149 S.W. 841 | Tex. App. | 1912
B. B. Lester, on the 27th of October, 1909, while engaged as a locomotive engineer on appellant's line of railway between Temple and the Leon river, was killed in a head-on collision, and this suit was brought by appellee, his surviving widow, against appellant, for herself and as next friend for her minor daughter, to recover damages therefor, alleging that his death was occasioned through the negligence of the railway company, in that it failed to adopt a system of rules for the operation of its trains which was reasonably safe. Appellant specially excepted to plaintiffs' petition, and pleaded in bar of said action that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover, because at the time of the accident her deceased husband was an employé of appellant, who as a common carrier was engaged in interstate commerce, and this fact was established by the uncontroverted evidence. There were other pleadings, not necessary to be stated. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in behalf of Mrs. Lester in the sum of $15,000, and in favor of her minor daughter in the sum of $5,000, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
The court overruled appellant's exceptions and special plea, and likewise refused to give several special charges asked by it, directing a verdict in its favor on the ground that plaintiffs were not entitled to maintain this suit, because the evidence showed that the railway company at the time of the accident was engaged in interstate commerce, and the deceased was employed by it in carrying such commerce. Did the court err in refusing to sustain said plea, or in declining to so charge the jury? The answer to this question necessarily involves a consideration of the act of Congress, relating to the liability of common carriers, of April 22, 1908 (
It will be observed that the federal act has no such provision relative to the rights of the beneficiaries to bring suit without administration, but the cause of action is declared in the federal statute to exist only to the personal representative of the deceased, for the benefit of his family, etc. It is insisted by appellant that there is a conflict in this respect between the two statutes, and that, this being true, the state statute can furnish no basis for a recovery, when the injury, as in the present case, from which death results to an employé, occurs while he was at work for the carrier engaged in interstate commerce, and that the action must, in such cases, be brought, if at all, by the personal representative of the deceased, to wit, the executor or administrator, and not by the beneficiaries named in the federal statute. We are inclined to agree with this contention. In the cases of Mondou v. New York, New Haven Hartford Ry. Co., Northern Pacific Ry. Co. v. Babcock, Adm'x, and the cases of New York, New Haven Hartford Ry. Co. v. Walsh, Adm'x, and Walsh v. New York, New Haven Hartford Ry. Co.,
No case has gone to judgment, so far as we are advised, in our Supreme Court, where the exact point here presented has been passed on. In the recent case of M., K. T. Ry. Co. of Texas v. Mrs. Linnie Blalack et al. (decided by said court June 15, 1912)
But it is contended by appellees that appellant has waived its right to insist upon this defense, because it first answered to the merits and subsequently set same up by amendment. We do not believe this contention is sound, for the reason that after the federal enactment upon the subject no right of action whatever in this character of cases could have been based upon the state statute, and it was just as though the state statute was not in existence. Appellant's liability existed by reason of the federal statute alone, there being no common-law liability. This being true, the right of action is wholly and entirely dependent upon the statute itself. While the plaintiff and her minor children were named as beneficiaries therein, still the cause of action arising out of theliability of appellant under the statute was given to the personal'representative of the deceased, and not to said beneficiaries. This being true, it seems to us that it follows that no one, except said representative, could maintain the suit. If this were not true, then the defendant might be harassed with several suits, brought by different beneficiaries, as well as by the administrator or executor of the deceased. If the suit had been instituted and prosecuted to judgment by the beneficiaries, we do not believe that it would bar another suit brought by the personal representative of the deceased. In fact, such has been the holding of the Supreme Courts of Indiana and Alabama upon this subject. See C., C., C. St. L. Ry. Co. v. Osgood, supra; also, L. E. W. Ry. v. Charman, supra. In the case of Yelton v. E. I. Ry., supra, the personal representative of the deceased filed suit. The railway company pleaded that it made settlement with the widow, who was the only heir of the deceased. The plaintiff demurred to this answer, and the Supreme Court of Indiana, in passing upon the question thus raised, disposed of it on the following reasoning: "The damages recovered inure to the exclusive benefit of the widow and children of the deceased. In this case, there being no children, the damages would inure to the sole benefit of the widow; but she could not prosecute the action. It must be prosecuted by the administrator. This being true, if the widow can compromise the cause of action and release the damages, so as to terminate the suit, it places the administrator in the anomalous position of having the sole right to prosecute the action, *844 and gives to the widow, or widower, or children, if there be children, the right to compromise the action outside of the court, and cancel the claim for damages upon which the action is based. While it would give to the administrator the sole right to prosecute the action, yet he would not have the sole right to control the prosecution of the action, once commenced. It would seem that the law which authorizes a person to prosecute an action would give to him, by necessary implication, the right to control such prosecution, and not permit one, not a party to the action, and having no right to be a party to the action, to compromise the action. While the actions under this section of the statute are prosecuted for the benefit of, and the damages inure to, the exclusive benefit of the widow and children of the deceased, yet it contemplates the collection of the damages by the administrator and turning the same over to the widow and children on final settlement."
We conclude, therefore, that no one except the personal representative of the deceased could maintain this suit, and hold that the court erred in its rulings complained of, for which reason its judgment is reversed, and the cause dismissed without prejudice to such rights as the personal representative of the deceased may have.
Reversed and dismissed.