Edwards v. . Chemical Co.

87 S.E. 635, 170 N.C. 551, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 12, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 635 (Edwards v. . Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. . Chemical Co., 87 S.E. 635, 170 N.C. 551, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 195 (N.C. 1916).

Opinion

Civil action to recover damages for death of intestate, caused by alleged negligence of defendant company.

The facts relevant to the inquiry are sufficiently embodied in the judgment of his Honor overruling the demurrer, in terms as follows:

"This cause coming on to be heard before his Honor, James L. Webb, judge presiding at said September Term, 1915, of the Mecklenburg Superior Court, and being heard upon the complaint filed by the plaintiff, the answer filed by the defendant, and the demurrer filed by the plaintiff to the further defense set up in defendant's answer, and it appearing to the court from the pleadings referred to that this action is brought by the plaintiff on account of the death of intestate, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, and it appearing from the further defense set up in the defendant's answer that the plaintiff's intestate, Jesse Edwards, prior to his death, brought an action for damages on account of the same injuries involved in the present action, which the plaintiff in this action alleges resulted in her intestate's death; that the said action of Jesse Edwards v. Intestate Chemical Corporation was duly tried and judgment rendered therein for the plaintiff, and that said judgment has been duly satisfied by the defendant, all of which will more fully appear by reference to the further defense set out in the defendant's answer, the plaintiff having filed a demurrer to said further defense admitting the truth of the allegations contained therein: Now, therefore, it is hereby considered, ordered and adjudged that the said demurrer, filed by the plaintiff, be overruled, and that the plaintiff's action be and it hereby (552) is dismissed by order of the court."

Plaintiff excepted and appealed. The question presented in the record has been much considered by the courts, and it has been very generally held, a position in which we fully concur, that the statute conferring a right of action for wrongfully causing the death of another, usually to be prosecuted by the personal representative, does not and was not intended to confer such right when the intestate, the injured party, had been compensated *Page 630 for the injury during his life and had received such compensation in full adjustment of his claim.

The legislation on the subject in this country is, to a large extent, modeled upon an English statute, commonly known as Lord Campbell's Act, 9 and 10 Vic., ch. 93, our own law, Revisal, secs. 59 and 60, being substantially a reproduction of the English statute, and the construction put upon the law in England was that the action would not lie if the injured party had, during his life, received satisfaction for the wrong; these courts being of opinion that it was the purpose and meaning of the statute to deprive the wrongdoer of the protection oftentimes afforded by reason of the common-law principle that actions of this character died with the person. Read v. Great Eastern Ry., Law Reports, 3 C. Q. B. (1867 and 8), p. 555. In that action it was shown that the injured party, deceased, had accepted a sum of money in full satisfaction for the wrong, and the plea in bar was held a good defense.Blackburn, J., delivering the principal opinion, said, in part: "Before that statute (Lord Campbell's Act), the person who received a personal injury and survived its consequences could bring an action and recover damages for the injury; but if he died from its effects, then no action could be brought. To meet this state of the law, the act of 9 and 10 Vic. was passed," etc.; and Lush, J., concurring, said, in part: "I am of the same opinion. The intention of the statute is not to make the wrongdoer pay damages twice for the same wrongful act, but to enable the representatives of the person injured to recover in case where the maxim, Actio personalis moritur cum persona, would have applied. It only points to a case where the party injured has not recovered compensation against the wrongdoer." This construction of the law has been very generally adopted by the courts of this country, whether the statutory action is considered a new right or a continuation of the old, and there is very little to be added to the cogent reasoning which they have presented in support of the position. Littlewood v. Mayor, 89 N. Y., 24; Telephone Co. v. Cassin, 111 Ga. 575; Thompson v.(553) R. R., 97 Tex. 590[97 Tex. 590]; Price v. R. R., 33 S.C. 556; Hecht v. R. R., 132 Ind. 507; Mooney v. Chicago, 239 Ill. 414. And cases in Supreme Court of the United States and text-books of approved excellence recognize and approve the principle.Michigan Cent. Ry. v. Vreeland, 227 U.S. pp. 59-70; Tiffany on Death by Wrongful Act (2 Ed.), sec. 124; 3 Elliott on Rys. (2 Ed.), sec. 1376; 8 A. and E. Enc., p. 870; 13 Cyc., p. 325.

In the citation to Tiffany the author says: "If the deceased, in his lifetime, has done anything that would operate as a bar to a recovery by him in damages for the personal injury, this will operate equally as a bar in an action by his personal representative for his death. Thus, *Page 631 a release by the injured party of his right of action or a recovery of damages by him for the injury is a complete defense in the statutory action."

In Vreeland's case, Associate Justice Lurton, delivering the opinion, said: "But as the foundation of the right of action is the original wrongful injury to the decedent, it has been generally held that the newaction is a right dependent upon the existence of a right in the decedent, immediately before his death, to have maintained an action for his wrongful injury.

A very satisfactory statement of the principle and the reasoning upon which it is properly made to rest will be found in the New York case of Littlewood v. Mayor, supra, where Rapallo, J., delivering the opinion, in part, said: "The counsel for the plaintiff is sustained by the authorities in the proposition upon which he mainly bases his argument in this case, viz., that the right of action given by the act of 1847 to the personal representatives of one whose death has been caused by the wrongful act, neglect, or default of another is a new right of action created by the statute, and is not a mere continuation in the representatives of the right of action which the deceased had in his lifetime. But it seems to me that this is not the point upon which the case turns, and that the true question is whether, in enacting the statute, the Legislature had in view a case like the present, where the deceased, in his lifetime, brought his action, recovered his damages for the injury which subsequently resulted in his death, and received satisfaction for such damages; and whether it was intended to superadd to the liability of a wrongdoer, who had paid the damages for an injury, a further liability, in case the party afterward died from such injury, for the damages occasioned by his death, to his next of kin; or whether the intention of the statute was to provide for the case of an injured party who had a good cause of action, but died from his injuries without having recovered his damages, and in such case to withdraw from the wrongdoer the immunity from civil liability afforded him by the common-law rule that personal actions die with the person, and to give the statutory action as a substitute for the action which the deceased (554) could have maintained had he lived.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 635, 170 N.C. 551, 1916 N.C. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-chemical-co-nc-1916.