19 Ga. App. 691 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
The act of 1887 (Acts 1887, p. 45), codified in section 4434 of the Civil Code (1910), provides that “A mother, or, if no mother, a father, may recover for the homicide of a child minor or sni juris, upon -whom she or he is dependent, or who contributes to his or her support, unless said child leave a wife, husband, or child.” The language of this statute is that the recovery may be had either when the parent is dependent or when the child contributes to the parent’s support, but it is settled, both by the decisions of the Supreme Court and of this court, that, in order to authorize a recovery, there must have been both dependency and contribution to the parent’s support. In the case of Clay v. Central R. Co., 84 Ga. 345 (10 S. E. 967), it was held that “the legislature did not intend to give to a mother or father, under the circumstances stated, the right to recover for the homicide of a child, unless the mother or father was dependent upon such child for a support and such deceased child contributed to the support or maintenance of the mother or father;” and it. was accordingly there ruled that the disjunctive “or,” as used in this clause of the act, should be read as “and.” This act was given the same construction in Smith v. Hatcher, 103 Ga. 158 (39 S. E. 163), in Augusta Southern Railroad Co. v. McDade, 105 Ga. 134 (7), 138 (31 S. E. 430), and in many other decisions of the Supreme Court. Although'in each code adopted since the passage of that act the legislature has continued to use the disjrmctive “or” as it appeared in the original act pf 1887, the courts of this State have continued to read the conjunctive “and” into the statute. Compare Fuller v. Inman, 10 Ga. App. 680 (74 S. E. 287).
It is well settled that the statute with which we are now dealing, being in derogation of the common law, must be strictly construed. The act is partly punitory and partly compensatory, according to the opinion by Mr. Justice Lumpkin in Georgia Railroad & Banking Co. v. Spinks, 111 Ga. 571 (36 S. E. 855). However, the statute seems to be mainly compensatory. Indeed, this doctrine is fixed in the law of this State, and must have influenced the court in declaring that the legislature meant to use the conjunctive “and” where the disjunctive “or” appears in the statute.
While, in a suit by a mother for the tortious homicide of her minor son, it is necessary to prove both dependence and material contribution to the support of the mother, it is equally well settled
The petition alleged that the defendant company was negligent in failing to secure or fasten the rear door of the coach on which the plaintiff’s minor son was riding as a passenger, and in leaving this rear door open without chains or other protection to keep any one from falling from the coach, and in disconnecting the coaches immediately attached to the coach in which he was riding, without notice, or warning to him, and in negligently locking and fastening the closet door in the rear end of the coach in which he was riding, and in running its train at a high and reckless speed,
Affirmed.