Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company v. Baese

136 F. Supp. 683, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedDecember 9, 1955
DocketCiv. A. 251
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 136 F. Supp. 683 (Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company v. Baese) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company v. Baese, 136 F. Supp. 683, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475 (M.D. Tenn. 1955).

Opinion

WILLIAM E. MILLER, District Judge.

Briefly summarized, the claim stated by the complaint is as follows: On Au *684 gust 8, 1954, Frank L. Rizer, a resident of Fentress County, Tennessee, wrongfully took the life of Alma Rizer, his former wife from whom he was divorced, by inflicting gunshot wounds upon her at her home in Louisville, Kentucky. Immediately thereafter Rizer committed suicide. On September 1,1954, the plaintiff, Citizens Fidelity Bank and Trust Company, a Kentucky corporation, was appointed administrator of the estate of Alma Rizer by the County Court of Jefferson County, Kentucky. The defendant, Frank Baese, is the administrator of the estate of Frank L. Rizer, having been duly appointed as such by the County Court of Fentress County, Tennessee.

The action is instituted in this Court under the Wrongful Death Statute of Kentucky, Kentucky Revised Statutes, 411.130, to recover damages in the amount of $40,752 for the wrongful death of the plaintiff’s intestate. The Kentucky statute provides that actions for wrongful death shall be prosecuted by the personal representative of the deceased and that the amount recovered “shall be for the benefit of and go” to named kindred of the deceased. Alma Rizer’s only survivor was a minor son by a former marriage, Billy Rizer, and the action is for his use and benefit.

Defendant moves to dismiss the action “because the plaintiff is a foreign administrator, alleged to have been appointed as such under the laws of the State of Kentucky, and has no authority to maintain this action in the State of Tennessee.”

There is thus presented for decision the question; Where diversity of citizenship and the requisite jurisdictional amount are present, may a foreign administrator maintain in a United States District Court sitting in Tennessee an action of wrongful death occurring in the state of his appointment under the wrongful death statute of that state and for the use and benefit of a named beneficiary?

As the plaintiff is suing in a representative capacity, its right to maintain the action must “be détermined by the law of the state in'which the district court is held” — in this case the law of Tennessee. Rule 17(b), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.; Cooper v. American Airlines, 2 Cir., 149 F.2d 355, 162 A.L.R. 318.

If the plaintiff were suing as an ordinary personal representative for the use and benefit of the general estate of its decedent, its lack of authority to maintain the action in the Tennessee courts would be clear. For in a long line of decisions the Tennessee courts, consistently with the view prevailing throughout the United States, have adhered to the dogma that a foreign administrator, as the representative of his estate, can not maintain an action in Tennessee without first obtaining ancillary letters, or qualifying in Tennessee. Caldwell v. Maxwell, 2 Tenn. 102; Allsup v. Allsup, 18 Tenn. 283; Keaton’s Distributees v. Campbell, 21 Tenn. 224; George v. Lee, 25 Tenn. 61; Sparks v. White, 26 Tenn. 86; Patton v. Overton, 27 Tenn. 192; Goodlett v. Anderson, 75 Tenn. 286; Whittaker v. Whittaker, 78 Tenn. 93; Campbell v. Hubbard, 79 Tenn. 6; Ellis v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co., 100 Tenn. 177, 43 S.W. 766; Farmers Bank v. Vinson & Williams, 9 Tenn.App. 51.

The rule is generally supported by the reasoning that “no state can allow property within its jurisdiction to be diverted so as to deprive its own citizens of an opportunity to enforce their claims against it”. Annotation 85 A.L.R. 1231, 1249.

But practically all of the courts which have considered the question have admitted an exception to the rule where the personal representative is suing, not for the benefit of the general estate, but for the use and benefit of a specified person or classes of persons under the provisions of the wrongful death statute of a foreign state. In that situation, it is said that the reason for the rule ceases to exist since the personal representative sues not in his capacity as such but in the character of a “trustee” or “medium” for the' benefit of the persons entitled to *685 the proceeds of the recovery under the statute. As the recovery passes directly to the named beneficiaries it iá not an asset of the estate and the fights of local creditors are not involved.

Many of the pertinent authorities approving the exception to the general rule are collated in the annotations in 85 A.L.R. 1231, 1245, and 162 A.L.R. 323, 324. In Cooper v. American Airlines, supra, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, was called upon to determine whether the exception was the law in the state of New York. At the time the decision was rendered (1945) the question had not been resolved by the New York courts. But the Court of Appeals concluded that the New York courts would approve the exception to the rule where the foreign administrator was suing under a wrongful death statute merely as a nominal plaintiff for the benefit of the real parties in interest entitled to the avails of the recovery. It was said that to reach a different conclusion “would be to rest judgment, irrationally, on the sheerest verbalism”.

It is significant to observe that the “prophecy” of the court in Cooper v. American Airlines, as to the law of New York, was later fulfilled when the highest court of that state approved the exception in Wiener v. Specific Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 1949, 298 N.Y. 346, 83 N.E.2d 673, 675. In holding that a Michigan administrator could maintain a suit under the Michigan death statute in the New York courts to recover damages for the death of a decedent in the state of Michigan, the court in that case said:

“The rule barring foreign administrators from our courts is just and reasonable only if applied in cases, first, where there are domestic creditors, and second, where the foreign administrator sues to recover a fund in which such creditors may share. Obviously, no prejudice threatens local creditors of the decedent if the wrongful death statute makes no provision for recovery on behalf of the general estate and, in fact, bars creditors’ claims against the proceeds. * * *
“For that reason, we conclude, as have the courts of a number of other jurisdictions, that a foreign administrator, suing as statutory trustee, has standing to maintain a wrongful death actidn in this State upon the strength of his original letters.”

Would the Supreme Court of Tennessee follow the exception to the general rule, upon the state of facts presented in the instant case, ór woúld it adhere, even in that situation, to the general pronouncement that foreign administrators have no standing to sue in the Tennessee courts ? The question is to be answered, as in Cooper v. American Airlines, on the basis of what this Court would prophesy that the state court would adjudicate if the issue were presented to it.

In the first place, it is assumed that the Tennessee court would look to the law of Kentucky in a similar situation to determine whether the administrator was actually suing as a trustee or for the benefit of the general estate of the deceased. Baldwin v. Powell, 294 N.Y.

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136 F. Supp. 683, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-fidelity-bank-and-trust-company-v-baese-tnmd-1955.