47 A.2d 187 | Conn. | 1946
The plaintiff administratrix brought this action against the defendants for damages for causing the death of her decedent. The decedent's employer joined as a plaintiff, claiming reimbursement for workmen's compensation which it has become obligated to pay. The administratrix alone has appealed from a judgment entered upon a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, claiming that the amount of the verdict was inadequate and assigning error in the charge on damages. The record is barren of any oral objection to the charge immediately after it was delivered, in compliance with the requirement of the Practice Book, 156. The finding discloses that after the charge was delivered the jury asked the trial court to "re-read that part" of its charge "pertaining to the *674 basis for the assessment of damages," which the court did. The plaintiff has sought to have the finding corrected by adding a statement to the effect that after the original charge was delivered and before that part of it relating to damages was repeated, counsel for the parties conferred with the trial judge in chambers and plaintiff's counsel objected to the charge, stating, in substance, that the amounts to be expended in support of the decedent's family ought not to be deducted from the gross earnings in arriving at net earnings, and requesting the court to correct the charge in that respect upon rereading it to the jury. The defendants, while claiming objection should have been made after the repetition of the charge, concede in their brief that counsel conferred with the court in chambers and that objection was made by plaintiff's counsel at that time.
We have consistently refused to make an exception in the application of 156 from the date of its adoption. Cervino v. Coratti,
As we stated in Chase v. Fitzgerald, supra, 467, the cause of action in such a case as this is one that comes to the representative of the decedent's estate by survival and so is a continuance of that which the decedent could have asserted had he lived. Had he lived and been shorn of all ability to carry on his usual activities, he would have been entitled to compensation for this loss, including destruction of his earning power.
The court charged in accordance with our earlier decisions that the measure of recovery on "the basis of the loss of the net earning capacity" was the decedent's capacity to earn more than was necessary for his support during his life expectancy and that there was no evidence to show that the decedent "earned any more money than was necessary to take care of his obligations." As we said in Chase v. Fitzgerald, supra, 469, "To measure damages upon the basis of the destruction of earning capacity is very different from awarding a sum intended to represent the amount which a decedent would have earned and left as a part of his estate." The final inquiry as to the earning capacity of a man is not what he is capable of saving but what he is capable of earning. Memphis Consolidated Gas Electric Co. v. Letson, 135 F. 969, 975, 68 C.C.A. 453. Had the decedent in this case lived and been entirely incapacitated from work, an element in measuring his damages would have been the loss caused by the destruction of his earning capacity, not the difference between this and his living expenses. While the trial court in its charge followed our previous decisions, we are constrained to find error in view of our decision in the Chase case.
After we handed down our opinion in the instant case, the defendants made a motion for a reargument which we granted. One ground of the motion was that the rule of damages announced in Chase v. Fitzgerald, *676
supra, should not be applied retrospectively to affect the decision in this case. There is abundant authority to support the proposition that where a court overrules a previous decision the effect is not to make a change in the law but to recognize that the court was mistaken in its first declaration of it and to establish that the law always was as stated in the later decision. People ex rel. Rice v. Graves,
The decisions and cyclopedic articles we have cited and other cases referred to in them state that there is a generally recognized exception to this rule where contracts have been made or rights have become vested, or perhaps other action has been taken, under the original decision. The basis of these exceptions is the essential injustice of applying the law as declared in the later decision to situations where parties have acted in reliance upon that stated in the earlier case. Gelpcke v. Dubuque,
The decedent's employer, coplaintiff in the action, has not joined in the appeal, but has filed a brief claiming that the administratrix cannot by appeal disturb the judgment which the employer has jointly secured against the defendants. General Statutes, 5231, contains a provision that "any employer having paid, or by award having become obligated to pay, compensation under the provisions of this chapter, may bring an action against" a third person legally liable to pay damages to the employee "to recover any amount that he has paid or by award has become obligated to pay as compensation" to the employee. A superficial reading of this provision would indicate that the employer has an independent right to recover the amount specified upon proof of the legal liability of the third person, regardless of the amount of damages for which the employee would be entitled to judgment. We have never had occasion to consider more than incidentally the nature of the employer's right to *678
recover. But, in an action where employer and employee were joint plaintiffs, we said: "The action is one in tort by Duffy [the employee] to recover from defendant damages suffered by reason of the negligence of its servants. The right of action does not flow from any contractual liability, nor are the provisions relative to injuries contained in the Workmen's Compensation Act in any way germane to the cause of action involved." Duffy v. Bishop Co.,
Again, the statute provides that, if the damages in the judgment are more than sufficient to reimburse the employer for what he has paid or become obligated to pay as compensation, judgment is to be rendered in his favor for the amount he has paid, with an allowance for an attorney's fee, and the excess is to be awarded to the employee, and while the statute does not so provide, the necessary implication is that where such a judgment is rendered in favor of the employer, *679
his obligation to make further compensation payments is ended. Rosenbaum v. Hartford News Co.,
There are compelling reasons aside from the terms of the statute for holding that the employer's right to judgment is derived from that of the employee and that the employer's judgment cannot exceed the amount of just damages to which the employee is entitled. In Taylorville v. Illinois Public Service Co.,
Counsel stated in argument that there is much uncertainty among trial judges and lawyers as regards the position of the employer where he joins with the employee in actions such as the one before us, and this is confirmed by certain issues sought to be raised in the case of Anderson v. Burgess Express Co., Inc.,
In our original opinion the direction for a new trial was restricted to the determination of the amount of damages. The defendants claimed on reargument that this issue was so interwoven with that of liability that if there was to be a retrial it should be on all issues. In Murray v. Krenz,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.