113 Ga. 420 | Ga. | 1901
It appears from tbe record that W. L. Hyer, an engineer in tbe employ of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, was killed in a collision. His widow instituted against tbe company a suit for damages, under sections 3828 and 3829 of the Civil Code, and recovered a verdict therein. In the meantime Mrs, Coleman and R. S. Hyer filed a petition in equity against Mrs. Hyer and the railroad company, asking that the latter be enjoined from paying over the amount recovered to the widow, who was alleged to be insolvent. Upon the hearing it was agreed that Mrs. Coleman was a married woman, and that both she and R. S. Hyer were the children of the deceased by a former wife, but were of full age and living apart from the deceased at the time of his death. Mrs. Hyer denied that the petitioners were entitled to any interest in the recovery for her husband’s homicide, and refused to pay them any part thereof. The judge was asked by both parties to grant the injunction if the petitioners had any interest in the recovery; to refuse it if they had not. He refused the injunction, and the petitioners excepted.
The controlling question in this case is whether in section 3829 of the Civil Code the word “ children ” is intended to include minor children only, or to embrace all children without regard to age. In determining this question sections 3828 and 3829 must be considered and construed together. In so far as pertinent to a case of this kind, they are as follows: § 3828. “A widow, or, if no widow, a child or children, may recover for the homicide of the husband
In 1883 this court held, in the case of Mott v. Central Railroad, 70 Ga. 680, that “the adult son of one who has been killed by a railroad, and who has left neither widow nor minor child, can not maintain a suit against the corporation to recover damages for the homicide.” In the opinion Hall, J., said: “ Applying these rules to that portion of the law which prescribes how the property shall descend and be distributed among the children, we can not entertain a serious doubt that the legislature meant to use the word “ children ” in a limited and specific, and not in a generic or general, sense. What widow ? What children ? The widow who had the right to bring the suit and recover; the children who, under certain contingencies, might likewise bring this suit, or to whom it would survive in certain other contingencies, and who could recover. None others are designated by this law. And who are they thus designated ? It is evident, from the decisions upon previous legislation, that they were such only as were entitled to a support from the deceased; such as were dependent members of the family at the time of the homicide of the parent. The right had, by previous decisions, been confined to them, and the General Assembly did not see proper to change these decisions by' extending the rule laid down by them to another class of children than those embraced in its terms. It is evident that this act was passed with a clear and intelligent understanding of the results of previous legislation, and that no other change of the rules resulting from these interpretations than those specified were designed or intended.” In 1887 the legislature further amended the law upon this subject by providing that, in arriving at the full value of the life of the deceased, no deduction should be made for necessary or other personal expenses which the deceased would have incurred had he lived. Although' this act was passed more than four years after the rendition of the decision in the Mott case, the legislature did not seek to change or modify the' effect of that decision. Had it been the will- of the legislature that adults should be included within the word “children,” nothing would have been easier than to so provide. The subject was in
It was argued here, in the admirable brief filed in behalf of the plaintiffs in error, that the Mott case decided merely that an adult child could not institute the action, and that anything said in that case as to the question of distribution of the amount recovered was obiter. It was also argued that, when the statute provided for the distribution of the amount recovered according to “ the law of descents,” it excluded all idea of minority and dependence, and embraced as distributees all who would ordinarily inherit from the deceased. After a careful consideration of this question we must decide to the contrary. The two sections of the code, above quoted, must be considered in pari materia, and, when the conclusion is reached that an adult child can not institute an action under section 3828, it must follow that such adult child has no interest in the proceeds of such a suit instituted by another. Of course the legislature might have provided that some who could not institute the action should nevertheless share in the distribution of the proceeds of the action, but this was not done. While the law as to recovery for homicides is divided into two sections in the Code of 1895, it was not so divided at the time of the passage of the act of 1887 or before that time, and the same words, “widow,” “child,” and “children,” are used with reference to the institution of the action and to the distribution of the proceeds. If these words include only minor children in giving the right to institute the action, can the same words in the same law be said to include other and different children when used to indicate those who shall share in the proceeds of the action ? That an adult is not a “ child ” who can institute the action is settled by the Mott case; and that an adult can not as a “ child ” share in the proceeds of the action must
Judgment affirmed.