55 A. 891 | N.H. | 1903
In the absence of statutory authority, the action cannot be maintained. At common law an action for a personal tort resulting in death does not survive. This "rule has been too long established and too generally recognized as a settled principle of the common law to be now shaken by anything short of a legislative act." Wyatt v. Williams,
At the time of the last revision of the statutes, in 1891, the existing statutes relating to the survival of actions of tort for personal injuries were contained in Laws of 1885, chapter 11, and Laws of 1887, chapter 71 (French v. Mascoma Co.
The limitation of time in the statute relates not merely to the remedy, but to the right which the statute creates. The right granted an administrator to sue in such a case is not an absolute right. It is not like the common-law right of making contracts. In the absence of the statute, it does not exist. Hence its scope and effect must be determined as questions of legislative intention. The plaintiff's right to maintain this suit is not greater than the legislature intended it should be. The language of the special provisions applicable leave no room to doubt that the right and the correlative liability thereby established were made conditional upon the bringing of the suit "at any time within two years after the death of the deceased party, and not afterwards." The cause of action is conditional. If the condition is not observed, the parties stand with respect to the wrongful act as though the statute had not been enacted. "It must be evident that, as this action is brought under a special law and is maintainable solely by its authority, the limitation of time is so incorporated with the remedy given as to make it an integral part of it and the condition precedent to the maintenance of the action at all." Hill v. Supervisors,
In The Harrisburg,
As the plaintiff failed in an essential respect to make out a case as defined by the statute, the defendant's motion for a nonsuit should have been granted. The burden was upon her to show that her action was begun within the time limited. Without such proof, the defendant's liability could not be claimed. Unlike the general statute of limitations, this special statute creating the right and giving the remedy does not merely confer a privilege upon the defendant to interpose a definite time limitation as a bar to the enforcement of a distinct and independent liability, but it defines and limits the existence of the right itself. In the one case the statute furnishes the defendant with a technical defence to which he may resort or not as he sees fit, while in the other it gives the plaintiff a right conditioned upon its enforcement within a definite time. Hence, while it has been generally held that the defendant must plead the general statute of limitations, or set it out in a brief statement under the general issue, in order to be protected by it (Wood Lim. s. 7), the reasoning that leads to that result, as a matter of pleading, has no application when, as in this case, the statute confers upon the plaintiff a peculiar right which if not exercised ceases to exist by its own limitation. Bomar v. Hayler, 7 Lea 78; Caldwell v. McFarland, 11 Lea 463; Bus. Lim., s. 375.
Exception sustained: verdict set aside.
All concurred.