64 Vt. 652 | Vt. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The intestate was injured by the unlawful act or neglect of the defendant. He brought a suit to recover therefor, and pending the suit died, it is claimed from the injury so received. His administrator entered, and prosecuted that suit to final judgment, which has been satisfied. The administrator subsequently brought this action under E. L. 2138, to recover for the widow and next of kin the pecuniary injury resulting to them from the death of the intestate. To this action the defendant has plead in bar the judgment in the suit commenced by the intestate in his lifetime, and its satisfaction. The contention is whether the plea is a good answer to this suit. Each party claims that this contention is settled in his favor by former decisions of this Court. The plaintiff relies upon Needham v. Grand Trunk Railway Co. 38 Vt. 294. In that case the question is discussed at length, and the views of the Court given thereon in favor of the plaintiff’s contention. That decision made in 1865 remained unquestioned until 1881. It is referred to, not by name, but, in principle, with approval by Judge Peck in Harding v. Townshend, 43 Vt. 541, and by Taft, J., in Westcott v. C. V. R. R. Co., 61 Vt. 440. But in neither case was the question in controversy under consideration, nor was there any attempt to discuss or decide it. Nor was this question involved in the point decided in Needham v. Grand Trunk Railway Company. The point decided in that case is, that the injury to the deceased having occurred in New Hampshire, under whose then existing laws no right of action in either form survived, the plaintiff could not maintain an action therefor in this State. This Court held, as is everywhere held, that the laws
But the whole act of 1849 is to be considered as contended by the plaintiff. The remainder of the act is embraced in R. L. 2139. Its provisions relate to the manner of enforcing the right given in R. L. 2138, and to pointing out the persons, to whose benefit its enforcement shall enure. It does not attempt to define or ereate the right. As there defined the recovery is not for the intestate nor his estate, although for an injury to him while in life. The recovery is for the benefit of his widow and next of kin. The damages are to be assessed, not with reference to the loss sustained by the intestate, but with reference to the pecuniary injury resulting to them from his death. It is contended that .the statute gives a new right of action. Strictly it is a new right of recovery arising from an injury to the intestate, which gave or would have given him a right of action and of recovery, if death had not ensued. The amount to be recovered is determined by the injury sustained by the widow and next of kin, resulting from the death of the intestate wrongfully occasioned by the defendant. The right of recovery and measure of damages are different from what existed in the intestate. This right of recovery did not exist at common law. It is wholly given by the act. It is not an act to cause to survive a right of recovery which otherwise would be taken away by the death of the injured. The damages are based mostly upon the wrong ful destruction of the earning capacity of the intestate. But his earnings in life do not legally belong to his wife and next of kin. Without the act the widow and next of kin could recover no damages for the destruction of the earning capacity of the intestate. Their right of recovery is given and determined by
It is contended by the defendant that to construe the act as claimed by the plaintiff would result in giving double damages to the same injured parties for the same wrongful act or neglect. If recovery is had in the right of the intestate under R. L. 2134 and 2135.one element of damages would be the bodily pain and suffering caused to the intestate by the wrongful act or neglect occasioning his death. The natural effect of such pain and suffering is to weaken, and if of adequate intensity sufficiently continued, to destroy the vital forces. The dam ages for this element recovered in the right of the intestate, may be said indirectly, if not directly, to be given for destroying the life of the intestate and ending his earning capacity. Such damages are not given to make up to his estate what it has lost by the wrongful injury. Unless required to pay the debts of the estate they are distributed to the widow and dext of kin. But the bulk of the damages recovered in the right of the intestate are different from those recovered for the benefit of the widow and next .of kin. Whether the recovery be in the right of the intestate, or for the benefit of his widow and next of kin, it is for the same wrongful act or'neglect. In conferring this new right of recovery for the same wrongful act, the legislature could place such limitations upon it as it judged expedient. As contended by the plaintiff, the same wrongful act frequently furnishes two independent rights of recovery, as in the case of an injury to the wife, or an injury to a servant. But in such cases the services of the wife and of the servant, lost by the injury, legally belong to the husband and to the master. Hence whether the damages recovered if two actions are given, may, to some trifling extent, be double, or whether the same injury sometimes gives two independent legal rights of recovery throws very little light upon the intention of the legislature in
The plaintiff further contends that the act of 1849, upon the construction we have given it, was wholly unnecessary; that by’ act of 1847 the intestate or his executor or administrator could recover all the actual damages sustained by the intestate. But no recovery could be had under the act of 1847 in case the death was instantaneous. The act of 1847 provides for the recovery of damages for a bodily hurt or injury, occasioned by “the act or default” of a party notwithstanding one of the parties to the action dies. Its language makes no reference to a wrongful act, such as amounts to a felony. While under it, recovery could be had for a wrongful act, amounting to a crime, if it caused bodily hurt or injury, there might have been doubt in the minds of legislators whether it would be construed to include such act or default. Then the legislature might have considered that there would be likely to be cases where death would follow so speedily • that no. recovery could be had in the life of the intestate, and if
It is also contended by the plaintiff that the act of 1819, which, in legal import, is Lord Campbell’s Act, should not receive the same construction which has been given to the latter, because the latter, in terms provided that but one suit should be brought,while the Acts of 1817 and of 1819 provided for the surviving of two distinct rights of recovery, for. the same wrongful Act. But the limitation in Lord Campbell’s Act was with reference to suits brought under it. It provided that but one suit should be brought for all the beneficiaries, or sharers in the damage recovered. The legal representatives or beneficiary bringing the suit, was required to name all the persons for whose benefit it was brought. The fact that by the act of 1817, the action survived to the executor or administrator of the deceased injured person, when death did not follow instantly, does not disclose any necessity for giving broader scope to the language of the act of 1819, than has been given to language of like legal import in Lord Campbell’s Act, and other similar acts in the various Hnited States. In Maine and some other states it is held that the acts of those states framed after Lord Campbell’s Act, give a right of action only when instant death follows the injury. In some other states it is held that the legal representative of the estate must elect either to sue in the right of the intestate or in the right of the wife and next of kin. The construction we have placed on the act of 1819 gives the
The pro forma judgment reversed, demu/rrer sustained, replication adjudged insufficient, plea in bar adjudged sufficient and cause remanded.