111 Tenn. 106 | Tenn. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Defendant, as the administrator of Caroline B. Walker, recovered a judgment against the Knoxville Traction Company for $2,000 for the negligent killing of said Caroline B. Walker. The defendant, Jas. W. Walker, is the only child of the deceased, and the complainants are the children of a deceased daughter, Lucie A. Haynes. The defendant, Jas. W. Walker, as the only child of the deceased, claims a right to this fund to the exclusion of the complainants, the children of the deceased daughter.
The chancellor was of the opinion that the complainants, as the children of the deceased daughter, were entitled to one half of the fund, and that the other half went to the defendant Jas. W. Walker. The court of chancery appeals concurred in this view.
It appears that the deceased left a will, in which she gave all her estate, real, personal, and mixed, absolutely and without condition to the son; and he claims the fund both under this will and under the statutes of the state.
The court of chancery appeals based their holding upon the ground that the judgment was recovered for the benefit of all the parties, and not solely for the son; and this they held to be conclusive as to the lights of the parties to the fund as between themselves. That court expressed the opinion that the fund did not pass under the will, but under the statutes of the state.
In the case of Whaley v. Catlett, 103 Tenn., 348-355, 53 S. W., 131, it is held that the right of action for the negligent killing of a party is the right of the deceased, and not of the party entitled to the damages, as separate; from and independent of the right of the deceased.
Still it is a right of action which is created by the statute, and depends alone upon it for its existence, and does not exist at common law. At common law all personal actions for wrongs or injuries died with or abated by the death of the party injured, and no right of action
The statutes creating this right of action and prescribing who shall be entitled to the benefit of the same are sections 4025 to 4028, inclusive, Shannon’s Code.
It has been held by this court in Freeman v. Railroad, 107 Tenn., 345, 64 S. W., 1, that these sections must'be read and construed in connection with and in the light of the statutes relating to the distribution of personal property; being sections 4172 and 4173 of Shannon’s Compilation. A recovery upon such right of action, when realized, becomes personal property, and follows the usual course of distribution of personalty. Loague v. Railroad, 91 Tenn., 461, 19 S. W., 430; Railroad v. Bean, 94 Tenn., 388, 29 S. W., 370.
The parties who are entitled to take under the statutes of distribution are, in the contemplation of the other statutes referred to, the next of kin, and entitled to take the recovery according to the statutes relating to the distribution of personal estates.
This cause of action is not only created by the statute, and dependent alone upon it, but the statute also provides how the proceeds of any recovery upon any such cause of action shall be distributed, and who shall be entitled thereto. It is in no sense an asset of the estate of the deceased, and does not and cannot pass by
Under this section the children of the deceased child take equally with the living children; that is, they take the share that the parent would have taken if alive.
Such a fund does not occupy the same status as the proceeds of a life insurance policy payable to the assured, and which he may dispose of while he lives; but it passes by operation of the statutes, and according to their provisions.
We are of opinion, therefore, the court of chancery appeals is correct in its holding upon both features of the case, and that the children of the deceased daughter, Lucie A. Haynes, takes equally with the son, James W. Walker. The judgment rendered by the court of chancery appeals by a clerical error refers to the recovery as $200, when it should be $2,000. The judgment of this court will be that the complainants have and recover of the defendant one-half of the said $2,000 judgment, together with the costs of the cause in the chancery court, and of the defendant and the sureties upon his appeal bond all the costs of the appeal.
The judgment to be subject to reasonable attorney’s fees for recovery of the judgment against the traction company.