172 S.E. 795 | W. Va. | 1934
On this certification, the sufficiency of a special plea is on test. The underlying question is whether the plaintiff, an ex-convict, may maintain an action for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been inflicted upon him, while a convict, through the negligence of the defendant.
By his declaration, plaintiff alleges that on the 23rd of June, 1931, while working with other men on a section of state highway No. 13, in Clay County, the defendant negligently drove her automobile against him, thereby causing him serious physical injuries. To the declaration the defendant filed a general issue plea and a special plea, in the latter of which she alleges that on the 11th of February, 1931, in the intermediate court of Kanawha County, the plaintiff was convicted of a felony and sentenced to confinement for one year in the state penitentiary, and that the plaintiff remained a convict for the year then ensuing; that in consequence of such conviction and sentence of the plaintiff, he does not have cause of action against the defendant on account of the matters set forth in the declaration. The learned trial court considered this special plea to be good and overruled a demurrer thereto. He certified his ruling to this Court for review.
In support of the plea, the defendant takes the position that at the time of the occurrences of which the plaintiff complains he was civiliter mortuus because he was a convict, and therefore cannot maintain an action on account of injuries alleged to have been received by him within the period that he was a convict. The plaintiff says that though he was a convict it did not follow that another might injure him with impunity; further, that upon the completion of his imprisonment *586 there exists no legal impediment to his right to institute and prosecute this action.
At common law, the attainder which operated upon pronouncement of sentence for treason or other felony embraced two principal incidents, forfeiture of estate and corruption of blood; and to a variable extent, the extinction of civil rights. The latter, when fully operative, being denominated civil death, civiliter mortuus. 13 Corpus Juris, page 912. By the constitution of West Virginia, the first two of the common law consequences of attainder are banned from this state. "No conviction shall work corruption of blood or forfeiture of estate." Constitution of West Virginia, Art. III, section 18. But, what about a convict's civil rights?
The English doctrine of loss of civil rights upon conviction and sentence for felony is attended with much uncertainty. In the first place, there is confusion in the old books as to the cases in which it became operative. It certainly applied to persons entering into religion or abjuring or banished from the realm. 8 Ruling Case Law, page 705. "The civil death commenced, if any man was banished or abjured the realm by the process of the common law, or entered into religion; that is, went into a monastery, and became there a monk professed: in which cases he was absolutely dead in law, and his next heir should have his estate. For, such banished man was entirely cut off from society; and such a monk, upon his profession, renounced solemnly all secular concerns." Blackstone's Commentaries, Book I, Part II, p. 132; I Tucker's Commentaries, p. 39. But to just what extent the doctrine of civiliter mortuus, in either limited or unlimited form, applied otherwise, there is indefiniteness. This was forcefully emphasized by the Supreme Court of New York in the case of Avery v. Everett,
The Supreme Court of Georgia held that an ex-convict is not disqualified from suing for personal injuries received while undergoing imprisonment. Dade Coal Co. v. Haslett,
The doctrine that convicts should have redress of personal injuries inflicted upon them through the negligence or wantonness of another is consonant with modern conceptions in respect of the proper relationship between society and convicted persons. The harshness of the common law with respect to forfeiture of estates, corruption of blood and destruction of civil rights no longer obtains in England. 33 and 34 Victoria, ch. 23, (1870). "The general effect of these statutes may be stated to be, that attainder has been abolished as from 4th July, 1870, * * *." Stephen's Commentaries on the Laws of England (16th Ed.), Vol. 1, page 371. In our case ofMartin v. Long,
Our Code 1931,
In the Virginia case of Ruffin v. Commonwealth, 21 Gratt. 790, cited by the defendant, the court held: "A convicted felon has only such rights as the statutes may give him." But in our late case of State v. Dignan,
It is the general policy of the law that wrongs suffered through personal injuries may always be redressed in a court of law, whether at the time of receiving such injury the party so affected be sui juris or non sui juris; that there is no period of time in the life of any person when a personal wrong may be inflicted upon him without there being attendant civil liability upon the wrongdoer.
In the light of the principles discussed and the authorities cited, we are of opinion that the special plea above noted does not constitute a defense to the action, and therefore that the demurrer to the said plea should have been sustained. Thus we respond to the certification.
Reversed and remanded.