25 N.W.2d 445 | Wis. | 1946
Action commenced December 23, 1943, by Mabel Schwab, plaintiff and respondent, against Oscar Nelson, Robert Wuedde, and General Casualty Company of Wisconsin, a corporation, defendants and appellants, to recover damages for the wrongful death of June Schwab. Defendants moved for summary judgment, which motion was denied by an order dated December 13, 1945, from which defendants appeal. Plaintiff and respondent, Mabel Schwab, mother and sole surviving parent of June Schwab, twenty-four years of age, seeks to recover damages for the wrongful death of June Schwab, who was instantly killed on June 17, 1943, by a truck operated by defendant Robert Wuedde, owned by defendant Oscar Nelson, and insured by defendant General Casualty Company of Wisconsin. Plaintiff paid the funeral expenses amounting to $456.70, which are set forth in the complaint as part of the damages for which recovery is. *565 sought. Defendants moved for summary judgment. The motion for summary judgment was supported by affidavits and the adverse examination of Mabel Schwab, from which it appears that at the time of her death June Schwab had on deposit with her employer $6 or $7 which had been withheld to apply on the purchase of a war bond, and that the employer immediately paid this money to the mother. The proof also shows that the deceased purchased her own clothing, and it therefore can be assumed she left such used clothing and personal effects as a girl would normally have.
Defendants contend that under this statement of facts any action for damages by wrongful death must be brought by and in the name of the personal representative of the deceased person. The right to recover for death by wrongful act is purely statutory, and is provided for in sec. 331.03, Stats. Sec. 331.04 (1) provides who may bring an action, in the following language:
"Every such action shall be brought by and in the name of the personal representative of such deceased person, and the amount recovered shall belong and be paid over to . . . his or her lineal descendants and to his or her lineal ancestors in default of such descendants, . . . provided, that if there be no cause of action in favor of the estate of such decedent and the person or persons to whom the whole amount sued for and recovered belongs, . . . shall be the husband, widow, or parent or parents, . . . suit may at his or her or their option be brought directly in his or her or their name or names instead of being brought in the name of the personal representative of such deceased person."
From the foregoing it is evident that where there is no cause of action in favor of the estate of the victim, any action commenced by the representative of the estate is solely for the benefit of the beneficiary named in the statute and the damages which can be recovered are only those which the beneficiary suffers. Defendants contend that the funeral expenses of this adult child are an obligation of her estate and not an item of *566
damages recoverable by the mother, citing Neuser v. Thelan
(1932),
In Cochrane v. C. Hennecke Co. (1925)
"In view of the logic of the situation, it is more correct to say that they can be recovered under the death statute than under the survival statute. Funeral expenses are not incurred and do not accrue until after the death of the deceased. It is therefore not logical to say they survive his death, since they do not come into existence until after his death."
Then in Keasler v. Milwaukee E. R L. Co. (1928)
In Neuser v. Thelan (1932),
In First Wisconsin Trust Co. v. Schmidt (1921),
"If she voluntarily incurred that liability personally, she should be entitled to reimbursement therefor, although she would otherwise have been under no legal obligation to incur such liability. That appellants' counsel apparently acquiesced during the trial in the propriety of those inferences and conclusions under the evidence, is indicated by the fact that they failed to object to the court's submittal to the jury of a question which expressly included the item of funeral expenses as one of the elements to be included in assessing plaintiff's pecuniary loss." *568
We then reach the case of Palmisano v. Century IndemnityCo. (1937)
"If, in the Neuser Case, supra, the widow could not recover because the estate, not she, was liable for the funeral expenses, the plaintiff here cannot recover them unless the victim has noestate, which, as first above stated, does not appear."
The court went on to discuss sec.
Under the statute where there is a cause of action in favor of the estate, such as an action for pain and suffering, the action must be brought in the name of the representative of the estate. The action being statutory the right to recover funeral expenses must be found in the statute, either in direct language or by implication. The damages which are authorized to be recovered for wrongful death are damages suffered by *569 the beneficiary named in the statute. The fact that the estate of a decedent is primarily liable for such funeral expenses does not in itself create a right of action in favor of the estate. In the Hegel Case, supra, and First Wisconsin Trust Co. v.Schmidt, supra, we permitted a recovery of funeral expenses in an action by the personal representative of the estate as part of the damages in a cause of action for pain and suffering. This is true only where there is a cause of action which survives, but where there is no such surviving cause of action in favor of the estate, the statute does not create one for funeral expenses. To hold otherwise would give no force or effect to that portion of the statute which permits an action to be brought in the name of the beneficiary where there is no cause of action in favor of the estate of the decedent. The estate of every decedent is primarily liable for funeral expenses. The primary liability for funeral expenses would be in the estate of the deceased in place of any named beneficiary in the statute. Thus the parent of an adult child killed instantly but leaving a large estate could not pay funeral expenses and recover them as an item of damage, as he would be an interloper in doing so. But where there is no estate and no cause of action in favor of the deceased, there is still the responsibility somewhere for the burial. The statute gives a cause of action for damages to certain beneficiaries, which we hold creates a liability on their part to' assume the liability for a decent burial which they can recover as a part of their damages. While the English rule and a few state courts do not permit the beneficiary to recover for funeral expenses as part of damages caused by wrongful death, the federal courts and a large majority of the state courts hold that funeral expenses are recoverable as damages in an action for death by wrongful act when the plaintiff has paid or rendered himself legally liable to pay the funeral expenses of the deceased, and the ground for this holding is that the funeral expenses are a *570 direct result of the wrongful death and as a matter of justice should be considered as an item of damages suffered by the person liable to pay them. 94 A.L.R. p. 441, and cases there cited. Thus where, as here, the adult child is, (1) instantly. killed and no cause of action arising out of the accident was ever in the child or ever survived to his estate, and (2) where wholly independently of this the child left no estate which could respond to funeral expenses, and (3) the mother has responded in accordance with her liability by paying or legally assuming the funeral expenses, she may under the doctrine of the Van Gilder Case, supra, as modified and applied by thePalmisano Case, supra, recover damages as part of her cause of action for death by wrongful act. This is a liability and expense that is cast upon her by the negligent conduct of the defendant and it literally arises out of the death of the child.
We then reach the question of whether the deceased had an estate. There were $6 or $7 to her credit with her employer, which had been withheld from her earnings for the purpose of purchasing a war bond. There was no proof to show that she had clothing and personal effects of any material value. Used clothing at the time of death is usually given to some charitable organization for the benefit of unfortunate persons, and certainly is not property that is as a rule offered for sale. Therefore the trial court properly said, "The law does not concern itself with mere trifles." Just when there is a sufficient amount in an estate to prevent a beneficiary from recovering funeral expenses we are not required to determine in this action, except to hold that the proof offered in the motion for summary judgment is such a minimum amount to warrant us in holding that it is not an estate under the statute in question.
By the Court. — Order affirmed. *571