3 Wash. 194 | Wash. | 1891
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover damages for the death of L. W. Graetz, alleged to have been caused by the negligent act of the defendants, and was brought by the surviving wife and child of the deceased. The court below sustained a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that the plaintiffs had no legal capacity to sue, and accordingly gave judgment for defendants. The action was brought under § 8 of the Code of Washington, which reads as follows:
“ The widow, or widow and her children, or child or children, if no widow, of a man killed in a duel shall have a right of action acainst the person killing him, and against the seconds, and all aiders and abettors. When the death*195 of a person is. caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs or personal representativesmay maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death; or when the death of a person is caused by an injury received in falling through any opening or defective place in any sidewalk, street, alley, square or wharf, his heirs or personal representatives may maintain an action for damages against the person whose duty it was, at the time of the injury, to have kept in repair such sidewalk or other place. In every such action the jury may give such damages, pecuniary or exemplary, as, under all circumstances of the case, may to them seem just ”
Sec. 717 of the code is as follows:
“Sec. 717. When the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another, the personal representatives of the former may maintain an action at law therefor against the latter if the former might have maintained an action, had he lived, against the latter, for an injury caused by the same act or omission. Such action shall be commenced within two years after the death, and the damages therein shall not exceed five thousand dollars, and the amount recovered, if any, shall be administered as other personal property of the deceased person.”
The only questions presented in this case for the determination of this court are, can these two sections, 8 and 717, be so reconciled with each other as to stand together as valid and independent enactments? And, if not, which of the two must yield to the other? The views of the learned counsel for the respective parties in most respects are entirely coincident. By both sides it is claimed, and justly, too, that the code should be regarded as one act or body of law, and that each of its provisions should be so construed as to harmonize with every other, if possible, so as to work no repeal of any part. But counsel for appellants insist that there is no real conflict between the two sections, and urge that the object and intent of the legislature in passing § 8 was to provide a remedy for the heirs.
“Sec. 761. The provisions of this code, so. far as they are substantially the same as existing statutes, must be construed as continuations thereof, and not as new enactments.”
This rule, if applicable to the case at bar, is mandatory. And it is applicable, for we find on examination that the two sections now in controversy are not only substantially, but exactly, the same as two statutory provisions existing at the time of the passage of that part of the code containing them, and which were originally passed at different times. The only effect of the codification was to continue them as originally passed, and the mere position now occupied by them in the code cannot be a guide to determine the latest expression of the legislative will. We are therefore relegated to the original acts themselves in order to determine which of the two irreconcilable provisions must give way.
The one last in time must betaken to be the law. The rule is thus laid down by Sutherland in his recent and valu
“ Though a revision operates to repeal the laws revised, whether repugnant or not, those portions that are reenacted are continuations. The revision is, however, areenactment, and tobe aloneconsulted to ascertain the lawwhen itsmeaning is plain; but when there is irreconcilable conflict of one part with another, the part last enacted, in the original form, will govern.”
Section 156, p. 210. In this instance, it must be remembered, he was speaking of revisions which did not contain a provision that the laws contained therein should not be deemed new enactments; and, of course, the reason for the rule is still stronger under codes or revisions like ours. Again the same author speaking on the same subject, says, at page 216, § 161:
“Where two statutes in pari materia, originally enacted at different periods of time, are subsequently incorporated in a revision, and reenacted in substantially the same language, with the design to accomplish the purpose they were originally intended to produce, the times when they first took effect will be ascertained by the courts, and effect will be given to that which was the latest declaration of the will of the legislature, if they are not harmonious. The appearance of such a statute in the form and body of a revision has no other effect than to continue it in force.”
The same rule is also laid down substantially in Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, in §§ 183 and 203, in the latter of which he makes reference to our code. In Winn v. Jones, 6 Leigh, 76, the court, speaking of irreconcilable sections of the Code of Virginia, and referring to the original law, used this language:
“If there be any inconsistency between them, this last must prevail, for in the construction of the laws reenacted at the revisal, we must, in case of irreconcilable difference, look to the dates of the original statutes, in order to ascertain the last declaration of the legislative will.”
“ The widow, or widow and her children, or child or children. if no widow, of a man killed in a duel, shall have a right of action against the person killing him and against the seconds, and all aiders and abettors, and shall recover such a sum as to the jury shall seem reasonable.”
The remaining portion of § 8 was originally embodied in the act of November 12, 1875 (Laws 1875, p. 4). The provisions of § 8 of the act of November 13, 1873, and those of the act of November 12, 1875, were brought forward and “ continued ” as § 8 of the code. It is thus seen that § 8, or at least that portion of it involved in the present controversy, is the latest declaration of the will of the legislature, and, according to the rule of construction laid down by the authorities above cited, must be held to be the law. It follows that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the complaint.
The judgment of the court below is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to orerrule the demurrer and to proceed according to law.
Scott, Dunbar and.Stiles, JJ., concur.
Hoyt, J., dissents.