112 Me. 508 | Me. | 1914
This is an action brought by an administratrix under the provisions of R. S., Chap. 89, Secs. 9 and 10, to recover damages resulting from the death of a boy nearly eleven and a half years of age, his heirs being a mother, who is the administratrix, and three sisters. The plaintiff says that the defendant, while conducting an agricultural fair on hired grounds, allowed a person to erect and run a shooting gallery in which a twenty-two calibre repeating rifle was used; that a partridge got lodged in the working parts of the riñe, and while the person in charge of the gallery was trying to remedy the trouble, the rifle was accidentally and carelessly discharged and the bullet passed through the boy’s head resulting in his death.
The defendant offered no evidence, but at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony requested the presiding Justice to direct a verdict for the defendant, ^nd upon the refusal of the Justice to so rule the defendant seasonably excepted. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the suái of $1873.33. Defendant then filed a motion for a new trial on the usual grounds. As the exceptions and the motion raise the same questions they will be considered, together.
The evidence satisfactorily establishes the proposition, that the boy moj? his death from the accidental discharge of the rifle, but the defendant urges that it should not be held liable for the damages resulting from that death. It says that the evidence does not show that'the. fair grounds were hired or the fair conducted by this defendant] A detailed discussion of the testimony upon this point would ^■hot be profitable, for this question was submitted to the jury under
The only remaining point for discussion is the amount of the damages. In construing the act under which this suit is brought this Court has declared that “no damages can be recovered for any grief, distress of mind, loss of companionship or society, or injury to the affections, suffered by the beneficiaries. . . . The injury for which damages can be recovered must be wholly to the beneficiaries themselves, and it is limited to the pecuniary effect of the death upon them.” McKay v. Dredging Co., 92 Maine.
One of the beneficiaries, a sister, is already married and has a husband to support her. The other two sisters, older than the deceased boy, are not likely, in the ordinary course of human probabilities to be much affected pecuniarily by this death. The pecuniary effect upon the mother is the principal question. According to the testimony her expectancy of life is a little over twenty-five years. Had the boy lived, he would have been compelled by the laws of this State to attend school nearly five years longer and in that time at least would hardly be expected to contribute anything to the support of his mother. Assuming that during the next twenty years of his life he had been a dutiful son to his mother, had been industrious and frugal, and had not taken on other domestic burdens by marriage, he would have been of financial aid to his mother. All these elements, however, are more or less speculative. They are in the realm of possibility not the realm of certainty. During the earlier years following the school age the financial benefit must necessarily be small.
So ordered.