Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McElwain

34 S.W. 236, 98 Ky. 700, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 19, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 236 (Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McElwain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. McElwain, 34 S.W. 236, 98 Ky. 700, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 29 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

JUDGE PAYNTER

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 8th day of October, 1892, a freight train on appellant’s road struck Josephine E. McElwain while she was crossing the track at a public road crossing, inflicting injuries from which she died on the 23d day of December, 1892. T. W. McElwain, the plaintiff in this case, qualified as executor of her will, instituted an action as such personal repre- ■ sentative and recovered a judgment against the defendant for the sum of five thousand dollars. This action was instituted at the same time by the plaintiff -is the husband of the deceased seeking to recover in his individual capacity [701]*701damages for the “loss of her society” from the date the injury was inflicted until her death.

In the a ction as personal representative he recovered compensatory damages, under the instructions of the court, for physical and mental suffering, for expenses of treatment and for the permanent impairment of her ability to earn money, etc.

The sole question in this case is as to whether the recovery in the action as personal representative of the estate of the deceased is a bar to the husband’s right to recover for a loss for which it is claimed the common law afforded him redress.

To determine this question the common law must be considered in connection with the statutory remedy afforded for the negligent acts resulting in death.

By the principle of the common law the right of action for an injury to the person abates upon the death of the party injured, the case falling within the familiar rule, actio per-sonalis moritur cum persona. Therefore, if death resulted, whether instantaneously or not, from such injury, no action could be maintained by the personal representative of the injured party to recover damages suffered by the decedent.

As early as 1606 in the King’s Bench, the case of Higgins v. Butcher, Yelv., 89, arose, wherein the plaintiff sought to recover damages of the defendant for assaulting and beating his wife, of which she died. The action seemed to have been for damages to the wife and not for the loss of service. It was held there could be no recovery, as the injury, having resulted in death, the cause of action therefor was merged in the felony. It might be added at this point that reasons other than merger have been suggested for the rule, to-wit, the law of forfeiture, the maxim, actio per-sonalis moritur cum persona, and public policy.

[702]*702From the case of Higgins v. Butcher, the question does not appear to have been raised in England until 1808, in Baker v. Bolton, 1 Campbell, 493. That was an action against the proprietors of a stagecoach on which the plaintiff and his wife were traveling, when it was overturned, inflicting injuries on himself and also upon his wife, from which she died within a month. It was declared that “the plaintiff had wholly lost and been deprived of the comfort, fellowship and assistance of his said wife, and had from thence hitherto suffered and undergone great grief, vexation and anguish of mind.” Lord Ellenborough said: “The jury could only take into consideration the bruises which the plaintiff had himself sustained, and the loss of his wife’s society and the distress of mind he had suffered on her account from the time of the accident till the moment of her dissolution.”

The above is the opinion in full. Although the case was at nisi prius it is the leading case on the subject. It was recognized as the law in England until the enactment of the statute familiarly known as “Lord Campbell’s Act,” in 1846. Until the passage of that act the law was recognized to be that “in a civil court, the death of a human being could not be complained of as an injury.”

Formed after “Lord Campbell’s Act,” nearly, if not all, the States of the Union have enacted statutes making an action at law. maintainable against a person who by wrongful act, neglect or default may have caused the death of another.

The courts of this country, with one or two exceptions, accepted Baker v. Bolton as authority, until the enactment of the statutes to which we have just referred.

Carey & wife v. The Berkshire Railroad Co., &c., 1 Cushing, 475, follows Baker v. Bolton, and is a leading case upon the subject.

The question arose in this court in 1853, in Eden v. Lexing[703]*703ton & Frankfort R. R. Company, 14 B. Mon., 204 [165], before the enactment of the statute. That was an action by the husband against a railroad companyforthe allegednegligent killing of his wife. She was killed instantly. The court followed the principle enunciated in Baker v. Bolton, but erroneously assumed that it was decided in that case that when death resulted, the civil remedy was merged in the public offense.

The court said in the Eden case: “The cause of action for injuries to the person dies with the person injured and it follows as a necessary consequence, that the cause of action having itself abated no separate action can be maintained for such damages as are exclusively consequential. But for aggravated injuries to the person of the wife or child the husband or parent has an independent and separate cause of action for the loss of society of the wife, or ih'e services of the child, as the case may be. This cause of action does not abate by the subsequent death of the wife or child, but the death of either affects the extent of the recovery, as by that event all further claim to the society of the one, or the services of the other, ceases and determines. And the rule still prevails, although the death that produces this effect results from the same injury which gives rise to the action.

-K * * * ' * *

“According to the existing law, there can be no recovery for this injury, inasmuch as the death of the wife was instantaneous, and it is only for the loss that is sustained by the husband, in this respect, from the moment of the injury up to time of the death of the wife, for which any recovery can be had.”

The death resulting immediately on ehe infliction of the injuries no appreciable time elapsed in which the husband [704]*704could have enjoyed his wife’s society, hence no damage could result.

It is perfectly manifest that at the common law a husband could recover damages for the loss of her society from the date of the injury until her death for a negligent act resulting in the injury of his wife, although she died therefrom.

The question here arises as to what effect the statute providing a remedy for injuries to the person by negligence has upon the right of the husband to maintain an action for such injuries for which the common law afforded him redress.

At the common law, although the person injured may have suffered great physical and mental pain the cause of action was abated by his death. The General Assembly, in order to preserve and keep alive such cause of action provided that, every right of action for personal injury, except actions for assault and battery, slander, criminal conversation, and so much of the action for criminal prosecution as is intended to recover for personal injury, shall survive to the personal representative. (Ch. 10, Gen. Stats.) [Ky. Stats., sec 10.]

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34 S.W. 236, 98 Ky. 700, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisville-nashville-railroad-v-mcelwain-kyctapp-1896.