83 Ala. 493 | Ala. | 1887
In the absence of statutes, no one could maintain any action for the injury complained of in this case, followed, as that injury was, by the death of the party injured. Hence, we must consult the statutes, alike for the right of action, and for the manner. of its enforcement. 3 Wood’s Bailway Law, 1530, sec. 409.
In England, and in many of the States, statutes have been enacted, giving a right of action, where death has ensued from the wrongful or negligent act of another, or of a corporation. — Wood’s Bailway Law, sec. 410. A remedy was provided in this State, in cases “when the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another,” by the act “to prevent homicides,” approved February 5, 1872. Sess. Acts, 83; Code of 1876, § 2641.
It was held, however, and has been uniformly so ruled in most, if not all of the States, that “there can be no recovery of the master by one for an injury inflicted upon him through the negligence of his co-servant,” unless the master or em
The imperfection in the law was attempted to be remedied by the “Act to define the liability of employers of workmen, for injuries received by the workman while in the service of the employer,” approved February 12,1885. — Sess. Acts, 115. That statute declares that, in case of such injury, “by reason of any defects in the condition of the ways, works, machinery,” &c. “the workman, or, in case the injury results in death, the heirs at law of the workman, shall have the same right of compensation and remedies against the employer, as if the workman had not been a workman of, nor in the service of the employer, nor engaged in his work.”
We encounter several difficulties in interpreting the foregoing language. “Heirs at law” is not a technically accurate form for defining distributees — next of kin — upon whom the law devolves the succession, when a decedent leaves personal effects. 'Such effects pass to the personal representative for. administration, and reach the legatees or distributees only through him. But the statute presents a greater difficulty. It declares that, “incase the injury results in death, the heirs at law of the workman shall have the same, right of compensation and remedies against the employer, as if the workman had not been a workman of, nor in the service of the employer, nor engaged in his work.” Treating, as we think we must, the phrase “heirs at law,” as intended to mean next of kin, we encounter the obstacle, that such next of kin, even when their ancestor died from injuries improperly inflicted by some other person, or by a corporation, have no known, direct remedy against such person, or corporation, even when the ancestor losing his life was not in the service of such person or corporation. The common law gave no such remedy, and our older statute, Code of 1876, § 2641, did not give it directly to the next of kin, or heirs at law. So, if we give to the act of February 12,
It is our duty to give to every part of any act of the legislature some meaning and some operation, if we can. And if language admits of more interpretations than one, we should adopt that which gives it some effect, rather than another which would defeat all operation. —Lehman v. Robinson, 59 Ala. 219; Ex parte Dunlap, 71 Ala. 73. And the statute we are construing being remedial, we should construe it liberally, in promotion of the remedy intended to be conferred.—Potter’s Dwar. on Stat. 73; Sedg. Con. & Stat. Const., 2d ed., 308 et seq.; Blakeney v. Blakeney, 6 Por. 109; Felrath v. Schonfield, 76 Ala. 199.
"We do not feel at liberty to deny to the statute all operation, while, at the same time, we feel it to be our duty to supply as few apparent omissions — to correct as few verbal inaccuracies — as will enable us to give operation to the statute. The controlling purpose of the statute was to give to workmen, laborers, employees, a remedy against their employers, for injuries suffered through the wrongful or negligent conduct of the latter; in other words, to relieve them of the discriminating disabilities, under which they had theretofore labored — to give for the benefit of their heirs at law — next of kin — in the event death had ensued from the injury, the same compensation and remedy against the employer, as if the decedent had not been a servitor, workman, or laborer for the person or , corporation offending.. As we have seen, the common law gave no compensation or remedy for negligence or tortious acts, causing the death of another. The statute, therefore, could have had no reference to the common law. An older statute — Code, § 2641 — had provided compensation and a remedy, when the decedent was not an employee — was not a retained servant, or laborer. True, the action was to be prosecuted in the name of the personal representative, but the recovery was not subject to the debts of the deceased. It was to be distributed “ as personal property of an intestate is now (was then) distributed;” that is, it was to go to the next kin — heirs at law. To this statute, the act of February 12, 1885, referred, or it referred to nothing. It provided compensation and a remedy to the heirs at law — next of kin — but it provided it through a suit by the personal representative. The suit in the present case ought to have been by. the personal representative.