117 A. 18 | N.H. | 1922
This action for negligently causing the death of the plaintiff's intestate is brought under ss. 8-13, c. 191, P.S. Except for the provincial highway statute, the first modification in this state of the common law rule that the death of a human being could not constitute a cause of action, is found in the statute c. 953, Laws 1850, s. 7, authorizing a proceeding by way of indictment against a railroad in case of loss of life by a person not in their employment, through the negligence of the railroad or its servants. Piper v. Railroad,
In the amendments and reenactments of the act in 1879 and 1887, the form of procedure found in the Massachusetts act was abandoned and the English procedure of a suit by the administrator of the deceased adopted. This fact and expressions apparently taken directly from the English act show conclusively the dependence of the present statute upon Lord Campbell's act. All that remained of the Massachusetts act after these amendments was the provision for the distribution of the damages recovered. The act of 1879, c. 35, s. 1, which repealed the act of 1850 gave the administrator a right of action for the injury, but the damages were limited to such as the deceased might have recovered. French v. Company,
"The statute recognizes a wrong to the family of a deceased person, and gives an additional cause of action. In addition to the injury to the deceased and to his estate, there may be recovered the injury to his family occasioned by his death. The word `injury' in section 1 includes (1) the injury to the person injured until he dies, and (2) the injury to his widow, children, or heirs by reason of his death." French v. Company, supra, 98. The injury to the deceased's relatives is worked out through the diminution of his estate because of the destruction of his ability to create one. As bearing thereon, his expectation of life and his earning capacity are named as factors for consideration. While his earning capacity for himself would be the gross amount he could obtain as the fruit of his efforts or service in any capacity, the amount which he could earn for his estate or the benefit. of others would be what remained after deducting the necessary expense of his own living. His earning capacity which tends to augment his estate or to permit him to aid those naturally dependent *298
upon his bounty is necessarily his net earning capacity; his capacity to acquire money less the necessary expense of acquisition. The statute was so construed in Carney v. Railway,
The instruction in this case to which exception was taken is, "The third element of damages is for loss of earning capacity in connection with which the decedent's age and his probable duration of life are to be considered, as well as anything else disclosed by the evidence which bears on the question. . . . This earning capacity is the capacity to earn money for one's estate, and that means what one is able to be worth to his estate. In other words what one would be able to save from what he would be able to earn over and above what it would cost him to live. His net saving ability from the time of his coming of age during his probable duration of life would measure the extent of this element of damage." This instruction is not entirely clear. It is capacity to earn and not ability to save which the statute prescribes as a basis of damages. Imbriani v. Anderson, supra. But although it may be argued that the instruction was liable to misconstruction by the use of the term, net saving ability, reference to the preceding sentence tends to show that in the use of the expression "saving ability" and being "able to save" the thought in mind was of the earnings that would be left after deducting "what it would cost him to live." The charge was clearly so understood at the trial for no exception was taken to the reference to "saving ability" or to the expression "what one would be able to save from what he would be able to earn over and above what it would cost him to live." The plaintiff excepted "to the statement that what it would cost to live is to be taken into consideration in determining the damages to the estate." This exception definitely informed the court that he had been understood to charge the jury in accordance with its terms and questioned only the legal soundness of the proposition excepted to. As this proposition correctly stated the law, the exception must be overruled. If the language of the charge now appears susceptible *299
a different construction in conflict with the rule of Imbriani v. Anderson, supra, the matter was not called to the attention of the court. As the objection was not seasonably presented to the court, the plaintiff could not now raise the question under a general exception. Mason v. Railway,
As the defendant waives the exception to argument of counsel, the plaintiff has
Judgment on the verdict.
All concurred.