Opinion by
Orlаndo Loekeby was employed as a brakeman by the defendant company. A frеight train, upon which he was engaged in the line of his duty, was derailed on the evening of Octоber 11,1899, and he was killed. The defendant company was charged with negligence in failing to keep the roadbed in safe condition, and the rolling stock in proper repair, and this suit was brought to recover damages for the death.
In such a case, if the deceased were a married man, the right of action to recover damagеs for his death, would clearly be in his widow, and in her alone.
This is fixed by the terms of the act of April 26, 1855, as has been repeatedly pointed out by the decisions of this court. The subject was fully discussed and the act of assembly clearly construed in Huntingdon, etc., Railroad Company v. Decker,
It is here contеnded, by counsel for the plaintiff, that one
In the same opinion therе is a reference to Prosser v. Edmonds, 1 Younge & Coll. 481, which sustains the doctrine that a bare right to file a bill or maintain a suit, is not assignable. The opinion in that case says: “ It is a rule, nоt of our law alone, but of all countries, that the mere right of purchase shall not givе a man a right to legal remedies. The contrary doctrine is nowhere toleratеd, and is against good policy. All orneases of maintenance and champerty are founded on the principle that no encouragement should be given to litigation by the introduction of parties to enforce those rights which others are not disposed to enforce.”
The judgment is reversed.
