115 Wis. 332 | Wis. | 1902
1. It appears from tbe record and is undisputed that tbe deceased was thirty-six years of age, and a strong, healthy man, and had worked in the woods for about sixteen years, and had been in the employ of the defendant in the logging business as a teamster for a year. On the morning of July 0, 1900, he was set at work unloading logs from the cars upon the landing, and continued such work until he was killed in the forenoon of July 1, 1900. During that time he had assisted in unloading something like a dozen train loads of logs. The cars were twenty feet or more long, and the logs were about the same length. The facts attending the accident, as stated by the plaintiff’s counsel, are to the effect that at the time of the accident four cars were brought in the train; and that, as the train was being pulled onto the banking ground, the deceased hooked the trip line onto the fit hook so as to unfasten the wrapper chain, and then, when the car was pulled ahead and set in place to he unloaded, he walked forward, and took hold of the trip line, and while standing near the end of the car next to the engine he gave the trip line a jerk, unfastening the wrapper chain, and while stepping back to get out of the way he stepped into a hole about three or four feet deep, and fell to the ground, and before he could get up the logs rolled off the car and over him, and injured him so that he died about three hours afterwards. The soil appears to have been a sandy slope from the railroad track hack to the mill pond: The hole was three or four feet across the top and three or four feet deep, and about two feet wide at the bottom. A brother of the deceased, who was sworn as a witness in behalf of the plaintiff, testified to the effect that anybody who looked at the hole could see it; that it was at least two feet down to the bark, and that anybody could see that who looked at it. The law applicable to such a state of facts is too well settled to require discussion. Sladky v. Mar
2. It also appears from the testimony of the deceased’s brother that the deceased left no- issue, and was unmarried, and that his father was dead; that his mother was still living in Ganada, where she had lived for many years; that she had no property; that the deceased had been accustomed to send his mother $10 a month when he could spare it; that she never lived in nor became a citizen of the United States; that his father lived nearly all his life at the same place where his mother did, and that he did not think he was ever a citizen of the United States. Upon such undisputed evidence it is claimed on the part of the defendant that under our statute this action cannot be maintained for the benefit of the mother of the deceased, a nonresident alien. The plaintiff claims a right to recover under secs. 4255,- 4256, of the statute. The true meaning of those sections has been so fully and so recently considered by this court as to require nothing further to be here said, except to state the result and the application to the case at bar. Thus it has been held that:
“The right of action given by” those sections “to certain beneficiaries therein named is personal, and the damages are limited to a mere indemnity for the pecuniary injury resulting therefrom to such beneficiary, and the action therefor does not survive the death of such beneficiary, but abates upon his -death, and cannot be revived in favor of his administrator.” Schmidt v. Menasha W. W. Co. 99 Wis. 300, 74 N. W. 797.
So it has been held that:
“The liability created by see. 4255, Stats. 1898, in case of the death of a person by an actionable injury for which such person could have recovered damages if death had not ensued, is for the benefit of certain relatives of the decedent mentioned in sec. 4256, Stats. 1898, and in default of such rela*336 tives there is no liability.” Brown v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 102 Wis. 137, 77 N. W. 748, 78 N. W. 771.
In. that case it was further held that such right of action is separate and distinct from “the right of action .for an injury to the person which survives under sec. 4253,” even though death ensue from the injury. Id. See, also, Hubbard v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 104 Wis. 160, 80 N. W. 454; Staeffler v. Menasha W. W. Co. 111 Wis. 483, 487, 87 N. W. 480. Here the contention is that the plaintiff, as the personal representar tive of the deceased, has the right to recover damages for the pecuniary loss which his mother sustained by reason of his death, notwithstanding such right of action did not survive under sec. 4253. Did the sections of the statutes thus relied upon give such right of action for the benefit of such nonresident alien ? The question is not whether the legislature had power to give such right of action, but whether the sections relied upon did give such right of action. It is claimed that the right “to maintain an action and recover damages” is given by the statute in general terms, and is broad enough to include aliens. The constitution declares that “no distinction shall ever be made by law between resident aliens and citizens, in reference to the possession, enjoyment or descent of property.” Art. I, sec. 15. As indicated, the sections in question have no reference to the possession, enjoyment, or descent of property, nor the rights of'property, where the death is instantaneous or without conscious pain, but simply give a new right of action, outside and independent of property. It has been held in England that “prima facie, and unless the con- • trary be expressed or be implied from the absolute necessity of the case, every legislature must be presumed to have intended by its enactments to regulate the rights which should subsist between its own subjects, and not to affect the rights of foreigners, whether by way of restricting or augmenting their natural rights.” Cope v. Doherty, 4 Kay & J. 367. T’o the same effect is The Zollverein, 1 Swab. Adm. 96; Jefferys v.
“It is plain that the laws of one country can have no intrinsic force, proprio vigore, except within the territorial limits and jurisdiction of that country. They can bind only its own subjects, and others who are within its jurisdictional limits, and the latter only while they remain therein.” Story, C'onfl. Laws, §§ 7, 20, 98, 278.
The general rule is that statutes are “presumed to have no extraterritorial force.” Endlich, Interp. St. § 169. The same author says that:
“In general, statutes must be understood as applying to those only who owe obedience to the legislature which enacts them, and whose interests it is the duty of that legislature to protect; that is, its own subjects, including in that expression not only natural born and naturalized subjects, but also all persons actually within its territorial jurisdiction; but that, as regards aliens resident abroad, the legislature has no con-cernffo'protect their interests, any more than it has a legitimate power to control their rights. In this view it would be presumed, in interpreting a statute, that the legislature did not intend to legislate either as to their rights or liabilities; and to warrant a different conclusion the words of the statute ought to he express, or the context of it very clear.’3 Id. § 176.
Upon this principle, and under a statute similar to ours, it was held in Pennsylvania that “a nonresident alien mother has no standing to maintain an action against a citizen of Pennsylvania to recover damages for the death of her son.” Deni v. Pennsylvania R. Co. 181 Pa. St. 525, 37 Atl. 558. In that case the court used this language: .
“Our statute was not intended to- confer upon nonresident aliens rights of action not conceded to them or to us by their own country, or to put burdens on our own citizens to be dis*338 charged for their benefit. It has no extraterritorial force, and the, plaintiff is not within the purview of it. While it is possible that the language of the statute may admit of a construction which would include nonresident alien husbands, widows, children, and parents of the deceased, it is a construction so obviously opposed to the spirit and policy of the statute that we cannot adopt it.” 181 Pa. St. 528, 529, 37 Atl. 559.
S'o it has been held in a case arising in Colorado that “nonresident aliens are not entitled to1 the benefit of the Colorado statute giving a right of action for death by wrongful act to the next of kin of the deceased, and cannot maintain an action thereunder.” Brannigan v. Union G. M. Co. (C. C.) 93 Fed. 164.
Counsel for the plaintiff cite and rely upon Mulhall v. Fallon, 176 Mass. 266, 57 N. E. 386; Kellyville Coal Co. v. Petraytis, 195 Ill. 215, 63 N. E. 94; Dennick v. Railroad Co. 103 U. S. 11; Vetaloro v. Perkins (C. C.) 101 Fed. 393. In the first of these cases it was held that “a statute cannot impose duties upon a nonresident alien, but it may confer rights upon him.” It is conceded by all that the legislature may confer such right of action upon nonresident aliens, but the question is, Has it done so by the general language employed in the statutes relied upon? In that case, Holmes, O. J., uses this language:
“Under the statute the action for death without conscious suffering takes the place of an action that would have been brought by the employee himself if the harm had been less, and by his representative if it had been equally great but the death had been attended with pain. In the latter case there would be no exception to the right of recovery if the next of ldn were nonresident aliens. It would be strange to read an exception into general words when the wrong is so nearly identical, and when the different provisions are part of one ’.scheme.” 176 Mass. 269, 57 N. E. 387.
In other words, that learned court puts such right of action in favor of the surviving relative, having no reference to the possession, enjoyment, or descent of property, upon the same
" By the Gourt. — The judgment of the superior court for Douglas county is affirmed.