15 Ga. App. 182 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1914
T. S.-Crenshaw Jr. brought suit against the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company et al., lessees of the Georgia
Under the provisions of the Civil Code, § 4412, “every person may recover for torts committed to himself, or his wife, or his child, or his ward, or his servant.” Our Supreme Court has held that the torts contemplated by this section belong to that class of torts for which damages could have been recovered at common law for the loss of the services of a wife, child, ward, or servant (Chick v. Southwestern R. Co., 57 Ga. 357, 360), and that the section should be construed in the light of the common law of force in this State, since it is declaratory of that law. Allen v. Atlanta Street Railroad Co., 54 Ga. 503; Bell v. Central Railroad, 73 Ga. 521; Frazier v. Georgia Railroad Co., 101 Ga. 72 (28 S. E. 684). Under the common law a father may sue for injuries to his minor son, just as he might sue for injuries to a servant, if the son be old enough to render services of value. Shields v. Yonge, 15 Ga. 349 (60 Am. D. 698); Allen v. Atlanta Street R. Co., 54 Ga. 505; Chick v. Southwestern R. Co., 57 Ga. 358; McDowell v. Georgia Railroad, 60 Ga. 321; Central R. Co. v. Brinson, 64 Ga. 475; Southern Railway Co. v. Covenia, 100 Ga. 46 (29 S. E. 219, 40 L. R. A. 253, 62 Am. St. R. 312); Amos v. Atlanta Railway Co., 104 Ga. 809-811 (31 S. E. 42). A father may sue where he loses the services of a child on account of any trespass done or any damage sus
In an action by a parent for the homicide of a child, it must, therefore, be alleged and shown that the homicide resulted in loss to the parent of the services of the child. Where the petition alleges merely that the child has been killed by the negligence of a railroad company, whereby the plaintiff is damaged, no cause of action is set out, and there is nothing to amend by. Bell v. Central Railroad, supra. The loss of services being the basis of the cause of action, it follows, as a necessary consequence, that if the child is incapable of rendering' services at the time of .the injury or homicide, the parent can not recover.
In Southern Railway Co. v. Covenia, supra, Chief Justice Simmons says, speaking for the court, that “whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions, it is well settled in this State that the gist of an action by a parent to recover damages for the death or injury of a minor child is the loss of services. . . The loss of service being the cause of action, it follows that when the infant is incapable of rendering service at the time of its death or injury, the parent can not recover.” So much is conceded by able counsel for the plaintiff in error, and the sole question for our determination is whether, as a matter of law, a child less than two years old is incapable of rendering services of value to the parent; for if this be true, then the action of the trial judge in directing a verdict which limited the plaintiff’s recovery to the sum conceded to be due for burial expenses was proper, and affords no ground for a reversal. In the case of Allen v. Atlanta Street R. Co., supra, the child for whose homicide the suit was' brought was but two years old, and the court held .that he was incapable of rendering any service at the time the alleged tort was committed, and hence no recovery could be had. In the case of Southern Railway Co.
The doctrine laid down in the Covenia case was adhered to in the case of Atlanta Consolidated Street Ry. Co. v. Arnold, 100 Ga. 566 (28 S. E. 224), in which it appeared from the petition that the child for the loss of whose services the suit was brought was under three years óf age. It was held that the difference between that age and the age of the child in the Covenia case was not sufficient to authorize the application of a principle different from the one that controlled the decision in that case; and Justice Eish, delivering the opinion of the court, said: “The reasons given by Chief Justice Simmons, in the opinion in the Covenia ease, for taking judicial cognizance of the fact that a child less than two years old is incapable of rendering ‘such services as would authorize the parent to recover’ for the loss of them, are equally applicable in a case where the child, for whose death a recovery is sought, is alleged to have been between two and a half and three years of age. It follows that the court erred in not sustaining the demurrer to the declaration, and, this being so, the trial and its result were nugatory and void.” It is true that in the case of Crawford v. Southern Railway Co., 106 Ga. 870, 879 (33 S. E. 826), the court said that “the question whether a child of this age [four and a half
In the case of James v. Central of Georgia Ry. Co., 138 Ga. 415
The court there said: “It will be seen that this court has held that courts will take judicial cognizance of the fact that children one and one half, and children about two and one half years old, are incapable of performing valuable services, and that their parents, on their being tortiously killed by a railroad company, can not recover for loss of such services.” The court called attention to the fact that the child in the Arnold case was alleged to be “between two and a half and three years of age,” and said that according to the familiar rule as to the construction of pleadings, it must be presumed that the child was nearer two and a half years of age than otherwise, whereas the child in the James case was nearly three years old—being two years, ten months, and twenty days old, and unusually precocious. Nowhere is it suggested in the James case that the Supreme Court receded from the doctrine laid down in the Covenia case; and besides, in the case now being determined, it does not appear, from the evidence, that the child was unusually precocious, and no other facts appear which would serve to distinguish this case from the Covenia case. Even if the later decisions of the Supreme Court were in conflict with the Covenia case, unless it were expressly overruled, we would, under the familiar rule, be bound by the older decision; but it appears to us that
Without implying that this court entertains any different idea as to the rule which should control where suit is brought on account of the homicide of a child of very tender years, we may conclude the matter hy saying that the several rulings of the Supreme Court are binding upon this court, and we could not lay down a different rule or extend the one already established, even if we thought the ends of justice would be better subserved thereby. If the allegations made by the plaintiff in the Covenia case were insufficient to withstand a general demurrer, it follows that proof of practically the same facts in the instant case as were alleged in that case could not sustain a verdict in behalf of the plaintiff, had the court submitted the matter to the jury and had the jury determined the issue against the defendants—the child in each case being less than two years old. Judgment affirmed.