187 Pa. 568 | Pa. | 1898
Opinion by
The cause of action in this case arose after the passage of the Act of May 8, 1895, P. L. 54, entitled “An act relative to actions by husband and wife for injury to the person unlawfully inflicted on her.” This appeal involves the construction of that act.
Previously to the application, the plaintiff’s statement, in which the .fact of her coverture was not disclosed, had been filed, and the defendant company pleaded “not guilty’’thereto. On the trial, the fact of plaintiff’s coverture was further shown, and, at the close, defendant requested the court to instruct the jury that “ under the pleadings and evidence . . . . the verdict must be for the defendant.” This was refused and, the case having been submitted to the jury, a verdict was rendered in plaintiff’s favo'r for $1,200.
The refusal of the court to charge as requested constitutes the only specification of error.
The defendant company does not of course complain of the refusal of the court to consolidate the two actions for the purpose of trial, nor is it in a position to do so, because the court in denying the plaintiff’s motion sustained its objection thereto. Defendant’s contention is that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover because her suit was brought by her alone for a cause of action arising after the passage of the act of May 8,1895, in which it is claimed no provision is made for the subsequent consolidation of such actions as this. It is not claimed that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the jury in finding as they did.
This is a quite too narrow construction of the act, the manifest purpose of which was to provide that the two rights of action, recognized as still existing in both husband and wife
This section clearly recognizes the continued existence of the same right of action in each, husband and wife, that they respectively had before the passage of the act, and manifestly contemplates the bringing of an action by either afterwards; and also provides a mode by which the other shall either join in the suit or be barred as fully and effectually as if he or she had actually waived his or her right of action. If one of the parties may thus be compelled to join in the action of the other, or be adjudged to have waived his or her right of action, it is certainly competent for both to voluntarily assent that their respective rights of action be redressed in one suit, to which each thus voluntarily becomes a party, as fully and effectually as by being ruled to join. The act evidently contemplates a suit brought to trial, in which both husband and wife have previously become parties either voluntarily or by being ruled to join in the suit after it had been brought. The main purpose of the act is thus fully accomplished, and an issue is presented for trial, in which the two rights of action may be redressed in only one suit. Any other construction of the act would be contrary to its spirit as well as the true intent and meaning of the section above quoted.
It matters not that the husband and wife, as in this case, had each brought a separate suit. They each had a separate
It was not the fault of the plaintiff or her husband that consolidation was not permitted in this case; and surely the former cannot be prejudiced by the mistaken action of the court in denying the motion to consolidate. The defendant company, of course, is not in a position to complain, because in denying the plaintiff’s motion, the court sustained its objection thereto.
We find nothing in the record of which the defendant has any just reason to complain.
Judgment affirmed.