85 S.E. 234 | S.C. | 1915
May 3, 1915. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The appeal is from two orders of the Circuit Court.
The administration of justice would have been promoted had the appellant abided a final judgment on the merits; for then, all the issues now made, and others which may be hereafter made, could be settled by one appeal, and no party have suffered.
The plaintiff sues the City of Columbia for the instant death of his wife, under his overturned automobile upon a defective highway of the city. *53
To a complaint, which alleged the wrong, the defendant demurred. The demurrer will be reported, as will the order made thereon.
The cause proceeded immediately to trial, but thereto the defendant "objected to the jurisdiction of the Court upon the ground that the Court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter." The grounds of objection and the order made thereon and denying the motion will also be reported.
There was a mistrial and the appeal here as above stated, is from the two orders made by the Court.
History: The plaintiff, in company with his wife, was driving his automobile along main street in the city of Columbia towards the south; at or near the intersection of Main and Whaley streets a small stream crosses Main street obliquely, and over the stream there was flung a narrow cement bridge; the plaintiff has just crossed over the bridge, and his machine went into a side ditch on the right, turned turtle upon and immediately killed the wife. Therefor, the plaintiff sued as the administrator of his wife's estate.
The right to sue for the alleged wrong is referable to many statutes of the State, and a decision of the cause requires a detailed and it may be a fatiguing consideration of the statutes and the decisions about them.
By the act of 1892 (
By the act of 1903 (
By the statute of 1903 the action was to be enforced as by the provisions of Lord Campbell's Act.
By the act of 1892 and its amendment of 1895 (
This is the statute law, and all of it by which the rights and remedies of the plaintiff are prescribed.
The defendant has made two exceptions, one about the order overruling the demurrer, and that he has subdivided into four parts; and one about the order overruling the plea to jurisdiction of the subject matter.
Thereby the appellant makes only two questions; he contends: (1) That section 1974, vol. I of the Code of Laws of 1912, is the sole warrant for the action, and its words do not sustain the action.
(2) That section 3963, vol. I of the Code of Laws 1912, governs the case; and by it the plaintiff has only that cause of action which Annie C. McLendon would have had had she lingered and not died immediately, which the appellant calls a survival action, and on it the plaintiff has not sued.
The confusion in the case arises out of the enactment of amendments to three capital statutes; so that the whole collected body of the law thereabout is not so in harmony as it would have been had it been embraced at the outstart in one act.
The three capital enactments are: (1) Lord Campbell's Act, 1859 (
Into each of these statutes, unrelated at the start, amendments have been thrust, in different years and for different purposes, so that each is now somewhat related to the other, and the relation is apparently hostile.
The third of these statutes, enacted in 1892, is that which created the primary right in the citizen and the corresponding *55 wrong of the municipality, and we shall hereinafter refer to it as the act of primary right.
By it the citizen might ride on smooth highways unhurt, and by it, for defective highways the consequence of municipal negligence which cause hurt to the citizen, the municipality is made liable.
The statute, however, gave a right of action only to a person who received bodily injury; it did not give a right of action to anybody in the event the person so injured died; and unless some other statute supplied that right it did not exist, for the wrong was esteemed to die with the person.
At that time (1892), and at the time of the transaction here (in 1913), Lord Campbell's Act was of force. The language of that act is sufficiently comprehensive to permit the plaintiff to maintain this new action.
The statute (Civil Code 1912, sec. 3053), which gives the primary right to the plaintiff, is not the same as that which was construed in All v. Barnwell,
By Lord Campbell's Act (Civil Code 1912, sec. 3955), and by the act of primary right, the right of action is made to depend on negligence; not so with the act construed at
But if Lord Campbell's Act (Civil Code 1912, sec. 3955) did not comprehend this case, the act of 1903 (
That statute was an amendment of the act of primary right. That statute was passed to change the rule announced in All v. Barnwell. It had not then nor since been held that Lord Campbell's Act did not embrace a case arising under the act of primary right.
But the appellant stoutly contends that Lord Campbell's Act cannot govern the case, though the General Assembly has so ordained by the act of 1903. The argument is (1) that Lord Campbell's Act creates a new action in him who sues for the death (Civil Code 1912, section 3955, and Exparte Mayo,
It is true the act of primary right declares that the right of action shall "survive," but the whole statute, especially that part which makes applicable Lord Campbell's Act, makes it plain that for the death of the person, certain other persons might sue and recover damages sustained by them.
In the instant case there could literally be no survival ofaction, for the woman instantly killed had no action. We must look to the plain purposes of the whole statute rather than to strict verbal construction of particular words of it. The action here sued on is a new action, and the plaintiff has so esteemed it; he has sought to "enforce" his primary right by the procedure laid down in Lord Campbell's Act, which is applicable to such actions.
And that brings us to the issue stated just above as (2).
It is true Lord Campbell's Act allows punitive damages. That was foreign matter thrust in 1901 into the act of 1859, and to change the rule announced in 1898 in Garrick v. R.R.,
And inasmuch as the allowance of punitive damages was one of the "provisions" of Lord Campbell's Act in 1903, when it was made "applicable" to the act of primary right, it is plain that such "provision" about punitive damages alters and amends the act of primary right wherein only actual damages were allowable.
In the case at bar, however, there is no demand for punitive damages; it is not alleged that the act of the municipality was wilful.
But the appellant yet contends that the statute of 1903, that which amended the act of primary right and makes "applicable" to the case Lord Campbell's Act, is not now a *57 part of the statute law of the State, and that because it is not written in totidem verbis in the codification of 1912, at section 1974.
That is the contention stated as (1) in the outstart of this opinion, when reference was made to the exceptions.
It is true that section 1974 of the Code of 1912 does not contain all the words of the act of amendment of 1903. The act of amendment did not recite and repeat the primary act or Lord Campbell's Act; it invokes those statutes by reference to them as numbered parts of the codification of 1902, and the numbered parts are pertinent.
But the codification of 1912, when it invokes the same two statutes — Lord Campbell's Act and the primary act — by section and chapter of that Code itself, renders to sections and chapters which contain matter foreign to the subject.
The appellant's contention is that the section must mean that which it declares, and if that meaning is not true, then its true meaning cannot be supplied aliunde.
But so far as the section and chapter therein referred to are concerned, to wit, sections 1475 and 2280, and chapter XCIII, the reference means nothing, and the section may, therefore, be read without the reference. Plainly, the insertion of the numerals 1475 and 2280 and the character XCIII, is a bull.
There is no need to enquire how it happened. The sense would be the same had blank spaces been put in the place of the numerals and character. It will not be contended on any hand that the General Assembly intended to make the references which appear in the section. If, therefore, section 1974 (Code of 1912) be read with the foreign matter eliminated, it will stand thus:
"Whenever the death of any person shall be caused by any injury through a defect in or failure to repair a highway, causeway, public way, street or bridge, under such circumstances and conditions as would have entitled the party *58 to recover damages if death had not ensued, then in every such case the right of action for such injury and death shall survive to and may be enforced by the personal representative of such person in the same manner as is now provided by this Code."
The Code of 1912 provides at section 3053 and chapter XCII a congruous right and remedy for the death of such person by such instrumentality.
We think, therefore, that the plaintiff has a plain right of action without any reference to how the blunder in section 1974 occurred.
The parol testimony offered to show how it did occur was irrelevant, as well as incompetent.
The best evidence before us of what is the statute law on the subject, is the printed volume; there is none other evidence at hand, and it contains all the law necessary to sustain the action. Finally, the appellant cites yet another statute to sustain his contention that the cause of action set up in the complaint is not a new action, but an old action made to survive her in whom it first inhered. That is the act of 1905 (
The act of 1892 had reference only to trespassers upon real estate, and it provided that wrongs thereon should survive to or against the owner or the trespasser as the case might be.
The amendment of 1905 included "any and all injuries to the person."
The statute as amended is discussed in Bennett v. Ry
Thus we have considered and decided all the real issues made, not by name, but in essence, and our conclusion is, that the orders of the Circuit Court be affirmed; it is so ordered.