Demczuk v. Jenifer

114 A. 471, 138 Md. 488
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 114 A. 471 (Demczuk v. Jenifer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Demczuk v. Jenifer, 114 A. 471, 138 Md. 488 (Md. 1921).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Evan Panyskosld, on May 27, 1920, shot and killed Mary Demczuk, at Turner’s Station, in Baltimore County. After-wards and before this suit, he died and letters of administration upon hisi estate were in due course issued to TI. Courtenay Jenifer, the appellee.

Thereafter John Demczuk, the surviving husband of M ary Demczuk, brought this action against the administrator for damages resulting to him from, the loss of her services, as a result of her death through the wrongful act of the decedent. The declaration filed in the case is in the following form, that is to say:

“John Demczuk, by Milton Dashiell and J. Booker Olift, his attorneys, sues H. Courtenay Jenifer, administrator of the estate of John Panyskosld, deceased:
“Por that the said Evan Panyskosld, deceased, did on or about the 27th day of May, 1920, assault and beat and with a revolver did shoot and kill at or near Turner Station, Baltimore County, State of Maryland, Mary Demczuk, the wife of John Demczuk, the plain-1 iff, and that the said John Demczuk was thereby deprived of the society, comfort and services of his said wife, Mary Demczuk, by the wrongful acts of the said Evan Panyskosld, deceased, wherefore this suit is brought, and the plaintiff claims $5,000.00 damages.”

The court sustained a demurrer interposed by the defendant to this declaration, and the plaintiff having declined to amend, judgment was entered for the defendant. This appeal is taken from that, judgment.

*490 The only question presented hy the record is whether, the liability of a person, who by his wrongful act, has caused the death of another, survives the death of the tort feasor, when it has not been prosecuted to a judgment during hisi life, and can be enforced against his personal representatives or estate by one who was entitled to the services of the person so killed.

The maxim actio personalis moritur cum persona is. generally applicable to actions in form ex delicio and “the general rule of the common law was that if an injury were done either to the person or to the property of another for which unliquidated damages only could be recovered in satisfaction, the action died with the person to whom or by whom the wrong was done.” Broom, Legal Maxims (8th Ed.), 702. This rule of the common law is in force in this State, except in so far as it has been changed or modified by statute. 1 Poe, Pl. &. Pr., par. 593; Ott v. Kaufman, 68 Md. 56; Stewart v. United Elec. L. & P. Co., 104 Md. 332. It becomes, necessary therefore to examine the statutes in force in Maryland to ascertain whether that rule has been changed in so* far as it affects the facts of this case and, if so, to- what extent and in what manner. The only statutes we need consider in this connection are codified as Section 25, Article'75, Code Pub. Gen. Laws; Section 104, Article 93, Code Phb. Gen. Laws; and Article 67, Code Pub. Gen. Laws.

Section 25, Article 75, Code Pub. Gen. Laws; provides, that “no action of ejectment, waste, partition, dower, replevin or any personal action * * * shall abate by the death of either or any of the parties to such action * * *. This not to apply to actions for injuries to the person where the defendant dies * *

Section 104, Article 93, Ibid, provides that executors and administrators “shall be liable to. be sued in any court of law or equity in any action (except for slander and injuries to the person) which might have been maintained against the deceased.” It excludes from the definition of the phrase “injury done to the person” actions for arrest, false imprison *491 ment,- violation of the twenty-third, twenty-sixth, thirty-first and thirty-second articles of the Bill of Rights.

Article 67, Sections 1 and 2, confers upon certain relatives of a person, whose death has been caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of another, under circumstances which would have entitled the deceased person, had he survived, to have maintained an action for the injury, the right to an action in the name of the State against the tort feasor.

In our opinion the right of the plaintiff to maintain this suit cannot be sustained under any of these statutes.

By their terms, Sections 25, Article 75, Code Pub. Gen. Laws, and Section 104, Article 93, Hid., do- no-t ap-ply to action for “injuries to the person.” The alleged cause of action in this case is the- husband’s loss of his wife’s services as a result of her death through the. wrongful act o-f another, and the question presented therefore is whether that is an action for “injuries) to- the person,” within the meaning of the statutes referred to-. There is nothing in the language of either’ statute to indicate that the expression “injuries) to the person” was intended to be limited to injuries to the plaintiff, or indeed to any particular person or class of persons, but on the contrary it was apparently used to define and characterize the class of actions excluded from the operation of the statutes. Used in that sense an action for “injuries to the person” naturally means any injury causing actual physical pain, discomfort or disability to any person, which occasions loss) or damage either to such person or to any other person entitled to the benefit of the services of the injured person.

While the loss of the wife’s- services), for which compensation is sought in this ease, did not result from any personal injury to the plaintiff, it did result from a. personal injury to the wife and this- is therefore “an action for injuries, to. the person,” and is excluded from the operation of the statutes under consideration.

This view is illustrated by the case of Mulvey v. Boston, 197 Mass. 178, an action by the husband to- recover for the *492 loss of his wife’s services as a result of personal injuries to her, in which the court, in construing the expression “injuries to the person” as used in a statute of limitation, said: “The injury to the plaintiff’s wife, on which his suit is founded, was an injury to her person. The first question to he determined is whether the husband’s action is for an injury to the person within the meaning of the statute. The language of the statute is not restricted to actions for injuries to the person of the plaintiff, and we think it is broad enough to include all actions of tort founded on injuries to the person of any one ina such relations to the plaintiff that the injury causes him damage. There is nothing in the context to indicate that the words are used in narrow sense, or that the actions referred to are only those brought by the person receiving the physical impact. The word ‘for7 is used in its ordinary signification of ‘on account of,’ ‘because or by means of,’ or ‘growing out of.’ See Strong v. Sun Ins. Co., 31 N. Y. 103; State v. Cornell, 54 Neb. 647, 655.

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Bluebook (online)
114 A. 471, 138 Md. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/demczuk-v-jenifer-md-1921.