30 N.W.2d 403 | Mich. | 1948
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *705 Plaintiff filed a declaration claiming judgment against defendant under the provisions of Act No. 38, Pub. Acts 1848* (the so-called "death act"), as amended by Act No. 297, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 14061 et seq., Stat. Ann. 1946 Cum. Supp. § 27.711 et seq.) Defendant filed an answer raising issue as to the amount of damages only, in pursuance of Court Rule No. 23, § 8 (1945), and admitting liability for $190 for funeral and burial expenses, but denying that the decedent endured any pain and suffering or that anyone suffered pecuniary injury as the result of her death.
The proofs establish that defendant's automobile, while driven by him, struck plaintiff's decedent, inflicting injuries resulting in her death; that defendant "hit something and heard someone or something holler at the same time;" that decedent lived from 20 to 30 minutes after being struck; that she was at *706 that time a widow, 63 years of age and in good health, with three married children, none of them dependent upon her for support and maintenance; that she then was and for some 10 years prior thereto had been residing with her son, plaintiff George A. Baker, and helped with chores and housework at his home; that this son furnished her board and room and gave her money from time to time as her needs required, but paid her no certain wages; that as a dependent of another son she had received two allotment checks from such son while he was in the army and within two or three months prior to her death; that the value, in the community in which they resided, of such services as she had been rendering in her son George's household was $15 per week or more. No witness testified that decedent was conscious after being struck by defendant's automobile. No testimony was introduced to establish that anyone was or had been dependent upon decedent for support or maintenance or that there was anyone to whom she was morally or legally obligated to contribute. Neither was there any testimony as to the cost of decedent's maintenance.
At the conclusion of plaintiff's proofs defendant moved the court to direct a verdict for plaintiff for $190, the amount of decedent's funeral and burial expenses, on the following grounds:
"1. That is the only amount of damage proved in this case at this time.
"2. There is no evidence in this case that decedent was under either a moral or a legal duty to contribute to any of her children.
"3. There is no evidence in this case of conscious pain or suffering.
"4. There is no evidence in this case which would enable the jury to determine the cost of maintenance of the deceased by the plaintiff or any of the other children. *707
"5. It clearly appears, in the evidence most favorable to the plaintiff, that the deceased was dependent upon him at the time of her death."
The court reserved decision on the motion under the Empson act** and permitted the case to go to the jury on the question of conscious pain and suffering and of decedent's probable future earnings had she not been injured and killed, refusing defendant's request to charge that there was "no competent proof of damages in this case other than the expenses in the amount of $190." The jury returned a verdict for $1,690. Defendant's motions for judgment non obstante veredicto and for a new trial, embodying substantially the same theories contained in his motion for directed verdict, were denied and judgment entered for plaintiff. Defendant appeals.
The burden rested on plaintiff to prove every material element of his case at issue under the pleadings by a preponderance of the evidence, including the element of conscious pain and suffering. The statute under which this action is brought expressly permits damages for "pain and suffering, whileconscious, undergone by such deceased person during the periodintervening between the time of the inflicting of such injuriesand his death." There is no testimony that decedent was conscious after being struck. Plaintiff contends that defendant's admission that he "hit something and heard someone or something holler at the same time" is indicative of conscious suffering by decedent after she was struck; but the outcry occurred at the instant of the collision, not during the period, mentioned in the statute, intervening between the time of the inflicting of such injuries and her death. Witnesses produced at the trial saw decedent within a few minutes after her *708
injury and none testified that she was conscious then or at any time thereafter. There is nothing in the record from which it may be inferred that she was conscious at any time during the interim after being struck and before witnesses saw her. Plaintiff has not sustained the burden of proof in this respect. SeeSweetland v. Railway Co.,
The next question presented is whether recovery may be had under Act No. 38, Pub. Acts 1848, as amended by Act No. 297, Pub. Acts 1939, for loss of probable future earnings, without diminution for cost of maintenance, when the widowed decedent had an established earning capacity but no surviving spouse or next of kin to whom she was under a legal or moral obligation to contribute support.
It is plaintiff's theory that this question should be answered in the affirmative and that like recovery may be had after the effective date of the 1939 act as theretofore under the survival act (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14040 [Stat.Ann. § 27.684]). In support thereof plaintiff quotes from In re Olney's Estate,
"Act No. 297, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 14061et seq., Stat. Ann. 1943 Cum. Supp. § 27.711 et seq.), does not repeal, but instead only amends, our so-called death act. 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14061 et seq. (Stat. Ann. § 27.711 etseq.). Nor does the 1939 act repeal our so-called survival statute (3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 14040 et seq. [Stat. Ann. § 27.684 et seq.]), except in so far as section 14040 is `inconsistent' with the 1939 act. And we do not find section 14040 at all inconsistent with any provision in the 1939 act, except that section 1 of the latter act provides: `All actions for such death, or injuries resulting in death, shall hereafter be brought only under this act.' Section 14040 is still part of our statutory law." *709
Plaintiff's brief and the opinion of the trial court also urgeGrimes v. King,
"The administrator's right to recover is not limited to the pecuniary loss suffered by the husband for the value of his wife's services. The deceased had an established earning capacity as a music teacher and had she lived throughout her expectancy could have added to the worth of her estate in which her heirs at law would participate. Under the statutory provisions, supra, they would also participate in the distribution of the damages assessed and collected."
Closer scrutiny of the Olney Case and the Grimes Case is essential to proper understanding of the holdings of this Court therein.
In the Olney Case the tortfeasor predeceased plaintiff's decedent. The above quoted language from the majority opinion was in express answer to the position taken in the dissenting opinion to the effect that the 1939 act had completely repealed the survival act so that decedent's right of action existing against the tortfeasor during the lifetime of them both did not survive the injured party's death with the result that the new cause of action which would have arisen at her death under the 1939 act must be, as provided in the act, against "the person who * * * would have been liable, if death had not resulted," and such person being already dead and no action being maintainable against a corpse, *710 there was no "person" who could be sued. In opposition to such position, the majority of this Court held that there is survival under the survival act regardless of whether the death be that of the injured party or of the tortfeasor or of both; that this is in no wise inconsistent with the 1939 act and that, therefore, in that respect at least, the survival act continues in force. But the majority opinion recognizes that the elements of damages recoverable under the old survival act are in certain respects inconsistent with the provisions of the 1939 act and that the survival act is, therefore, to that extent, by reason of the repealing provision of section 3 of the 1939 act, no longer in force. This is manifest in that plaintiff's decedent in theOlney Case lived six days after she was injured and yet the majority of this Court said:
"Our conclusion being that the administrator's cause of action survives, consideration must be given to appellant's claim that damages adjudged in the amount of $5,000 were excessive. In this connection the question arises as to what elements of damages may be recovered under the 1939 act. This act specifically divides the damages recoverable into three classes. These classes are damages (1) `with reference to the pecuniary injury resulting;' * * * (2) `for the reasonable medical, hospital, funeral and burial expenses;' * * * (3) `for the pain and suffering.'
"1. The surviving husband had no legally enforceable claim tosupport or maintenance by deceased, nor does this record disclosesuch claim as to any other person. But the surviving husband lost the services of Mrs. Bennett, and the value thereof lessreasonable cost of her maintenance may be recovered in this action. Gorton v. Harmon,
It is difficult to imagine how this Court could have stated more explicitly that after the effective date of the 1939 act recovery may be had, even when the injured party survives his injuries for a time, only for pecuniary injury, as formerly compensable under the death act, plus compensation for conscious pain and suffering, when it exists, and for reasonable medical, hospital, funeral and burial expenses, all as expressly provided in the 1939 act.
In the Grimes Case death was instantaneous. To give the language above quoted from that case the meaning contended for by plaintiff and accorded it by the trial court would be to hold that in cases of instantaneous death the elements of damages were extended by the 1939 act, beyond what was recoverable under the previous death act, so as to include, now, probable future earnings, without diminution for cost of maintenance, regardless of whether decedent left a surviving spouse or next of kin to whom decedent was legally obligated to contribute support. That was not the intent of the 1939 act.
It is to be observed that Crook v. Eckhardt,
The paragraph above quoted from the Grimes Case is not necessary to the holding therein. Nevertheless, in the interests of a clarification of that case and of this Court's views, the paragraph should be read as though there were inserted after the first sentence thereof the following:
"The administrator's right to recover extends also to the pecuniary injury to decedent's surviving spouse and next of kin, which shall be found to exist only, as under the old death act, when and to the extent that it is established that the decedent owed a legal duty to contribute to the support of such persons or any of them."
That this reflects the real meaning of the Grimes Case further appears from the fact that, in the paragraph preceding the one above quoted, Mr. Justice BUSHNELL, in speaking for the majority of the Court, said:
"Here, the death was instantaneous, and as was said in theOlney Case, the surviving husband can recover for loss of services `less reasonable cost of her maintenance.' SeeGorton v. Harmon,
In the respect that any of the language which is necessary to the decision in the majority opinion of the Grimes Case may be read to mean anything other than as that case is here construed, it should be deemed to be overruled.
The effect of the 1939 act on the old survival act becomes abundantly clear upon a reading of its provisions. Legislative language could hardly be made more explicit on the subject. Four times the legislative intent on this matter is expressed in the 1939 act:
(1) the title proclaims that for wrongful death or injuriesresulting in death the statute is enacted "to prescribe the measure of damages recoverable * * * and to repeal inconsistent acts;"
(2) section 1 reads in part: "all actions for such death, orinjuries resulting in death, shall hereafter be brought only under this act;"
(3) section 2 limits damages to (a) what the court or jury shall deem fair and just with reference to pecuniary injuries to the surviving spouse or next of kin, (b) reasonable medical, hospital, funeral and burial expenses, (c) reasonable compensation for conscious pain and suffering;
(4) section 3 expressly repeals the survival act insofar as its provisions are inconsistent with this act.
The conclusion is inescapable that it was precisely in the field of damages, in those cases in which decedent survived his injuries, that the legislature attempted to effectuate a change, not only as to the distribution but, particularly, as to what shall constitute the elements thereof. *714
The remaining question is, what is meant in the 1939 act by "pecuniary injury" to decedent's surviving spouse or next of kin. Does this include things so speculative and nebulous as the fondly nurtured hope of an inheritance, enhanced by redress for decedent's wrongful death, but suspended by the tenuous cord of decedent's possible intestacy? Assuredly not. In the Olney Case we recognized that, beyond compensation to a husband for loss of his wife's services, the right to recover for pecuniary loss must be predicated upon the existence of some next of kin having a legally enforceable claim to support or maintenance by deceased.
In both the Olney Case and the Grimes Case we pointed out that the provision in the 1939 act for compensation for "pecuniary injury" is identical with that in the old death act. (There is, of course, a change as to method of and persons to whom distribution is made under the 1939 act.) Under the old death act, in construing the term "pecuniary injury" recoverable under the act, we have uniformly held that, in addition to the husband's right to recovery for loss of his wife's services (or parent's right to recovery for loss of minor child's services) after deduction of her maintenance costs, further recovery could be had only for those persons who would have been entitled to inherit deceased's personal property had he died intestate (under the 1939 act this is changed to surviving spouse and next of kin), and for them only to the extent that deceased was legally obligated to contribute to the support and maintenance of any of them. As recently as in Bricker v. Green,
"The death act, after its amendment by Act No. 297, Pub. Acts 1939 (Comp. Laws Supp. 1940, § 14061 *715 et seq., Stat. Ann. 1945 Cum. Supp. § 27.711 et seq.), is as stated by counsel for plaintiff, `at least as broad in protecting such minor beneficiaries as the original death act.' See In reOlney's Estate,
"`The law requires in this class of cases that the administrator must show that some person has suffered somepecuniary injury by the death. The statute does not imply that damages and pecuniary loss necessarily flow from the negligent killing. * * * These damages must be limited to the pecuniarydamage sustained by those legally entitled to support. Van Brunt
v. Railroad Co.,
"See, also, Ormsbee v. Railway Co.,
In the instant case, plaintiff failed to establish conscious pain and suffering by decedent, and inasmuch as the widowed decedent's next of kin, in the language of the Olney Case, "had no legally enforceable claim to support or maintenance by decedent" and, consequently, suffered no pecuniary loss, the only element of damages which was recoverable was the expense of decedent's funeral and burial, for which plaintiff claimed and defendant conceded that plaintiff was entitled to have judgment for $190.
Judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for entry of judgment in the amount of $190. The record disclosing no tender by defendant in that amount, plaintiff may recover his costs in the court below. Defendant is awarded the costs of his appeal.
SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, NORTH, and CARR, JJ., concurred with DETHMERS, J. BUSHNELL, C.J., and BUTZEL, J., concurred in the result.
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