180 Mass. 141 | Mass. | 1901
This is an action brought under Pub. Sts. c. 100, § 21, by the parents of Dennis McNary, for an injury in their means of support in consequence of his intoxication, alleging it to have been caused by the defendant. The case is here on exceptions to the judge’s refusal to make certain rulings requested. Two of these were, in substance, that the plaintiffs had no right or legal claim to support from their son, and that the injury was too remote, and that therefore the action could not be maintained ; a third that the plaintiffs could not recover without proving their poverty and dependence upon their son. There
There was evidence of the following facts. The defendant was engaged in the illegal sale of intoxicating liquors. On June 12, 1897, between 12 M. and 1 P. m., Dennis McNary got from him at his bar three glasses of whiskey and a bottle of liquor. On leaving, McNary showed signs of intoxication. At about three he took the train from Gloucester to Manchester, then being obviously intoxicated. At about eleven minutes past three he was put off the train lawfully at West Gloucester. He started to walk by the track to Manchester, in spite of’ the efforts of the station agent to prevent him, and was struck a few minutes later by a following train. When the engineer of that train first saw him he was by the side of the track, but as the train came' up with him he reeled against the cylinder of the engine and his arm was made permanently useless. The plaintiffs live in Nova Scotia. The father made his living by fishing in a small boat. There were nine children, Dennis being the second, and the oldest son. At the time of the accident he was twenty-five or twenty-six years old. Until 1895 he had lived with the plaintiffs, fishing like his father, and had given them all his earnings. Then he came to Massachusetts, and since then he had sent money to his parents at different times, — in all, according to the mother’s statement, about $170.
She testified that sometimes she sent for money and he responded. The money was used for support in the household. From the time of his injury until 1899, McNary made nothing. Then he returned to Nova Scotia, set up a small grocery store, making a dollar, sometimes two dollars, a week, boarding with his parents and paying what he could, from half a dollar to two dollars a week.
It was not argued that the statute does not confer rights upon non-resident aliens, and therefore we do not discuss the point. The statute is not the same as the one considered in Mulhall v.
If the intoxication was the natural and proximate cause of the injury, in the words of the instruction, it was in one sense the necessary cause of it, If the insertion of the word “ necessary ” in the request meant that the result must be one which ought to have been foreseen as necessary, at the time of the sale, it unduly restricted the words of the statute. The statute imposes the liability for an injury “ in consequence ” of the intoxication. If we assume that those words are limited to such a connection of consequence as is recognized by the common law, men are held liable every day in tort for the natural and proximate results of their wrongs, although the particular result could not have been foreseen specifically as necessary at the time of the act. See Eddy v. Courtright, 91 Mich. 264, 268; Brockway v. Patterson, 72 Mich. 122, 126; Dunlap v. Wagner, 85 Ind. 529; Roth v. Eppy, 80 Ill. 283. It is not necessary to consider how the case would have stood if the railroad company had been found to blame.
As to whether an injury to the plaintiffs’ means of support was made out, it is manifest from the facts which we have stated that the plaintiffs were in very humble circumstances,' and it might be inferred from the mother’s sometimes sending to her son for money that they actually needed his help. The jury were warranted in finding, and, indeed we have no doubt, that what the son sent, little as it was, not only went for support but was needed for it. The help of their son, in other words, was one of the plaintiffs’ means of support, and it was taken away. This statute, even more clearly than the one construed in Mulhall v. Fallon, 176 Mass. 266, 267, applies to a case of partial dependence, and we are of opinion that it gives a remedy to parents injured in their actual means of support by the loss of help from a child, without regard to their having a legal right to the help. Eddy v. Courtright, 91 Mich. 264, 268. See Moran v. Goodwin, 130 Mass. 158 ; Daly v. New Jersey Steel & Iron Co. 155 Mass. 1. The judge when he refused to rule that the plaintiffs must prove their poverty and dependence read the statute to the jury and showed by what he said that he understood the request to mean, as probably it was intended to mean and as it now is argued, that the plaintiffs must make out a legal right. He left no doubt that they could recover only the direct loss of means of support. See Mead v. Stratton, 87 N. Y. 493; McMahon v. Sankey, 133 Ill. 636.
Exceptions overruled.