188 Ky. 579 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1920
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming
The injury to the wife resulting in the loss of her services and the loss of her consortium to the husband, to recover for which this suit was brought, was sustained by her, as alleged, on December 20, 1917, and was the result of the negligence of the defendant and appellee, Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, while the wife was a passenger on one of its trains. She sustained the loss of a leg, and was otherwise injured, and her husband sought by his petition to recover the sum of $15,000.00 as damages for the loss of her services and of her society resulting from such injuries.
Among the paragraphs contained in the answer was one pleading the one year statute of limitations, the suit having been filed more than one year after the infliction of the injuries to the wife. A demurrer filed to that plea was overruled, and plaintiff declining to reply thereto, his petition was dismissed, and he appeals.
Another paragraph of the answer relied on a settlement made with the plaintiff husband and his wife whereby they were paid the sum of $8,750.00 in full satisfaction of their respective damages growing out of the injuries complained of. A reply was filed to that paragraph, but there was no adjudication of the issues raised thereon, and we will make no further reference to it.
Section 2516 of the statute says: “An action for an injury to the person of the plaintiff, or of his wife, child, ward, apprentice, or servant, or for injuries to person, cattle or stock, by railroads, or by any company or corporation; an action for a malicious prosecution, conspiracy, arrest, seduction, criminal conversation, or breach of promise of marriage; an action for libel or slander; an action for the escape of a prisoner arrested or imprisoned on civil process, shall be commenced within one year next after the cause of action accrued, and not thereafter.”
It is the contention of counsel for plaintiff that while the cause of action for the wife growing out of the personal injuries she sustained would be barred by that
The Menefee case was a malpractice suit, and the only question decided was that the negligence sued for grew out of the violation of an implied contract whereby the physician defendant agreed with plaintiff to exercise the requisite skill in performing his' professional services, and being a violation of a contract, “express or implied,” the limitation came within the express terms of section 2515 of the statute.
The contention is made that the injuries to the wife in this case grew out of a violation of the contract of carriage, and that the case comes within the doctrine of the Menefee case. Every one will admit that statutes of limitations are founded in public policy, and that the legislature in enacting them is the sole judge of that public policy, unless the limitation prescribed is so short as to constitute a practical denial of justice. The quoted words of section 2515 relied on by plaintiff’s counsel as bringing this case within the five year period of limitation are immediately followed by the expression “and not hereinafter enumerated.” Section 2516 is “hereinafter enumerated” in the chapter and in the same article of the entire statute of limitations. So that if it contains any provisions in conflict with the quotation from section 2515, relied on by plaintiff, such provision must prevail, which brings us to a consideration of the language of section 2516. Reading it with such eliminations as do not apply to the concrete case, it says:
“An action for an injury to the person of plaintiff, or (to the person) of his wife ... or for injuries to person ... by railroads . . . shall be commenced within one year next after the cause of action accrued, and not thereafter.”
This interpretation is not to -be discarded because, as argued,- there might be loss of the wife’s services or loss of her society sustained by the husband when no personal injuries were inflicted upon her; as, for instance, if she should be kidnapped, or her affections alienated from her husband. But what would be the limitations applicable to the husband’s cause of action in such cases is a matter with which we are not now concerned, since the assumed facts present only a hypothetical case. Our concern is to determine the concrete case which the facts present, and which are dealt with in section 2516, the language of which, to our minds, is too plain for discussion.
We are fortified in these conclusions by the case_ of Hancock v. Wilhoite, 1 Duvall, 314, which was an action by the father to recover for the loss of services of his daughter because of her seduction and the one year limitation was held to apply, but it was also held that
It being perfectly clear to our minds that the court properly overruled the demurrer to the paragraph of the answer pleading the one year statute of limitations, it results that the judgment must be and it is affirmed.