75 Mo. App. 541 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
This is an action for damages which resulted to plaintiff by the death of her husband, the death being charged to have been occasioned by the
The charge of negligence is that defendant failed to place sufficient guard or stop block at the end of the
But it is evident that the supreme court by the opinion of a majority of the judges in McGowan v. R’y, 109 Mo. 518 (Black and Brace, JJ., concurring in the criticism of the instruction therein considered), have made a distinction between the words, “necessary injury” and “pecuniary injury.” It is directly asserted in that case: “There is an obvious difference between a pecuniary damage and a necessary pecuniary damage.” So it may be said, in the light of that
So that the question presented by the instruction under consideration is, are the whole of the “probable earnings” of a deceased husband if he had lived to be allowed as a necessary pecuniary loss to his widow in an action by her for his death! We think not. The instruction in this case was therefore wrong. Permitting the surviving widow to recover the whole of the husband’s probable earnings is equivalent to an assertion that such was her pecuniary loss. It is evident that such is not necessarily her loss, for she is not necessarily entitled to all his earnings, nor would she receive them at his death in cases where she survives him. She was entitled to his support and maintenance and this she necessarily loses by his death. But his earnings may amount to many times her support. The statute limits the total recovery in any case to $5,000, but that does not affect the general question as to a proper measure of damage. It is true that the supreme court in the McGowan case, supra, quotes with approval an instruction in the case of R. R. v. Wightmen’s Adm’r, 29 Gratt. 431, wherein it is declared the sum recoverable could equal the whole of the probable earnings of the deceased.
And the case of Kelly v. R. R., 48 Fed. Rep. 663, which arose under the statute of Iowa, is likewise cited, in which it held that a proper element of damage is the amount the deceased would probably have saved during his probable lifetime. But in each of those cases the administrator of the estate was the plaintiff as provided by the statutes of Virginia and Iowa. By the Virginia statute the sum recovered was apportioned to the wife and children as the jury might direct. If
By the Iowa statute the damages belonged to the estate; and if there were wife or children the sum was free from debts. In those cases the pecuniary loss is either a loss to all of the deceased’s immediate heirs or to his estate. The parties in interest in those states and this state are different. In those states, it may be said, in general terms, that the parties sustaining the pecuniary loss are all of those to whom his earnings would go upon his death; while with us, the damage, in the first instance, belongs to the husband or wife only, and next to the children. And if the deceased be an unmarried minor, then to the father and mother. If all these fail there is no action. Secs. 4425, 4427.
It is clear that those cases have no bearing on the question involved here. Judge Gantt was discussing the neceessity of confining the damages to the pecuniary loss and by quoting from the Wightman case, evidently did not intend to adopt as an element of damage that which may be more than a plaintiff’s loss under our statute. For it is apparent that the surviving wife’s loss is not necessarily the whole amount of the deceased’s probable earnings. This, simply from the fact that she is not entitled to the whole of such earnings after her support and other matters of pecuniary loss are secured therefrom.
But the wife could have an interest in the whole of the probable earnings — a share in such earnings — if they amounted to more than the expenditures of the deceased — if he was accumulating and saving a surplus which would descend to his heirs as his estate. She would have a right to a share of his estate with other heirs. By his death she has been deprived of such
But it is claimed that under our enabling statutes a wife is placed on an equality with the husband with respect to her personal and property rights. And it has been held that under the force of these statutes a married woman may sue one who has alienated her husband’s affections and recover for loss of his society as the husband could do in case of the alienation of the wife’s affection and loss of her society. Clow v. Chapman, 125 Mo. 101. The St. Louis court of appeals
With the exception noted the court’s action on instructions was proper. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.