “court of this state” within the meaning of the statute, the next question to be decided is whether the three months allowed by the statute began to run when the judgment was rendered by the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Kentucky or when judgment was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals. Appellee relies on Gray v. Sawyer, Ky.,
“What сonvinces us that the ‘final judgment’ referred to in § 344 means the final judgment in the circuit court, is that new. trials are not. favqred by courts and it is important that litigation be brought tо an end- Affirmance of a judgment obviously does not make it less than final. It confirms finality.”
On the other hand, appellant relies on cases from other jurisdictions which hold that the time is computed from the date of the appellate determination. ’ The authorities are far from united on the question.
We conclude that the judgment rеferred to in the statute, KRS 413.270, is the decision which finally determines the disputed issue over the court’s jurisdiction —the trial court’s judgment if there is no appeal, but the аppellate court’s ruling if there is an appeal. This view is consistent with the prime purpose of the statute— to afford a full opportunity for a hearing on the merits.
In his quest for the proper forum a plaintiff may irritate a defendant with a prolixity of litigation, but this is not proscribed by the statute unless it is done in bad fаith. In the case at bar; we do not find that the appellant (plaintiff) acted in bad faith for the purpose of creating a sufficient nuisance of himself, for example, to effect a settlement for nuisance value. Rather, it appears to us that the appellant (plaintiff) confidently selected his route and started his trip without inspecting his juridical road maps, a frame of mind likely to cause delays on either the path of justice or the рublic highway.
In the case at bar, the suit on the claim for wrongful death never reached a court having jurisdiction until it was filed in the Oldham Circuit Court on May 4, 1953, over two yеars after the death and about three months after the decision on appeal in the United States Court of Appeals. Nevertheless, the seсond suit in the Federal court— the one filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky —was commenced within a year of the death, and hence was within time. It is the concensus of the court that the statute was tolled from the date of the filing in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky on January 20, 1952, until the decision on appeal, February 16, 1953, and since the present action was filed on May 4, 1953, it was filed within three months of the time of that judgment as authorized by statute.
The judgment dismissing the action is reversed.
