While the courts of a state are bound to give full faith and
credit to all substantial provisions of a statute of another state
creating a transitory cause of action which inhere in the cause of
action or which name conditions on which the right to sue depends,
venue is no part of a right, and whether jurisdiction exists is to
be determined by
Page 233 U. S. 355
the law of the state creating the court in which the case is
tried. A state cannot create a transitory cause of action and at
the same time destroy the right to sue thereon in any court having
jurisdiction although in another state.
The jurisdiction of a court over a transitory cause of action
cannot be defeated by the extraterritorial operation of a statute
of another state even though the latter created the cause of
action.
The statute of Alabama making the master liable to the employee
for defective machinery created a transitory cause of action which
can be sued on in another state having jurisdiction of the parties,
notwithstanding the statute provides that all actions must be
brought thereunder in the courts of Alabama, and not elsewhere.
A state court does not deny full faith and credit to a statute
of another state by taking jurisdiction of a transitory cause of
action created thereby, although such statute provides that the
action can only be brought in the courts of the enacting state.
Atchison &c. Ry. v. Sowers, 213 U. S.
55.
11 Ga.App. 221 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a judgment of the
courts of the State of Georgia and the determination of whether
those courts gave full faith and credit to a statute of the State
of Alabama affecting the cause of action, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 358
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
Wiley George, the defendant in error, was an engineer employed
by the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company at its steel
plant in Jefferson County, Alabama. While he was under a locomotive
repairing the brakes, a defective throttle allowed steam to leak
into the cylinder, causing the engine to move forward
automatically, in consequence of which he was seriously injured. He
brought suit by attachment, in the City Court of Atlanta, Georgia,
founding his action on § 3910 of the Alabama Code, which makes the
master liable to the employee when the injury is
"caused by reason of any defect in the condition of the ways,
works, machinery, or plant connected with or used in the business
of the master or employer."
The defendant filed a plea in abatement in which it was set out
that § 6115 of that Code also provided that "all actions under §
3910 must be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction within
the State of Alabama, and not elsewhere." The defendant thereupon
prayed that the action be abated because
"to continue said case of said statutory cause of action given
by the statutes of Alabama, and restricted by said statutes to the
courts of Alabama, would be a denial, so far as the rights of this
defendant are concerned, of full faith and credit to said public
acts of the State of Alabama in the State of Georgia, contrary to
the provisions of Art. 4, § 1 of the Constitution of the United
States."
A demurrer to the plea in abatement was sustained, and the
judgment for the plaintiff thereafter entered was affirmed by the
court of appeals. The case was then brought to this Court.
The record raises the single question as to whether the full
faith and credit clause of the Constitution prohibited the courts
of Georgia from enforcing a cause of action
Page 233 U. S. 359
given by the Alabama Code to the servant against the master for
injuries occasioned by defective machinery when another section of
the same code provided that suits to enforce such liability "must
be brought in a court of competent jurisdiction within the State of
Alabama, and not elsewhere."
There are many cases where right and remedy are so united that
the right cannot be enforced except in the manner and before the
tribunal designated by the act. For the rule is well settled that
"where the provision for the liability is coupled with a provision
for the special remedy, that remedy, that alone, must be employed."
Pollard v.
Bailey, 20 Wall. 527;
Galveston Ry. Co. v.
Wallace, 223 U. S. 490;
Stewart v. B. & O. R. Co., 168 U.
S. 445;
National Bank v. Francklyn,
120 U. S.
753.
But that rule has no application to a case arising under the
Alabama Code relating to suits for injuries caused by defective
machinery. For, whether the statute be treated as prohibiting
certain defenses, as removing common law restrictions, or as
imposing upon the master a new and larger liability, it is in
either event evident that the place of bringing the suit is not
part of the cause of action -- the right and the remedy are not so
inseparably united as to make the right dependent upon its being
enforced in a particular tribunal. The cause of action is
transitory, and, like any other transitory action, can be enforced
"in any court of competent jurisdiction within the State of
Alabama. . . ." But the owner of the defective machinery causing
the injury may have removed from the state, and it would be a
deprivation of a fixed right if the plaintiff could not sue the
defendant in Alabama because he had left the state, nor sue him
where the defendant or his property could be found because the
statute did not permit a suit elsewhere than in Alabama. The
injured plaintiff may likewise have moved from Alabama, and for
that, or other, reason may have found it to his interest to
Page 233 U. S. 360
bring suit by attachment or
in personam in a state
other than where the injury was inflicted.
The courts of the sister state, trying the case, would be bound
to give full faith and credit to all those substantial provisions
of the statute which inhered in the cause of action, or which name
conditions on which the right to sue depend. But venue is no part
of the right, and a state cannot create a transitory cause of
action and at the same time destroy the right to sue on that
transitory cause of action in any court having jurisdiction. That
jurisdiction is to be determined by the law of the court's
creation, and cannot be defeated by the extraterritorial operation
of a statute of another state, even though it created the right of
action.
The case here is controlled by the decision of this Court in
Atchison &c. Ry. v. Sowers, 213 U. S.
55,
213 U. S. 70,
where the New Mexico statute, giving a right of action for personal
injuries, and providing that suits should be brought after certain
form of notice in a particular district, was preceded by the
recital that
"it has become customary for persons claiming damages for
personal injuries received in this territory to institute and
maintain suits for the recovery thereof in other states and
territories, to the increased cost and annoyance and manifest
injury and oppression of the business interests of this territory
and the derogation of the dignity of the courts thereof."
Despite this statement of the public policy of the territory,
the judgment obtained by the plaintiff in Texas was affirmed by
this Court in an opinion wherein it was said that where an action
is brought in
"another jurisdiction, based upon common law principles,
although having certain statutory restrictions such as are found in
this [territorial] act as to the making of an affidavit and
limiting the time of prosecuting the suit, full faith and credit is
given to the law when the recovery is permitted, subject to the
restrictions upon the right of action imposed in the territory
enacting
Page 233 U. S. 361
the statute. . . . When it is shown that the court in the other
jurisdiction observed such conditions, and that a recovery was
permitted after such conditions had been complied with, the
jurisdiction thus invoked is not defeated because of the provision
of the statute"
requiring the suit to be brought in the district where the
plaintiff resides or where the defendant, if a corporation, has its
principal place of business.
It is claimed, however, that the decision in the
Sowers
case is not in point, because the plaintiff was there seeking to
enforce a common law liability, while here he is asserting a new
and statutory cause of action. But that distinction marks no
difference between the two cases because, in New Mexico, common law
liability is statutory liability -- the adopting statute
(Comp.Laws, § 1823) providing that "the common law, as recognized
in the United States of America, shall be the rule of practice and
decision."
The decision in the
Sowers case, however, was not put
upon the fact that the suit was based on a common law liability.
The court there announced the general rule that a transitory cause
of action can be maintained in another state even though the
statute creating the cause of action provides that the action must
be brought in local domestic courts.
In the present case, the Georgia court gave full faith and
credit to the Alabama act, and its judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES dissents.