93 Ala. 350 | Ala. | 1890
— The trial below was had before the judge-of the Circuit Court without a jury, and this appeal brings under review his rulings on the pleadings, his conclusions of fact, and the judgment rendered in the cause; and it becomes our duty to pass upon the conclusion and judgment of the court on the evidence, without indulging any presumption in favor of the lower court’s action, and to render such judgment as the Circuit Court should have rendered, or to “reverse and remand the same for further proceedings, as to this court shall seem right.” — Acts 1888-9, p. 797.
The action is under sections 2590 and 2591 of the Code,, and counts on injuries which caused the death of one M. O. Trammell. The right to maintain the suit is given and confined by the section last cited, eo nomine, to the personal representative of the deceased. The complaint is in the name of “Maria Trammell, administratrix of the estate of M. C. Trammell, deceasedand in the body of the complaint it is averred that “plaintiff’s intestate” was in the service of the defendant* &c., was injured in the manner therein specifically alleged, and died from the effects of such injuries; thus setting forth a. cause of action which, by the terms of the statute, couid enure only to the plaintiff in her representative capacity. In such
The present case is unlike that last cited in that it involves a dependent relationship between the deceased and the next of kin, and no pecuniary interest on the part of the latter except by way of support and maintenance. The evidence is that he received a dollar a day for his labor, and that “he always brought his money home and spent it on his family,” thus negativing the idea that he saved anything. There is no evidence that his family consisted of others than himself and his wife, the plaintiff here. His probable duration of life was about twenty-seven years. The judgment was for two thousand five hundred dollars. This sum was fixed upon the theory, that his next of kin, his family, received to their support two hundred of the three hundred dollars which he annually earned, and that $2,500 at the legal rate of interest would, produce that annual sum. The amount is too large. Assuming, as we must on the evidence we find in this record, that the family of the deceased consisted of himself and his wife, and that he spent three hundred dollárs per annum on this family, the most liberal admeasurement of damages would give to the wife only one-half of that sum, or one hundred and fifty dollars; and the judgment is excessive on this score to the extent of the difference between a sum yielding two hundred dollars annually and a sum which would yield one hundred and fifty dollars, that is, between $2,500 and $1,875, or $625. But this is not all. It is manifest that, had Trammell lived and spent three hundred dollars, all his earnings, on himself and wife for twenty-seven years, there would have been at the end of that time nothing saved. ■ Yet under this judgment the wife, as next of kin, would in that time receive and expend all she would have gotten had he survived, and at the end of the period of his probable life, still have $2,500, or $1,875,' as the case may be, which she would not have received at all but for his death — a net gain over and above the pecuniary value of her husband’s life of the amount of the judgment after the lapse of twenty-seven years. This, of course, is wrong. The true measure of damages manifestly is that which gives her such sum as, being put to interest, will each year, by taking a part of the principal and adding it to the interest, yield one hundred and fifty dollars, and as that the whole remaining principal, at the'end of the twenty-seventh year, added to the interest on this balance for that year, will equal one hundred and fifty dollars. This sum we find to be approximately sixteen hundred and fifty ($1,650) dollars, and judgment will be here entered for that amount.
Modified and affirmed.