McKay v. New England Dredging Co.

43 A. 29, 92 Me. 454, 1899 Me. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 43 A. 29 (McKay v. New England Dredging Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKay v. New England Dredging Co., 43 A. 29, 92 Me. 454, 1899 Me. LEXIS 76 (Me. 1899).

Opinion

Emery, J.

The jury found that the death of the plaintiff’s intestate, William McKay, was “caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default” of the defendant, according to the Act of 1891, ch. 124. This finding does not seem to us so unmistakably wrong as to require us to set it aside.

The question of the amount of damages to be recovered requires [458]*458more consideration. The action is “ for the exclusive benefit ” not of the estate, but of the father and mother of the deceased, they being his only heirs, he having left no widow nor children. The father and mother are entitled to “a fair and just compensation, not exceeding five thousand dollars, with reference to the pecuniary injuries resulting to them from such death.”

The right to any compensation is wholly created by the statute, and the amount of the compensation is to be measured solely by the standard prescribed by the statute. At common law in cases like this there was no right of action in the widow, children or heirs for any compensation. Our statute is evidently derived from the English Statute of 9 & 10 Yict. ch. 93, (1847) known as Lord Campbell’s Act, as were similar statutes in others of the United States and the Canadian Provinces. By some writers it has been suggested that these statutes are a re-appearance of the ancient Wer-gild, the compensation paid by a slayer to the family or clan of the person slain. This however is purely fanciful. The statute is to be construed as a new statute, creating a new right, and not as affirming or reviving an ancient right.

As to the measure of damages under the statute several propositions are already well established and familiar. No punitive damages can be recovered, nor any damages by way of penalty. No damages can be recovered for any suffering by, nor injury to, the deceased himself or his estate. His creditors cannot be heard to complain that his estate has been diminished to their injury, nor that they have lost the chance that he would have earned something with which to pay them. No damages can be recovered for any grief, distress of mind, loss of mere companionship or society, or injury to the affections, suffered by the beneficiaries. Nor can damages be recovered for the value of the life to the deceased, to the State or community. The injury for which damages can be recovered must be wholly to the beneficiaries themselves, and it is limited to the pecuniary effect of the death upon them.

It does not follow, however, that the death must cause an actual subtraction from the estate or income of the beneficiaries or from their earning power. It is not necessary that the beneficiaries [459]*459should have any legal claim against or upon the deceased. They have no rights under the statute as creditors. In every person’s life are matters of actual value to him which form no part of his estate and have no market value. The education and training which children may reasonably expect to receive from a parent are of actual and commercial value to them as better fitting them to obtain an income or estate. The loss of that education and training through the death of the parent from the fault of a defendant would be in the statute sense a pecuniary injury. So the attentions and kindness of children to parents though adding nothing to their estate may add much to the physical comfort or ease of their life, independent of the affections or of the joy of companionship. The loss of these might under some circumstances be a pecuniary injury.

Of course loss of income or loss of estate would be pecuniary injuries. So would be tbe loss of a reasonable prospect of additional income and estate in tbe future. If a son had settled an annuity during his own life upon his parents, his death would be a pecuniary loss to them, as well as to his wife and minor children.

Generally where there exists a reasonable probability of pecuniary benefit to one from the continuing life of another, whether arising from legal, or family relations, the untimely extinction of that life is a pecuniary injury.

It is evident that the pecuniary damages to be recovered under this statute can never be ascertained with exactness nor with any satisfactory degree of approximation. Unlike ordinary questions of the legal measure of damages, this relates wholly to the future. There can never be knowledge. The conclusion arrived at must be based on probabilities instead of facts. The only facts that can be ascertained are those which occurred before or at the time of the death. From that data, what would probably have occurred had not the wrongful act or neglect of the defendant intervened, must be conjectured as carefully as possible. The circumstances of the deceased and the beneficiaries are to be ascertained. The legal, family or other ties are to be considered. The age, capacity, health, means, occupation, temperament, habits and disposition of [460]*460the deceased and of the beneficiaries are material to be known. There is some probability that these various circumstances shown to be existing at the time of the death would have’continued in more or less degree had not the death occurred. They would be subject however, to acceleration, retardation, interruption and even extinction by other circumstances which may possibly, or probably, or even surely occur after the death. These inevitable, probable, and even possible subsequent circumstances are therefore to be looked for and considered. Whatever result is arrived at must be reached from a careful balancing of the various probabilities.

It remains to make the' conjecture, to balance the probabilities, for this case. At the time of the death of William McKay, his father and mother were past middle life. The mother had been an invalid for some six years, unable to do any work or to walk, and for some time had been unable to feed herself. The father was somewhat infirm from rheumatism, being at times unable to work. They were too poor to employ a nurse, and3 the mother was cared for by the father and the two younger sons aged fifteen and seventeen. The deceased son was aged twenty-three and a half years at the time of his death. He had learned the stone cutter’s trade during his minority. After arriving at his majority he worked at his trade for the most of his time in Quincy, the home of his parents, and turned all of his earnings into their home. He also worked at his'trade for a little time atHallowell and at Leadbetter’s Island and. occasionally sent home little sums of money to his mother. He did not have constant employment, but does not appear to have been lazy or unusually idle. He sought at various places for work at his trade, and failing to obtain that, he worked as a laborer in the defendant’s quarry where he was killed. It is not shown that he sent home any money while in defendant’s employ. His wages as laborer were fifteen cents an hour, out of which he had to pay his board of $20 per month. What wages he got at his trade was not shown, but the father at the same trade was paid $2 per day. The only home the deceased had was with his parents in Quincy, to which he seems to have returned in the intervals of employment, and paid his board there.

[461]*461He was of some pecuniary assistance to his parents, though evidently quite small. He rendered this assistance after he became of age. In view of the increasing age and infirmity of his parents, there is a probability that he would have continued to furnish more or less money or service during their lives according to their needs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 A. 29, 92 Me. 454, 1899 Me. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckay-v-new-england-dredging-co-me-1899.