143 A. 630 | Conn. | 1928
This action is brought to recover damages for the death of plaintiff's intestate, alleged to have occurred in Massachusetts through the negligence of the defendants, who pleaded as a special defense that at the time of the injury complained of there was in force § 9 of Chapter 346 of the Acts and Resolves of Massachusetts for the year 1925, to wit: "A person who by his negligence or by his wilful, wanton or reckless act, or by the negligence or wilful, wanton or reckless act of his agents or servants while engaged in his business, causes the death of a person in the exercise of due care, who is not in his employment or service, shall be liable in damages in the sum of not less than five hundred nor more than ten thousand dollars, to be assessed with reference to the degree of his culpability or that of his agents or servants, to be recovered in an action of tort, commenced . . . within two years after the injury which caused the death by the executor or administrator of the deceased."
Ground two of the plaintiff's demurrer to the special defense upon which he stands is general instead of special. The rules of practice and a long line of the decisions of this court point out that general demurrers are no longer a part of our system of pleading. Since the defendants do not attack the demurrer on this ground, and the court has overlooked the bad pleading, and the parties are in agreement that the ground of the trial court's decision on the demurrer is the sole ground of appeal, we have decided to determine this question, which is, whether the statute pleaded by way of special defense affording a right of action to the plaintiff for the death of his intestate is penal and therefore incapable of enforcement in the courts of Connecticut.
The ruling of the trial court was based upon our decision in Cristilly v. Warner,
The appellant invites our attention to certain changes which he asserts have occurred in the legislation and judicial decision of Massachusetts which no longer make it possible to hold that Massachusetts now regards this statute as of such a penal character as to be unenforceable elsewhere. The discussion of this claim requires a re-examination of Cristilly v. Warner.
The history of this statute and the construction placed upon it by the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts is set forth in many decisions, chief of which are:Carey v. Berkshire R. Co., 55 Mass. (1 Cush.) 475;Commonwealth v. Boston L. R. Corp.,
We based our decision in Cristilly v. Warner upon these decisions. In them the Massachusetts court had construed the remedy under this statute by an action of tort as a substitute for that by indictment, held that the primary purpose of each was punishment and not compensation and that its method of assessing the damages measured by the degree of culpability was indicative of its punitive character, and had not only characterized but defined the action as one to secure a penalty. Those who construe these statutes as compensatory and not punitive in character rely largely upon the statement in Commonwealth v. Boston *390 A. R. Co.,
Again, in McCarthy v. Wood Lumber Co.,
This viewpoint is in entire accord with what has been denominated the Massachusetts system and with the construction placed upon the decisions of that jurisdiction in Cristilly v. Warner. Johnston v. BayState Street Ry. Co.,
From these expressions in the last four cases cited the appellant insists that the Supreme Judicial Court has reversed its construction of the death statutes as they existed at the time of the decision in Cristilly v.Warner. We are unable to believe that that court has intentionally receded from a construction which it has so abundantly demonstrated to have been the legislative purpose from the time of Carey v. Berkshire R.Co., supra. Perhaps the explanation rests in its use of compensation in the sense of reparation. Under its system damages were assessed according to the degree of culpability and not according to the measure of loss. Their imposition was the very antithesis of Lord Campbell's Act. They were imposed as a fine and paid to the relatives "as a gratuity from the Commonwealth." If this construction stands the damages assessed are in no proper sense compensatory. They are reparation for a wrong done and nothing else. The death statutes are remedial in one sense only; they provide a remedy where before their enactment none existed. Boott Mills v. Boston M. R. Co., and Hudson
v. Lynn B.R. Co., supra. If the use of the term compensatory were thought essential to show that the death statutes, though penal, were not such in *394
the international sense of that word, we think that argument can be sustained without construing these statutes as compensatory in giving damages to those who have been, presumably, wronged. A gratuity or gift cannot well be reconciled with a recompense or indemnification for loss. When the court had before it the question whether damages assessed under its death statute fell within the prohibition of the order of the Director General of Railroads limiting suits which can be brought against carriers for injuries to person or property exclusive of those for the recovery of fines and forfeitures, it held that recovery in such cases was so far penal and punitive and in the nature of a fine, that although the statute has certain compensatory features and a remedial function, no recovery could be awarded. The decision is sound, since the recovery under the death statute was punitive and not compensatory and the order permitting a recovery in a suit for injury done was essentially an action for compensation and not for the recovery of a gratuity by means of a fine. In one particular it is apparent the court intends to differ with a part of the argument advanced in Hudson v. Lynn B.R. Co., supra, where the court said the penalty recovered under the death statutes was of the same kind as that maintained by an informer for a penalty except as to the persons who receive the penalty. The court was explicit in its statement in Putnam v. Savage,
The appellant next claims that the death statute of Massachusetts is not penal in the international sense and only statutes which are penal in that sense are unenforceable in other State jurisdictions. MR. JUSTICE BEACH in his dissenting opinion in Cristilly v.Warner, writes: "I do not understand that the opinion of the court expresses any different view" as to the definition of a penal statute in its strict and proper sense as given in Huntington v. Attrill, supra. He was entirely correct in this. We did not express any opinion upon that point, for the reason that the claim was not presented by counsel in their briefs or oral argument, nor in the viewpoint of the trial court in deciding the demurrer from the judgment on which the appeal was taken. We do not intend to be understood as asserting that the point was not raised by the appeal. It was legally raised under the reason of demurrer that the court erred in deciding that the statute was a penal one, but the present claim was not passed upon by us for the reason stated. Before the decision in Huntington v. Attrill, supra, anything was regarded as penal, as that term is used in the conflict of laws, "that a defendant is compelled by law to pay plaintiff other than that which is necessary to compensate him for legal damage done him by the defendant." Goodrich on Conflict of Laws, p. 12. Huntington v. Attrill adopted a new test of a penal law which is unenforceable in another jurisdiction: "The question whether a statute of one State, which in some aspects may be called penal, is a penal law in the international sense, so that it cannot be enforced in the courts of another State, depends upon the question whether its purpose is to punish an offense against the public justice of the State, or to afford a private remedy to a person injured by the wrongful act." "The test whether a law is penal, in the strict and primary sense, is whether the wrong *396 sought to be redressed is a wrong to the public, or a wrong to the individual." At another point in the opinion the court says: "Penal laws, strictly and properly, are those imposing punishment for an offense committed against the State, and which, by the English and American constitutions, the executive of the State has the power to pardon." "This language," Wharton says in Conflict of Laws (3d Ed.) Vol. 1 at p. 18, "when read in connection with other portions of the opinion, seems to confine the rule that the courts of one State or country will not enforce the penal laws of another, to prosecutions and sentences for crimes and misdemeanors, and suits in favor of the State for the recovery of pecuniary penalties, and to exclude actions by the individuals wronged to enforce, for their own benefit, the statutory liability imposed upon the wrongdoer." Such a rule for determining what are the penal actions which are unenforceable in the courts of the other States furnishes a rule of certainty, the dividing line between the penal actions which are unenforceable and those which are not being definitely marked. It also makes judgments acquired in foreign States more generally enforceable, "surely a desirable result," as Professor Goodrich observes.
Prior to the decision in Huntington v. Attrill the Privy Council of Great Britain in the same case had reversed the judgment of the Court of Ontario and reached a like decision as to what was a penal law in the international sense. Huntington v. Attrill, L. R. (1893) A. C. 150. This has remained the law of England ever since. Raulin v. Fischer, L. R. (1911) 2 K. B. 93.
Minor, in Conflict of Laws, § 10, has stated that the question before the court in Huntington v. Attrill was whether the refusal of the court of Maryland to enforce a judgment of a court of New York was a violation of *397 the full faith and credit clause of the United States Constitution, and that the decision of what constituted a penal obligation was not involved. We think the determination required the ascertainment of the nature of the judgment which required also the ascertainment of the nature of the cause of action. If the cause of action was penal in the international sense, the judgment of the State court must stand, but if it was penal in any other sense, the judgment could not stand because the refusal to enforce the judgment of New York was in violation of the Federal Constitution.
Huntington v. Attrill has been cited in several opinions of the United States Supreme Court, but not precisely upon the penalty doctrine of that case, except inNorthern Pacific R. Co. v. Babcock,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the