150 S.W.2d 625 | Ark. | 1941
The issue is whether, within the period of limitation, an amended complaint when considered with the original, stated a cause of action. The trial court held that it did not.
The suit was brought by Jesse Tipler as administrator of the estate of Frank Tipler. It was alleged that a truck operated by a servant of James and Rupert Crafton1 was negligently parked on Highway No. 61 near Hayti, in the state of Missouri, in consequence of which an automobile driven by Walker Crawford struck the back end of the truck and fatally injured Frank Tipler, who was with Crawford.
It is conceded appellants' rights are created by and subject to restrictions of Missouri laws. Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939, 3652, 3653, and 3654.2 The applicable statute in the instant case is 3652.
The civil penalty or forfeiture for negligence resulting in death is fixed by 3652 at not less than $2,000 nor more than $10,000, in the discretion of the jury.3
Frank Tipler died October 17, 1938.4 Suit was filed by the administrator May 9, 1939 — twenty-two days after *353 six months from the date of death. During the first six months the widow had the exclusive right of action. Thereafter, for six months, the right to sue was in the minor children. The complaint conforms to the Arkansas procedure in causes arising from wrongful death, one of the allegations being:
"At the time of [Tipler's death] he was in good health, of sound body and mind, 52 years of age, and was earning $2,400 a year, all of which he contributed to the support of his wife and family. By reason of the carelessness and negligence of the defendant's . . . servants, . . . the plaintiff is entitled to recover for the benefit of the estate of the deceased and for the benefit of the widow and next of kin of the deceased the sum of $50,000."5
June 12, 1939, defendant's motion to dismiss on the ground that the administrator had no cause of action was passed at the request of plaintiff's counsel in order to allow them time to check authorities. A year later (June 13, 1940) the amended complaint was filed.6 It alleged that the five plaintiffs were the minor children and the next of kin of Frank Tipler.7
The trial court thought the amended complaint introduced new plaintiffs, and sustained a motion to dismiss.
Appellant insists that the amendment does not allege a different cause of action or set out new facts; that it "simply made the complaint more definite and certain as *354
to who the beneficiaries were," and alleged in more explicit terms that Jesse Tipler, although administrator of the estate, was bringing the action "in the name of and for the benefit of the minor children." Attention is directed to 1305, 1317, and 1463 of Pope's Digest, wherein it is required that actions must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, except as provided in 1307, 1309, and 1310; and that in furtherance of justice the trial court may permit amendments to pleadings, etc. We are also cited to Buckley v. Collins,
The difficulty in applying to the case at bar the principles announced in the decisions to which attention is called by appellants is that at the time the administrator sued he had, prima facie, a cause of action under the fourth classification of 3652, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939. That right is given when the wife fails to sue within six months, if there are no minor children; subject to other exceptions not applicable here.
Since the administrator may act only "if there be no husband, or wife, minor child or minor children, . . . or if the deceased be an unmarried minor and there be no father or mother," a presumption arose when the administrator (after the wife's cause became barred) sued "for the benefit of the next of kin" that he was acting for those interested, other than as minor children. After six months and within a year appellants were apprised of the status of the law and the pleadings, but they did not, within a year, amend the complaint by *355 alleging the existence of minor children of the decedent, and therefore incapacity of the administrator to sue.
Baker v. The Hannibal St. Joseph Ry. Co.,
After mentioning that damages for a tort to the person resulting in death were not recoverable at common law, nor could husband or wife, parent or child, recover any pecuniary compensation from the wrongdoer, the statutory remedy was discussed. The court said:
"In the statute which creates the right of action, and in the same section in which the statutory right and remedy is thus conferred upon the husband or wife, it is further provided, by the second subdivision, . . . that if there be no husband or wife, or he or she fails to sue in six months after the death, the right of action thereafter shall (be vested in the minor children of the deceased, if there be such. This provision is not, we think, merely a limitation or bar to the remedy of the wife, but is a bar to the right itself, if there are minor children, and the existence, or non-existence, of such minor children is to be held, we think, as of the substance of the right of the wife to sue after the six months have expired."
At page 93 of the opinion it is said: "So in the case now before us, where the action is brought by the widow after the expiration of the six months, her right to maintain the same is conditional and depends on the nonexistence of the minor children, a material and necessary fact, we think, and which was not alleged or proved. . . . As in our judgment the fact, if such it is, that there was no minor child, was one material and necessary to be shown, to entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action, which was begun after the six months had expired, and as there was no evidence offered in that behalf, the instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evil *356 deuce, asked by the defendant at the close of the evidence, should have been given."
In Goldschmidt et al. v. Pevely Dairy Co. et al.,
"The first and second amended petitions disclose that deceased left minor children, and, this being so, the widow was required to file suit within six months from the date of death of her husband, otherwise the cause of action passed from her and vested in the minor children. Section 3262, R. S. 1929, [and cases cited]. The widow did not sue within six months; therefore, when the first petition was filed by her alone, there was no cause of action in her to state. The first amended petition making the minor children parties plaintiff, along with their mother, the employer, and the insurer, was not filed until . . . a year, two months and nine days after the death of the deceased. Section 3262 provides that, if the wife fails to sue within the six months, then the minor child or children may sue, and 3266 R.S. 1929, Mo. St. Ann. 3266, p. 3385, provides that `every action instituted by virtue of the preceding sections of this article shall be commenced within one year after the cause of action shall accrue' . . . And notwithstanding that the cause of action was in the widow for the six-month period, the minors were required to file suit within one year from date of death of deceased. . . . They did not sue within the year, hence any cause of action in them was barred upon the lapse of the one year.
"But it is contended that the filing of the first amended petition, two months and nine days after the lapse of the one year, relates back `to the time of the filing of the original petition, and the joining of additional parties plaintiff or the substitution of a new plaintiff is not barred even though they were at the time of the amendment barred by limitations from instituting a new action. As supporting these contentions plaintiffs call our attention to Drakopulos v. Riddle et al.,
In Betz v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co.,
"There being thus no general right of recovery open to all persons representing the estate of the deceased or interested in his life, only such persons can recover in such time and in such manner as is set forth in the statute, and from Barker v. Railroad Company,
A headnote to Packard et al. v. Hannibal St. J. Ry. Co.,
It will be seen from the quoted Missouri decisions that the right to amend a complaint in circumstances such as we are dealing with is substantive, and not procedural, and the right to recover, under the statute, depends upon allegations made by the complaining party, who must bring himself within the terms of the law, as construed by the courts of that state.
St. Louis S. F. Rd. Co. v. Coy,
If, as the Missouri Supreme Court said in the case of Baker v. Railway, the provision of the law permitting differently related parties to bring suit within stated periods is "not a mere limitation or bar to the remedy, . . . but is a bar to the right itself," substitution of parties is not procedural.
Nowhere in the record of the instant case is there an allegation, prior to expiration of a year following the death of Tipler, that there were minor children. If *359 there were no such minors, and other conditions concurred, it was the duty of the administrator to sue for the benefit of the next of kin. That the original complaint sought recovery for the benefit of the widow is unimportant because, at the time suit was filed, the widow had no cause of action. The complaint, then, stands as though the administrator, who might have had a cause of action, was proceeding regularly under the laws of Missouri to recover for those to whom his obligation extended. If, when the motion was made to dismiss the administrator's suit, the pleadings had been amended to show that there were minor children, and that they desired to be made parties, there would have been no question as to the right to do so, for at that time the statute of limitation had not run.
Affirmed.