53 Ind. 517 | Ind. | 1876
Complaint by the appellee against the appellants in two paragraphs. Demurrer to each paragraph for want of sufficient facts overruled, and exception. Issue, trial by jury, verdict and judgment for plaintiff.
The complaint is as follows, viz.:
“ Catherine Heilman complains of John Krach and Christian Stock, and says that on the 1st day of December, 1873, the said John Krach obtained a permit, in due form of law, to retail spiritous and intoxicating liquors, in quantities less than a quart, for one year from that date, at his store situated on the Petersburg road, in Scott township, in the county of Vanderburg, State of Indiana, about eight miles from the city of Evansville, and from that day to the present time he has been and still is engaged in that business. The plaintiff further avers that Edward Heilman, late of Warrick county, was for many (to wit, twelve) years next previous to his decease as hereinafter described, the husband of the plaintiff, and that during all that time they lived together as husband and wife, and that they became the, parents of
“2d Par. The said plaintiff, further complaining of the said defendants, says that the said John Krach, on the 1st day of December, 1873, obtained a permit from the Board of Commissioners of the county of Vanderburgh to retail intoxicating liquors, and henceforth has been engaged in retailing said liquors. And plaintiff says she was, on the 31st day of December, 1873, the Avife of one Edward Heilman, and so remained until his death, and is now his AvidoAv; that said Edward Heilman, at the time.of the happening of
Error is assigned upon the ruling of the court upon the demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint, and we proceed to consider the questions thus raised.
The common law does not, on the facts alleged, give the plaintiff any right of action. Her right of action, if she have any, is based upon statute. The statute relied upon is the act of February 27th, 1873, to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors, etc., Acts 1873, Reg. Sess., p. 151. The eighth section of the act is as follows:
“ Any person or persons who shall by the sale of intoxicating liquor, with or without permit, cause the intoxication, in whole or in part, of any other person, shall be liable for and be compelled to pay a reasonable compensation to any person who may take charge of and provide for such intoxicated person, for every day he or she is so cared for, which sum may be recovered in an action of debt before any court having competent jurisdiction.”
The twelfth section provides, that, “in addition, to the remedy and right of action provided for in section eight of this act, every husband, wife, child, parent, guardian, employer, or other person who shall be injured in person or property, or means of support, by any intoxicated person, or in consequence of the intoxication, habitual or otherwise^ of any person, shall have a right of action in his or her name, severally or jointly, against any person or persons who shall, by selling, bartering, or giving away intoxicating liquors have caused the intoxication, in whole or in part, of such person,” etc.
The first paragraph of the complaint is not based at all upon the eighth section of the statute. Nor do we think the second paragraph makes out a case within that section.
The allegation in the second paragraph, that for the period of three months, during which the deceased languished, the plaintiff was compelled to nurse and take care of him, does not bring the case within the eighth section; for it does not show that the intoxication continued during that time, or, indeed, any part thereof.
Each paragraph, then, must stand or fall upon the pro-' visions of the twelfth section.
It cannot, under the allegations, be claimed that the plaintiff was in any way injured by the intoxicated person; and it remains to inquire whether the allegations show that she was injured in person or property or means of support, “in consequence of the intoxication” of her now deceased husband.
The substance of the case made by both paragraphs is, that the defendants fuimished the deceased with intoxicating liquor, until he became drunk and insensible and unable to take care of himself; that in going home, lying down in his wagon in consequence of his intoxication, he received the injury from the barrel of salt, which injury he would not have received but for having been intoxicated, and from which injury he died.
One of the objections made to the complaint, passing over others, is, in bur judgment, fatal to both paragraphs.
The rule of law is, that the immediate, and not the remote, cause of any event is regarded. We have seen that if the plaintiff is entitled to recover, it is because she was injured “in consequence of the intoxication” of the deceased. The immediate cause of the injury to the plaintiff was the death of the deceased. The remote cause may have been his intoxication, which led to his injuries, which injuries, in their turn,
The rule of law above stated is well enough settled. The difficulty that usually arises is in its application. It is sometimes difficult to determine what is the remote, and what the proximate cause of an event. But no difficulty of that sort arises in the present case. Here, according to the allegations, it is clear that the intoxication of the deceased was only the remote cause of the injury to the plaintiff, while his death was the immediate cause of such injury. For such injury, we think, on principle and well considered authority, the statute does not render the defendants liable to the plaintiff.
The case of Tisdale v. Inhabitants of Norton, 8 Met. 388, is in point. There, the town was obliged to repair the highway, and an action was given by statute to any person who might receive an injury by reason of any defect, or want of repair. A gully had been washed out in the highway, rendering it impassable, and the plaintiff, in passing along with his conveyance, had to drive off the highway and into a pond, in order to pursue his journey. In passing through the pond, the plaintiff’s conveyance was overturned, and he was thrown into the pond, in consequence of a hole in the bottom thereof. It was held that the case did not come within the statute, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
The case of Marble v. The City of Worcester, 4 Gray, 395, is also in point. The case arose under a statute similar to that involved in the previous case. There was a defect in the way, and a man with a horse and sleigh undertook to. drive through that part of the way in which the defect existed. The sleigh pitched into a hole in the ice, which constituted the defect, and the horse, taking fright, ran, threw out the driver, detached himself from the sleigh, except, the shafts, or thills, and having run some fifty rods, ran against the plaintiff, who was then in the highway, and injured him, for which the action was brought. It was held
in delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“ The rule, in jure, causa próxima, non remota, spectatur, is of very general application in the law; and although more frequently stated and illustrated in the law of insurance, yet it is equally applied to other cases of like kind. The whole doctrine of causation, considered in itself metaphysically, is of profound difficulty, even if it rpay not be said of mystery. It was a maxim, we believe, of the school-men, ‘ causa causantis, causa est causatiAnd this makes the chain of causation, by successive links, endless. And this perhaps, in a certain sense, is true. Perhaps' no event can occur, which may be considered as insulated and independent; every event is itself the effect of some cause or combination of causes, and in its turn becomes the cause of many ensuing consequences, more or less immediate or remote. The law however looks to a practical rule, adapted to the rights and duties of all persons in society, in the common and ordinary concerns of actual and real life; and on account of the difficulty in unravelling a combination of causes, and of tracing each result, as a matter of fact, to its true, real and efficient cause, the law has adopted the rule before stated, of regarding the proximate, and not the remote cause of the occurrence which is the subject of inquiry.”
In Crain v. Petrie, 6 Hill, 522, it was said by Nelson, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court, that:
“ To maintain a claim for special damages, they must appear to be the legal and natural consequences arising from the tort, and not from the wrongful act of a third party remotely induced thereby. In other words, the damages must proceed wholly and exclusively from the injury complained of.”
The case of Fairbanks v. Kerr, 70 Pa. State, 86, is in point. It was there held, that “ the general rule is, that a man is answerable for the consequences of a fault only so far as the same are natural and proximate, and as may, on this account, be seen by ordinary forecast, and not for those which arise from a conjunction of his fault with circumstances that are of an extraordinary nature.”
CThe defendants, in causing the intoxication of the deceased, could not have anticipated that on his way home he would be fatally injured by the salt-barrel. That was an extraordinary and fortuitous event, not naturally resulting from the intoxication. Suppose, by -way of illustration, that a person, by reason of intoxication, lies down under a tree, and a storm blows a limb down upon him and kills him, or that lightning strikes the tree and kills him. Could it be said, in a legal sense, that his death was caused by intoxication? In the chain of causation, thq intoxication may have been the remote cause of his death, because, if he had not been intoxicated, he would not have placed himself in that position, and therefore would not have been struck by the limb or lightning. In the case supposed, it may be assumed as clear, that the parties causing the intoxication would not be liable, under the statute, to the widow, as for an injury to her caused by the intoxication of the deceased. Yet there is no substantial difference between the case supposed and the real case here. See, on the subject of remote and proximate causation, the case of Kelley v. The State, ante, p. 311; also, Durham v. Musselman, 2 Blackf. 96.
The judgment below is reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded, with instnictions to the court below to sustain the demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint