delivered the opinion of the court.
While employed by the railway company as a switch-man, William M. Ward was accidentally killed, December 13, 1912; and the Administrator brought suit in a state court under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, as amended, for the benefit of his father and mother, seeking to recover their pecuniary loss and also damages for the injuries suffered by him prior to death. Some evidence tended to show that, after being run over by one or more cars, although wholly unconscious, the deceased continued to breathe for perhaps ten minutes. Testimony of other witnesses supported a claim that there was no appreciable continuation of life. Judgment upon an unapportioned verdict, in favor of the Administrator, was affirmed by the state Supreme Court, .October, 1914. The railway company duly excepted to the following portions of the charge:
“Did Ward’s injuries kill him instantly? If he was killed instantly, one rule of damages applies, while if he lived some time after he was injured, another rule of damages would apply. There is some evidence that he lived a few minutes after receiving his injuries; there is other evidence that he was dead when taken out from *146 under the car. If you should find that Ward died from his injuries without living an appreciable length of time, then the plaintiff could only recover/ if at all, what would have been the pecuniary value of Ward’s life to his father and mother had he lived. . . . And in that connection it would be proper for you to consider his health, his disposition to contribute to the support of his parents, the evidence of what he customarily earned, his earning capacity, the amount he was in the habit of giving to his parents, his age, his condition in life, the length of time he probably would have lived had not this accident happened, and the expectancy of the life of the father and mother, and the reasonable expectancy of the parents in respect to benefits, if any, from the services of their son; ...
“In case you find that Ward did not die instantly from his injuries but that he lived some appreciable length of time after the accident, then you would come to another . question in the case.
“Under the law of the United States it is provided that any right of action given by the Act of Congress in reference to injuries of this kind under such circumstances, that the right of action shall survive to the personal representatives of the deceased for the benefit of his parents, if there is no surviving widow and children. And if you should find from the evidence that Ward did not die instantly from his injuries but that he lived some little time after he was injured, then, under the law, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover damages in the same amount that Ward, the deceased, would have been entitled to recover had he brought the action in his life time. That is, you can award such damages as in your judgment would be a full, fair and. reasonable compensation for the loss sustained by Ward, the deceased, by reason of the injuries he received. . . And in that connection, it would be proper for you to consider his age, his habits *147 of industry, his health, his ability to work, his earning capacity, and the amount he usually earned at the time he was injured, and the length of time he would probably have lived had he not been injured, using your best judgment under all the circumstances in arriving at what would be a fair compensation for his loss.”
In
St.. Louis & Iron Mountain Ry.
v.
Craft,
The present record presents the very circumstances which we declared afforded no basis for an estimation or award of damages in addition to the beneficiary’s pecuniary loss. And although apparently not challenged in the State Supreme Court and therefore not now to be
*148
relied on as ground for reversal
(Harding
v.
Illinois,
The judgment below is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
