James Ira Vickers was killed on April 22, 1952, when an automobile he was driving collided with a truck which was then being operated by an employee of Brunswick Pulp & Paper Company, a corporation. The deceased was survived by his widow and their minor child; also by seven other children, the issue of a former marriage, two of whom were minors at the time of his death. His widow sued Brunswick Pulp & Paper Company for $175,000, alleging in her complaint that her husband was 56 years old at the time he was killed; that his death resulted from a negligent act for which the defendant was liable; and that the full value of his life was the amount sued for. Brunswick Pulp & Paper Company afterwards paid $38,700 in settlement of the suit, and from the amount so paid Mrs. Vickers received $25,000. She took the position that the adult children of the deceased were not entitled to any part of the amount received by her and refused to pay them any part of it. This litigation arose when James Vickers, an adult son of the deceased, sued Mrs. Vickers for his pro rata part of the amount received by her in consequence of the wrongful death of his father. His petition, which was afterwards amended, alleges his right to have and receive a stated part of the amount received by Mrs. Vickers; and it also alleges mismanagement and waste of the funds received by her, and prays for certain injunctive relief, discovery, a receiver, and a judgment for his pro rata part of the amount received by Mrs. Vickers. With respect to the amount received, it is alleged in his petition that Mrs. Vickers, as widow of the deceased, is entitled to one-fifth of the net amount paid by the tortfeasor, and that the eight children of the *490 deceased are entitled to the remaining four-fifths, share and share alike. The six other children of the deceased by his former wife intervened, and the minor child of Mrs. Vickers was also made a party. The intervenors made, by their petition, substantially the same allegations which James Vickers had made in his petition, and likewise prayed for similar relief. By stipulation, the parties agreed for a named person to take possession of and hold the fund in controversy until the rights of the parties could be finally determined in this litigation, except it was agreed that Mrs. Vickers should retain $500 for certain personal uses, but the amount retained by her was to be properly accounted for when the rights of the parties were finally determined. On the trial it was shown, without dispute, that the deceased was survived by his widow and eight children, three of whom were minors at the time of his death; and that Mrs. Vickers received the net sum of $25,000 in settlement of the litigation which she had instituted against Brunswick Pulp & Paper Company for the wrongful death of her husband. By direction, the jury found that Mrs. Vickers, as widow of the, deceased, was entitled to one-fifth of the recovery or $5,000, and that the eight children of the deceased were entitled to the remaining four-fifths, share and share alike, or $2,500 each. There is a proper exception as to this.
Here, as shown by our statement of the case, Mrs. Vickers, as widow, sued Brunswick Pulp & Paper Company, which had in consequence of a negligent act killed her husband. She sought to recover a sum amounting to the full value of his life without deduction for necessary or other personal expense which it would have been necessary for him to have incurred had he lived. The tortfeasor, in settlement of the- litigation, paid $38,700, of which the widow received the net sum of $25,000. To whom did the money belong? A determination of this question should and will settle all material issues submitted by the record.
. Prior to 1924, and under an act which the legislature passed in 1887 (Ga. L. 1887, p. 43) amending prior acts, money recovered from a tortfeasor for the wrongful death of a husband and father belonged to his widow and his surviving child or children. It did not become a part of the decedent’s estate, it was not subject to any debt or liability of the deceased husband and parent,
*491
and it was held by the widow subject to the law of descents, just as if it were personal property descending to the widow and children of the deceased. These provisions of the amending act of 1887 were included in the Code of 1910 as §§ 4424 and 4425; and this court, in construing them and the acts from which they were codified, held unanimously in
Coleman
v.
Hyer,
113
Ga.
420 (
In 1924, the legislature amended the act of 1887 and the acts which it had amended (Ga. L. 1924, p. 60). The whole act now appears in the Code of 1933 as Title 105-13, but the question submitted for decision in the instant case relates only to Code §§ 105-1302, 105-1304, 105-1305, and 105-1308. These sections of the Code, being parts of the act of 1924 and the various acts amended thereby, should undoubtedly be considered and construed together.
City of Elberton
v.
Thornton,
138
Ga.
776 (
Judgment affirmed.
