Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cassin

50 L.R.A. 694, 36 S.E. 881, 111 Ga. 575, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 9, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 50 L.R.A. 694 (Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cassin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cassin, 50 L.R.A. 694, 36 S.E. 881, 111 Ga. 575, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 680 (Ga. 1900).

Opinions

Simmons, C. J.

George Cassin was injured by the plaintiff in error, May 6, 1892. He instituted suit, and, while the action was pending, the company paid him $2,500, taking a receipt stating that it was “in full settlement of my action against said company, now pending in the city court of Atlanta, and also in full settlement of all and any claim for damages on my part, arising out of the injury received by me on or about May 6th, 1892.” More than five years after the injury, Cassin died, and his widow thereupon brought suit against the company for his homicide, alleging that his death was caused by the inju^, negligently inflicted by the companj-. She too died, and the suit was then continued in the name of the children. The evidence as to the cause of the death of Cassin was conflicting. One physician testified that it was due to apoplexy, superinduced by Cassin’s habit of body, and great mental distress caused by domestic afflictions. Another physician testified that-it was caused by the blow from the fall of the telephone cable. The company offered in evidence the receipt given by Cassin in settlement of the damages, and the court excluded it.

The technical rule of the common law, preventing a "wife or child from recovering damages for the death of a husband or father, was a great hardship. There was a crying demand for the enactment of a law which would give a cause of action against “the person who would have been liable if death had not ensued,” and in 1846 was passed Lord Campbell’s act, the first of a series of acts giving such remedy. At the present time, like statutes exist in nearly all of the States of the Union, and none more liberally protect the rights of the wife and child than does that in Georgia. In many of the States, while there is no [577]*577limit to the amount of damages recoverable for personal injury, there isa limit in case of death; some providing that the verdict, in case of death, shall not exceed five thousand dollars, and some that it shall not exceed ten thousand dollars. In others, while there is no statutory limit to the amount of the verdict, the widow or children are only entitled to recover the “pecuniary value” to them of the father or husband; and in arriving at this pecuniary value, the jury must consider and deduct at least what he would have spent on himself. But so liberal to the wife and children are the provisions of our law, that, when the facts show that the defendant is liable for the death of the husband or father, the jury’s verdict is for the “full value of the life of the deceased, without deduction for his necessary and personal expenses” — a provision which “to say the least, is a' harsh rule, and must be strictly construed.” Smith v. Hatcher, 102 Ga. 160. The proposition relied on by defendants in error, if correct, exactly doubles the operation of a statute which has already gone a bowshot beyond that of any other State. For it is claimed that this act gives the widow the full value of the life of the husband, even though he, in his lifetime, had received from the defendant compensation for the injury inflicted, and that evidence of the release can not be introduced, either as a bar to her recovery, or to be considered by the jury in reducing the amount of the verdict. A decision which would announce to persons who have settled with parties injured, that the settlement, instead of being in full, was only partial, that if death ensues as a result of the injury, they must pay again, and this time the full value of the life of the deceased, will be justly regarded as a great hardship; and it will come to the widows and children, not as the grant of a right heretofore unjustly withheld, but as a second payment of a claim already satisfied.

Examining the decisions in England under Lord Campbell’s act, and the decisions under similar statutes enacted by the various States in the Union, we find that sometimes the right of action is vested in the injured party, and survives to his personal representatives, or family. Sometimes a cause of action for the death is given to the personal representatives, who sue for the benefit of his estate,— or sometimes for the benefit [578]*578of persons who are dependent on him. In such cases the personal representative is trustee for these beneficiaries, and not for the estate. In other cases, the widow, or children, are given directly the right of action for the death of the husband. But these differences are all incidental. Tiffany, Death by Wrongful Act, § 24. Each of these statutes had the same purpose as our own ; differing as to details, they are all intended to give the personal representatives, or the members of the family, or whomsoever the plaintiff might be, a right to recover against “the person who would have been liable if death had not ensued.” In Littlewood v. Mayor, 89 N. Y. 24, s. c. 42 Am. Rep. 271, the court had under consideration an act giving the personal representative a cause of action for death, and said : “ The main purpose was to deprive the wrong-doer of the immunity from civil liability. The entire gist of the first section is that the wrong-doer shall be liable to an action for damages notwithstanding the death of the person injured. It does not provide that the wrong-doer shall be liable notwithstanding . . any other defense he might have had at the time of death, but merely that the death of the party injured shall not free him from liability, —showing that this is the point at which the statute is aimed.” Most of the statutes are absolutely silent as to the effect of settlements made by the husband in his lifetime, and yet, notwithstanding this silence, the courts have generally held that such settlement was a bar to another suit against the same party, as the act was not intended to “give two actions for a single injury.” Sawyer v. Perry, 33 Atl. Rep. 660. Some of these decisions had been rendered before our act of 1887, and are fairly to be presumed to have been within the knowledge of the legislature when revising the law on the subject of death by wrongful act. If that body had intended to change this well-known construction as to the effect of settlement, it would have said so. Its silence is to be taken as more indicative of approving than disapproving of this line of cases. For many years the code has permitted a widow, and, if no widow, the children, to recover for the homicide of the husband or father. During that period, hundreds of instances have occurred in which the husband was injured and has. received compensation therefor. In the very nature of things, [579]*579many of these physical injuries impaired health, and probably hastened death, and yet no suit therefor has, until within recent years, been brought by the widow of such person. Evidently, by the common understanding of the community, payment to the husband, accord and satisfaction between him and the defendant, was regarded as a settlement of all liability growing out of the negligent act. (See Lubrano case, 52 Atl. Rep. 207, bot.) We feel safe in saying that many adjustments have been made upon this idea, which would not otherwise have been made, and that giving to the statute the effect now insisted upon would not only be a great hardship upon defendants, who, relying and acting upon the heretofore generally accepted view of the law, have paid their money and bought their peace, but it would be giving to widows something which they did not expect where a settlement had been made by the head of the family.

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Bluebook (online)
50 L.R.A. 694, 36 S.E. 881, 111 Ga. 575, 1900 Ga. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-bell-telephone-telegraph-co-v-cassin-ga-1900.