Worley v. Cincinnati, Hamilton, & Dayton Railroad

1 Handy 481
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedMay 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1 Handy 481 (Worley v. Cincinnati, Hamilton, & Dayton Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worley v. Cincinnati, Hamilton, & Dayton Railroad, 1 Handy 481 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1855).

Opinion

Storer, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff states in his petition, that in August last his wife, without any fault or negligence on her part, but through the carelessness of the defendants’ servants, was struck by the cars under their charge, while the same were running on the road track, and immediately killed. He further charges, that he has thereby been deprived of her services as a wife in the care of his children, and the management of his household affairs; that those services were worth at least $500 per annum, to which amount he is injured; that he has lost her comfort, fellowship, and society; that at the time of her death, she was between 41 and 42 years of age, in good health, and would probably have lived about eleven years, on which supposition his damages are $5000. He also states that he has expended a considerable sum for the funeral charges of his deceased wife.

The defendants have demurred generally, and the question is presented for our determination, whether in a case like the present the plaintiff can recover.

There is no reported decision of our own courts to aid our inquiry, or determine our judgment; we must therefore consider the question upon principle, by an examina[482]*482tion of the peculiar rights that attach to the husband by his marital relation.

Legally speaking, the right to the society and fellowship of the wife is secured to the husband, on the sole condition of his protection and support. The duties of each party are correlative. When one refuses to perform the obligations devolving on him, or her, the basis of the common relation is directly impaired. If, moreover, there is a violation of the compact that binds the parties in one, the union is virtually severed, and there can be no claim for the loss of service, or the interruption of social happiness. Hence it is, if the husband abandons the wife, or treats her with indignity, she may seek the protection of friends, and the law will not permit him to ask damages for an injury, that he has thus produced, or tolerate a claim for the loss of her society, whose protection he has surrendered to others, and whose sympathy he does not deserve to enjoy. And so it is, if the wife dishonors her husband, neglects her family duties, or causelessly ignores his just claim to her affection, and her confidence, a judicial tribunal may well determine that her right to be supported by one to whom she is morally a stranger, ought not to be enforced.

It is on the recognition of these reciprocal duties that the rights of the parties depend. When they cease to be performed, the obligations they imply necessarily cease, and it would seem to be immaterial by what act the parties were prevented from their fulfillment, whether their own imprudence or criminality, or the ordinary accidents of life. The relation once entirely severed, there is an end of duty, and consequently of privilege, for the one is dependent on the other.

[483]*483Having thus suggested the principle, upon which we suppose the right of the husband depends to claim damages for an injury to his wife, let us examine the earlier cases, where the question is considered. Until the decision in Guy vs. Livesey, Cro. Jac. 501, it was seriously doubted, whether the husband and wife should not be joined in every action, where an injury to the wife was sought to be redressed in damages, no distinction being made in the consequences that followed the act. It was there held, “that in an action brought for the battery of the wife, she need not be joined, as the loss was only her company which pertained alone to the husband, for which he should have his suit, as the master shall have for the loss of his servants’ service.” The same doctrine was reported in Hyde vs. Scyssor, Cro. Jac. 538, and subsequently in Young vs. Pridel, Cro. Car. 89. These are the leading authorities for the suit by the husband for the loss of the wife’s society, and the right is placed on the same ground, that gives the master remuneration for the loss of his “ servants’ service.” The doctrine is based upon the hypothesis that the relation of husband and wife, parent and child, master and servant, exists, at the time the right of action accrued, not constructively but actually; not because the relation once subsisted, but was then in being with all its incidents.

Hence it was that the measure of damages in all such cases was the loss sustained before the institution of the suit. The deprivation of service for any subsequent period gave a new right of action. No future or probable injury could be reasonably anticipated, and even if it could, a remedy was at hand. The unlawful deprivation of service, or social privilege, was a tort continuing until [484]*484the mischief was practically remedied, and for each successive trespass a liability was created.

We can find no case, where an action at common law has been brought in England, by the parent or master, for the loss of the child’s or servant’s service, by the death of either, in consequence of the fault or negligence of an individual, or a corporation. The silence of the books on the subject furnish a strong argument against the right, and justify us in the belief, that no such right has been supposed to exist.

There are two cases, however, in which suits are reported to have been brought by the husband for the loss of his wife’s services, under similar circumstances. In Higgins vs. Butcher, Yelv. 89, which is the first case we find on the subject, it was ruled, “that the husband could not maintain an action, per quod consortium amicit,” where the wife had lost her life by the fault of another, as the act of killing, being a felony, merged all private rights.” This decision was made by Tanfield, Fenner, and Yelverton, Justices in 1607, and from that period until 1806 we find no similar case reported. In the latter year, Lord Ellenborough held in Baker vs. Bolton and others, 1 Camp. 493, “that in a civil court the death of a human being could not be complained of as an injury,” and therefore the plaintiff’s claim to damages for the loss of his wife, must stop with the period of her existence.

We know of no other adjudications on the subject in the English Courts, and in each of these we find a different reason given for the judgment. The reasoning in Yelverton we could not adopt, as it is inapplicable to our judicial proceedings. We have no felonies, as at Common Law or by the British Statutes; the commission [485]*485of crime here works no corruption of blood, or attainder of estate: the individual doing the wrong, though punishable to the extremity of the law, is still liable for the personal injury he inflicts, and his estate may be legally subjected, by way of indemnity, to the injured party. 4 Ohio 376, Raguet vs. Roll; 15 Mass. 331, Boardman vs. Gore; 14 B. Monroe 204, Eden vs. Lexington and Frankfort Railroad Company.

Although we cannot defer to the reason given for the authority in Yelverton, it is still a very clear indication of what was then deemed to be the law, and if the principle adjudicated had been regarded as unjust, we may suppose that in view of the consequences, some new mode would have been provided by statute, to obtain that relief which was denied by the courts. But the postponement of all legislation on the subject from 4 Jas. 1, when the opinion in Higgins vs.

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