42 W. Va. 551 | W. Va. | 1896
Lead Opinion
This was an action of trespass on the case brought by Charles 0. Rowe, Nellie A. Batch elder, R. D. E. Rowe,
The first error assigned and relied on by the defendant is claimed to be that the case should have abated, as to Charles 0. Rowe, when his death was suggested, and should have proceeded in the name of the survivors only, and that, instead of this, two suits have been created and are still pending, one in the name of R. D. E. Rowe and others, and the other in the name of J. GL Hurst, sheriff, committee and administrator of Charles 0. Rowe, deceased. Is this assignment of error well taken? Our statute (Code, e. 127 s. 2) provides, in speaking of the death of a party, that: “Where such fact occurs in any stage of a cause, whether it be in a court of original or appellate jurisdiction, if it occur as to any of several plaintiffs or defendants, the suit may proceed for or against the others, if the cause of suit survive to or against them. If a plaintiff or defendant die pending any action, whether the cause of action would sur
Now, when the death of Charles 0. Rowe, one of the plaintiffs, occurred and was suggested, did the cause of suit survive to the other three plaintiffs, to wit, Nellie A. Batch-elder, B. D. E. Rowe, and James E. Rowe? Upon this question, Freeman on Co-Tenancy and Partition, in section 364, under the head of “Death of Co-Tenant Pendente Lite,” says: “In the two preceding sections we have considered the effect of the death of one co-tenant after the accruing of a joint cause of action, and before the commencement of a suit thereon, and have found the rule to be universal that all joint causes of action survive to the last survivor, irrespective of the nature of the co-tenancy, and further that, when the cause of action survives after the decease of all the co-tenants, it vests in the personal representative of the last survivor. We shall now consider the effect of the death of one of the co-tenants pendente lite, for the purpose of ascertaining whether such death operates as an abatement of the suit. The general rule upon this subject is thus stated by Mr. Jickling: ‘If the whole interest of a party dying survive to the other party, so that no claim can be made by or against the representatives of the party so dying, the proceedings do not abate. Survivorship is a characteristic of joint tenancy, and hence, on the death of a joint tenant party to a suit, either as plaintiff or defendant, the suit does not abate.’ It is therefore certain that, if the plaintiffs are joint tenants, the death of one does not occasion an abatement of the action.” In section 362 the author says: “When the cause of action is joint, it survives to the remaining co-tenants on the death of either of them. This is true in every
Prom these authorities my conclusion is that the cause of action in the case under consideration and the entire cause of action, survived to R. D. E. Rowe, Nellie A. Batchelder, and James E. Rowe, plaintiffs, and that they had the right to prosecute the suit for the entire damages sustained, and not for any aliquot part thereof; but as the jury were instructed at the instance of the defendant that they should assess only three-fourths of said damages in favor of the plaintiffs, this is an error of which the defendant can not complain, although, in my opinion, it would have been the duty of the jury to have found the entire damages to which the original plaintiffs were entitled, and then the plaintiffs could have settled with the estate of the deceased plaintiff".
Did the trial court err in its order of the 24th day of February, 1894, wherein it states that the death of Charles 0. Rowe is suggested, and his estate has been committed to the sheriff, and directs that the suit proceed in the name of J. G. Hurst, committee and administrator of said Charles 0. Rowe, and in the order of December 1, 1894, wherein it was ordered that said suit in the name of the administrator of Charles 0. Rowe do proceed separately from the suit in the name of the surviving plaintiffs? And, if error, is it such as the defendant could complain of? I regard it as plainly error, for the reason that under the law, as we have seen, the suit should have abated as to Charles 0. Rowe, and should have proceeded in the name of the surviving plaintiffs; and I consider it error of which the defendant could complain, for this reason: It entails upon the defendantjhe defense of a suit which is unauthorized by law, as the action should have abated as to said Charles 0. Rowe. And this error is more apparent from the fact that, if another one or two of the plaintiffs had died pending the suit, the defendant would have been required to defend two or three suits for the same cause of action.
Did the court err in rejecting instruction No. 2 asked for by the defendant in regard to the measure of damages, in which the court was asked to instruct the jury that, if
It is further claimed as error that the court refused to set aside the verdict on account of the misconduct of the juror Jacob Kephart. Now, the fact can not be disguised that this juror, in speaking to the two witnesses, and using the expression “The pulp mill ought to be sunk,” meant and intended the pulp mill that was defendant in this action, and it manifested a feeling and prejudice that a juryman ought not to entertain who is about to try a cause. The county of Jefferson is large, and we must presume that many qualified men free from prejudice could have been obtained to try this cause, and we think the courts can not be too careful in guarding the purity of verdicts and securing juries free from prejudice. In the case of Flesher v.
The judgment complained of must be reversed, the verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded, with costs to the appellant.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I dissent from the opinion by Judge English reversing the judgment because of the refusal to abate the attachment. I am clearly of the opinion that the Court ought to have abated the action as to the dead co-plaintiff, and have