Goheen v. General Motors Corporation

502 P.2d 223, 263 Or. 145, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 391
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 502 P.2d 223 (Goheen v. General Motors Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goheen v. General Motors Corporation, 502 P.2d 223, 263 Or. 145, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 391 (Or. 1972).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is a declaratory judgment proceeding to *148 determine the rights of the parties under the Oregon Wrongful Death Act, OES 30.020, as the result of an automobile accident in which two nuns were killed. Both were members of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, a religious order which operates various schools. One nun was a qualified school administrator, while the other was a qualified school librarian, but neither earned or retained any earnings of money or property. Both had taken simple vows of poverty and also left wills under which Sisters was the sole beneficiary. Neither estate incurred any funeral, medical or hospital expenses.

The trial court held that the personal representatives of the estate of the two nuns had no rights of recovery by a proceeding under OES 30.020 because Sisters was not a “dependent” within the meaning of that statute and because there was no “pecuniary loss” to the estate of the decedents, as also required under OES 30.020, for the reason that neither decedent would have accumulated any net savings during her lifetime. We reverse.

To understand the reasons for this decision it is first necessary to state the contentions of the parties. Plaintiffs’ primary contentions are that the trial court erred in denying recovery because decedents would never accumulate net savings; that under the Oregon Wrongful Death Act recovery has been allowed based on evidence of earning capacity, with no evidence of either prior earnings or that the decedents would accumulate future savings; that because decedents performed services of pecuniary value there was evidence of their earning capacity and their vow of poverty should be disregarded, and that if this court finds that no recovery can be permitted within the limits of the *149 rule announced by it in Carlson v. Oregon Short Line Ry. Co., 21 Or 450, 28 P 497 (1892), it should reexamine that rule and adopt a modified measure of damages under which recovery would be based upon a decedent’s earning capacity or capacity to render useful service to others. (1)

Defendants responded by contending that the rule measuring pecuniary loss to an estate for the purposes of ORS 30.020 by the net savings that would probably have been earned and accumulated by a decedent at the expiration of his normal life expectancy, as stated in Carlson, has been long established and repeatedly reaffirmed by this court and that the “earning capacity” or “capacity to render useful service” of these decedents “cannot be relevant here in determining the actual pecuniary loss to the estate because of the admitted facts that decedents could not earn or retain from earnings any money or property, and that their next-of-kin would not reasonably have expected any money benefit from the continued life of decedents.”

To understand the full significance of these conflicting contentions, it is necessary to revieAV the origin and history of actions for Avrongful death and of the Oregon Wrongful Death Statute, ORS 30.020, including the decisions of this court under that statute, and setting forth not only what this court has said in those decisions, but what was actually decided and done in those cases.

*150 Denial of common law remedy for wrongful death •—Adoption of Lord Campbell’s Act and similar state statutes.

It has been said that “* * * [w]rongfxil death cases have long been the stepchildren of tort litigation” and are only now “starting to emerge from the wilderness to which Lord Ellenborongh consigned them in his much disputed decision of 1808 in Baker v. Bolton.” (2) As also stated by Prosser: (3)

“* * * Lord Ellenborongh, whose forte was never common sense, held without citing any authority that a husband had no action for loss of his wife’s services through her death, and declared in *151 broad terms tbat ‘in a civil court the death of a human being could not be complained of as an injury.’ * * *”

Meanwhile, the American courts allowed recovery for wrongful death. (4) In 1848, however, the Massachusetts Supreme Court in Carey v. Berkshire RR Co., (5) ignored earlier decisions by American courts to the contrary and cited and adopted the rule as stated in Baker v. Bolton. Since then most American courts, including this court, have adopted the rule holding that there is no common law cause of action for wrongful death. (6) In the light of this historical background, however, it is understandable that legal writers have been critical of the almost universal rule that there is no common law remedy for wrongful death. (7)

*152 One of plaintiffs’ contentions in this case is that this court should now right this ancient wrong and adopt the rule that in Oregon there is such a remedy at common law in cases not covered by the terms of its Wrongful Death Act, OES 30.020. Thus, plaintiffs cite the recent decision by the Supreme Court of the United States in Moragne v. States Marine Lines, 398 US 375 (1970), in which that court held (at p 402) that there is a remedy for wrongful death under “general maritime law” in cases not covered by the Death on the High Seas Act, 46 USC §§ 761, 762. In doing so that court (at p 409) reversed its previous decisions to the contrary.

Although there may be some merit in that view, our own previous decisions are to the contrary, (8) and we prefer to rest our decision in this ease on other grounds.

As a result of the injustice inherent in the absence of a common law right of action for wrongful death, particularly under the changes in conditions resulting from the industrial revolution, Lord Campbell’s Act was adopted in England in 1846. (9) That Act *153 provides that whenever the death of any person is caused by the wrongful act of another an action for damages may be maintained in the name of decedent’s executor or administrator for the benefit of certain named relatives, including the wife, husband, parent and child. (10) The Act, by its terms, does not expressly limit such damages to pecuniary damages, but has been so interpreted by the courts. (11)

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Bluebook (online)
502 P.2d 223, 263 Or. 145, 1972 Ore. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goheen-v-general-motors-corporation-or-1972.