76 Wis. 657 | Wis. | 1890
However ungrateful it may have been in the plaintiff, nearly two years after he had assigned his alleged cause of action to Thomas F. Clarke, and after the latter had, on the faith of such assignment, incurred the liabilities and advanced the monejus in the action, mentioned in the foregoing statement, to settle with the defendants, and to release and discharge them from any and all liability by reason thereof, as stated, without the knowledge or concurrence of Mr. Clarke, yet we are forced to hold that such cause of action was not assignáble; and that Mr. Clarke obtained no right to the same, nor to control or continue the action in the name of the plaintiff or other
These eases go on the theory that such actions and causes of action for personal injury or injury to business did not survive the death of-the plaintiff at common law, nor by see. 4253, R. S. Randall v. N. W. Tel. Co. 54 Wis. 141; Farrall v. Shea, 66 Wis. 565; Cotter v. Plumer, 72 Wis. 478. It is claimed, however, that such cause of action would survive by virtue of ch. 280, Laws of 1887, amend
By the Oourt.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.