27 Conn. 325 | Conn. | 1858
The motion for a new trial in this case being abandoned by the defendant, it is unnecessary to consider any of the points which it might involve. The only question before us is the one which has been made on the motion in
By the rules of the common law an action is abated by the death of the plaintiff or defendant, and can not be revived in favor of their respective executors or administrators; and if the cause of action survives it is necessary to bring a new suit. But the 80th section of the act, for the regulation of civil actions, (Bev. Stat, tit. 1, § 80,) provides, that if the plaintiff, in any action pending in the superior court, shall die before final judgment, the same shall not abate if it might originally have been prosecuted by his executor or administrator, and that in such case the executor or administrator may enter and prosecute the same in his own name. If, therefore, any of the causes of action described in the several counts of the declaration in this suit might have been originally prosecuted by the administrators of the plaintiff, the suit, in regard to such causes of action, was in our opinion properly prosecuted by those administrators, although none of the other causes of action declared on were of such a nature that either the common law or the statute would allow the action tó be prosecuted for them after the death of the plaintiff. No good reason can be given why, under that statute, the abatement of the action by his death as to some only of the causes of action for which it was brought, should have the further effect of destroying it as to other causes of action for which it was also brought and which could have been originally prosecuted by his representative. In regard to the latter causes of action the suit obviously should stand on the same ground, and be allowed to be prosecuted under the statute by such representative, as if they were the only causes of action set forth in the declaration, while, as to the other causes of action not embraced in the statute, the common law principle should be applied to them, and the suit, as to them, should be deemed to be abated. The writ and declaration are plainly divisible in respect to the several counts or causes of action set out in the declaration, and may well stand as to those which are sustained and allowed
It is a familiar and well settled principle, that, upon the death of either of the parties to a contract, the cause of action upon it survives to and against his executors and administrators. The first count in this declaration is in tort for a breach of warranty on the exchange of the cattle of the defend
Lord Ellenborough says, that the warranty is the material averment, and it is sufficient to prove that broken to establish the deceit, which consists, in that kind of action, of the breach of the warranty; and also, that whether the action for a
On the question of survivorship, we consider it immaterial whether the form of the remedy adopted is in tort or in contract, provided the cause of action is founded on a contract. The form of action brought to redress a wrong, sometimes, and indeed usually, indicates its nature, whether as arising independently of contract or not; but this is far from being invariably so, there being many cases where the action, the cause of which grows out of a breach of contract, may be in form either ex delicto, as in case, or ex contractu, as in assumpsit. In determining whether a cause of action survives to the personal representative, the real nature of the injury or claim ought to be regarded, and not the form of the remedy by which it is sought to be redressed or enforced. 1 Chitty PI., 68, 90,134,135,
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Motion in arrest overruled.