130 S.E. 313 | N.C. | 1925
The action was brought to recover damages for the wrongful death of the plaintiff's intestate, who at the time of his injury was a boy ten years of age, of bright mind; of good health, habits and character; and of fine physique. The issues were answered as follows:
1. Was the injury and death of the plaintiff's intestate, Clemmons Purnell, caused by the negligence of the defendant as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
2. Did the said Clemmons Purnell by his own negligence contribute to and cause his own injury and death as alleged in the answer? Answer: No.
3. Was the injury and death of Clemmons Purnell caused by the negligence of Burkett Purnell as alleged in the answer? Answer: No.
4. What damage, if any, is plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant? Answer: $1,000.
The plaintiff's motion to set aside the answer to the fourth issue for insufficiency of the damages was denied and the plaintiff excepted. There was a judgment in his favor of $1,000. The plaintiff assigns as error two instructions which were given by the court as to the measure of damages:
"1. I give you the rule as to award and damage for the wrongful death applicable in the State of North Carolina and direct you to observe it and none other. Where one's death is caused by the negligent acts of another, proximately producing it, the amount of award or the damage is subject to the following rule: The award is the present value of the net pecuniary worth of the deceased, to be ascertained by deducting the cost of his own living and expenditures from the gross income based upon his life expectancy.
"2. After subtracting his personal expenditures from that amount they thus reach what is known in law as his net income, and having deducted this amount, then they determine what is the present pecuniary value of such an amount, and having done so, the sum arrived at would be the amount of the award."
At common law a civil action could not be maintained against one who had negligently caused the death of another (Craig v. Lumber Co.,
In Kesler v. Smith,
It is true that in Carter v. R. R.,
With the respect to the second exception the appellant contends that the trial judge instructed the jury to ascertain the gross earnings and the personal expenditures and to subtract the latter from the former, and in this way to find the net income of the deceased; then to deduct the net income from something that is not defined, and to determine the present pecuniary value of such amount by a method not stated; and finally that the sum thus arrived at would be the answer to the fourth issue.
In our opinion the instruction is not reasonably susceptible of this interpretation. The words "and having deducted this amount" evidently refer to the personal expenses of the deceased and not to the net income; and as indicated the deduction was to be made, not from an unknown quantity, but from the gross income. The charge, of course, must be considered in its entirety, in the connected way in which it was given and on the presumption that the jury did not disregard it; and if it presents the law fairly and correctly it will afford no ground for reversal, though expressions standing alone may be technically incorrect. White v. Hines,
No error. *577