83 N.Y. 595 | NY | 1881
This action was originally brought by a husband for a wrongful injury to the person of his wife, whereby he suffered damages in the loss of her services and society, and in the expenses of such care and medical attendance as became necessary. Pending the action, but before trial, the husband died and the action was revived, his administrator being substituted as plaintiff. The question whether the cause of action survived came before us on appeal. (
Upon the trial the court, in submitting the case to the jury, mingled these two classes of damage — those which involved pecuniary loss and diminished the estate, and those which only affected the personal comfort of the husband. After describing the cause of action which the wife had, the learned judge added, that "the other cause of action is the one before you which belongs to the husband, and which, in a prospective point of view, took in the fact that he was not only entitled to her services, and the comfort of her society, but was deprived of and suffered damages from it." Again, the measure of damages was described as affected by the death of the husband, and the court said: "The question which is before you stopped at his death, what he was deprived of in his life-time, the loss of her services and society, and you are limited to that and his expenses," etc. And, finally, after excluding from the consideration of the jury certain elements of special damage connected with her keeping a store, the learned judge added: "so that you will confine yourselves to what the husband suffered in respect to nursing, attendance, doctor's bill, the deprivation of ordinary affairs, of regular attendance, services, comfort ofhis wife's society, what the damage was." At the close of the charge the defendant's counsel excepted to so much of the charge as submitted to the jury the question of damages for the loss of society, and so much of it as related to "comfort" independent of services. *598
The attention of the court was thus called to the precise question, whether, in addition to the right of action for pecuniary damages which diminished the estate, there also survived to the administrator a right to recover damages for the loss to the intestate of the society of his wife, and the comfort of such society.
The conclusion of the court is sought to be sustained upon two grounds. The first is, that the charge, in the respect objected to, did not, in fact, go beyond a claim for services, and that what was intended by the use of the word "comfort" was merely the personal service of the wife as contradistinguished from the service of a stranger or a hired nurse. That is the substantial ground taken by the General Term. We do not think such a construction is just. It is not the natural or apparent import of the language, and could hardly have been so understood by the jury. How the defendant's counsel understood it was made very plain by the precise terms of the exception. Comfort, as independent of services, was the point of his objection, fairly and distinctly stated. It is not to be presumed that if he plainly misunderstood the meaning of the charge the court would have avoided explanation. If the counsel misunderstood it the jury might also, and indeed would, be very certain to do so when the interpretation, openly and distinctly put on it by the counsel, was in no manner qualified or repudiated by the court. We must understand, therefore, the charge to mean, as it plainly did mean, that a right to damages for the loss of the wife's society, and the comforts of that society, survived the death of the intestate and vested in the administrator.
The correctness of that ruling is argued on another ground. It is said that the cause of action which survives must do so as one and entire, and cannot survive in part and abate in part; and our attention is called to the cases of which Moore v. Hamilton
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This rule was violated in the submission of the case to the jury, and for that error the judgment should be reversed.
All concur.
Judgment reversed. *601