This is the second appeal to this court of this case. It is reported in
David Edmondson was killed by C. Kuykendall. The suit is brought under section 2486 of the Code of 1907, by the administratrix of David Edmondson’s estate. This section authorizes a personal representative to maintain an action and recover damages for a wrongful act of a person whereby death is caused.
This complaint would have been good if the word “and” had been used, instead of the word “or” therein. If the word of the statute “wrongful” had been used, instead of the words “wanton, intentional, or willful,” the complaint would be good.
“The damages recovered are not subject-to the payment of debts or liabilities of the testator or intestate, but must be distributed according to the statute of distribution.”
Section 4007 disqualifies the defendant from testifying when the deceased person’s estate is interested in the result of the suit.
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“Section 1938 of the Code does not, in our opinion, contemplate a suit by an administrator as the representative of an estate. It imposes upon the administrator a trust, separate and distinct from the administration. The trust is not for the benefit of the estate, but of the widow, children, or next of kin of the deceased. The administrator fills this trust, but he does not do it in the capacity of representative of the estate. It is altogether distinct from the administration, notwithstanding it is filled by the administrator. No judgment for costs, in a suit under that section, could properly be rendered, to be levied de bonis intestatis; and the court erred in rendering such a judgment against the administrator of Lankford’s estate.”
Justice Mayfield, in Kennedy v. Davis,
“The damages under this statute are essentially punitive and not compensatory; the measure thereof being ‘such as the jury may assess.’ * * # statute was not to compensate or recompense any one, but to mete civil punishment to the wrongdoer, and thereby prevent homicides.”
This case holds that the sole beneficiary of the deceased can collect damages for the wrongful act, and if the administrator after-wards sues and gets judgment, a court of equity will enjoin the collection of it. “The personal representative is the naked agent to collect for the wrongful act, and pay it over to the distributees.”
In L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Street,
“The sum recovered is not an asset of the decedent’s estate.”
In the case of Holt v. Stollenwerck,
“In prosecuting such action, the personal representative * * * is not proceeding to reduce to possession the estate of his decedent.”
Sturges v. Sturges,
“The statutory right to dispose by will of what a person owns at the time of his death does not include damages which may be recovered for his wrongful killing.”
Justice McClellan in Griswold v. Griswold,
“These damages in the hands of the administrator were assets only for the purposes of distribution — they were not subject to the payment of debts or liabilities of the decedent — and were to be distributed according to the statute of distribution of force at the time the claim for damages accrued.”
It is true that Judge Dowdell in Cobb, as Adm’x, v. Owen,
So, is the estate interested in the result of-the suit, or only the distributees of the estate? We think the estate has no interest, and the distributees are the sole beneficiaries. It is a penal statute to punish a wrongdoer for wrongfully taking human life, and giye the fruits, not to his estate, but to the distributees. The administrator can collect it; he cannot administer it: he must pay it to the distributees.
Is the estate of David Edmondson interested in the result of this suit? If it wins, it receives no damages; if it loses, it pays no cost. The assets of the estate are neither increased nor diminished thereby. It does not participate in the profits, and shares none of the losses, when the suit is ended and the result declared.
The wrongdoer, if indicted for murder or manslaughter, can testify on the trial as to the facts of the difficulty. When the law authorizes him to be punished — penalized for.the wrongful act — by the administrator, in dollars, for the benefit of the distributees, should he not be allowed to testify as to the difficulty? We think so. Kennedy v. Davis,
The case of Cobb, as Adm’x, v. Owen,
This court, on the former appeal, stated the law as to the admission of evidence in this case. The court below followed the opinion in this trial, and committed no error prejudicial to the defendant in its rulings.
The assignment of error as to the juror will not arise on another trial, and there is no necessity for passing thereon.
Reversed and remanded.
