— Under the statute which entitles the personal representative of an employé, whose death is caused by the negligence of the employer, to maintain an action, the measure of recoverable damages established by this court is the money value of the life. The recovery is limited to actual compensation for the pecuniary loss suffered by those entitled to inherit his estate according to the statutes of distribution, allowing nothing for the pain which the deceased may be supposed to have suffered, or as solace to the grief of surviving relations. — James v. R. & D. R. R. Co.,
In Penn. R. R. Co. v. Butler, 57 Pa. St. 335, after stating that the proper measure of damages is the pecuniary loss suffered by the parties entitled to the sum recovered, it is observed: “And that loss is what the deceased would have probably earned by his intellectual or bodily labor in his business or profession during the residue of his life-time, and which would have gone for the benefit of his children, taking into consideration his age, ability and disposition to labor, and his habits of living and expenditure.” True, this language is susceptible of the construction, that the sum of the probable future accumulations is the measure of the pecuniary loss, suffered by the surviving next of kin; but we do not suppose that the learned justice who rendered the opinion intended to be understood as laying down the rule, that the net earnings during the period of the expectancy of life constitute the absolute measure of the present pecuniary value. In L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Trammell,
Whatever may be the inherent difficulty of estimating the pecuniary value of human life, it is important and necessary, in view of the frequent occurrence of cases arising under the statute, that a clear and definite rule be established for the ascertainment, with reasonable certainty, of the pecuniary value of the life destroyed — so clear and definite, if practicable, that juries will be capable of applying it, when the facts of the particular case are shown. The application of any rule will be attended with more or less uncertainly, for, in some respects, the value is speculative. The precise loss can not be calculated with exact accuracy. The net income, which the deceased is earning at the time of his death, might not be continued for any considerable portion of the expected term of life; sickness or accidental injuries may impair the accumulating capacity, and want of employment may diminish his earnings; while, on the other hand, they may be increased as he may acquire skill and ability. Whilst courts and juries are compelled to compute from reasonable probabilities, mere speculations should be discarded. The rule should be so formulated as to give the surviving next of kin full actual compensation for the pecuniary loss suflerecl by them, and at the same time not unduly oppress the defendant. The present case devolves the duty of endeavoring to formulate a rule to govern in cases where there are net earnings, and no relation of dependence.
As the statute provides, that the damages recovered shall be distributed according to the statutes of distribution, they should be calculated in reference to the reasonable expectation of benefit from the continuance of the life. That benefit is the estate of the person killed, had he survived, consisting of the accumulations by his labor or skill at the termination of expectancy of life, not including any income derived from property, or investments or employment of capital. In computing the pecuniary loss, the first term, or unknown quantity to be ascertained, is the aggregate amount of the net earnings at the end of the expected term of lile, estimated on the basis of his health, ability to labor, habits of sobriety, industry and economy, gross annual earnings and expenditures. The sum of such accumulations, however, is not the measure of the pecuniary value of the life, at the time death resulted from
Affirmed.
