This is an action against the defendant for negligently
At the common law the right of action for a personal injury, whether it produced death оr not, was terminated ■by the death of the injured party. Broom. Leg. Max. 400, 401; Whit. Smith, ISTeg. 430; 3 Suth. Dam. 281; 1 ■Shear. & R. ISTeg. § 124. But in England this rule was .abolished in 1840, by what is commonly called “Lord Campbell’s Act,” (9 and 10 Viet. c. 93,) and which has been adopted in substance by most of the States of this Union as well as by this Territory. 2 Comp. Laws 1888, ■§§ 2961, 2962. This statute was adopted in this Territory in 1874, and provides that an action may be maintained against any person or corporation whose wrongful .act or neglect has caused the death of any person, notwithstanding the death of the injured person, if the injured party could have maintained an action for damages in respect thereof if death had not ensued; and that
The foregoing cases decided by the California courts .are all basеd on the case of Beeson v. Green Mountain, etc., Co.,
But the decisions in California and Virginia in the cаses of Cleary v. Railroad Co., and Matthews v. Warner are in conflict with the rule almost uniformly laid down by the courts of England and the United States to the, effect that only the pecuniary loss sustained can be compensated for, and that no compensation can be given for the mental anguish or suffering of the heirs or next of kin of thе deceased. We cite only-a few of the many authorities that might be cited on this point. 3 Sutli. Dam. 281, 282, and cases; 2 Ror. R. R. 845, 861, 862, 1167, and cases; 3 Lawson, Rights, Rem. & Pr. 1729, and cases; 3 Wood, Ry. Law, 1536-1538, and cases; Whit. Smith, Reg. 434, and cases; Wood’s Mayne, Dam. 74; Railway Co. v. Levy, (Tex.) 12 Amer. & Eng. R. Cas. 90; Railroad Co. v. Hauer, (M.d.) Id. 154; Lett v. Railway Co., (Ont.) 21 Amer. & Eng. R. Cas. 165; Holmes v. Railway Co., (Or.)
Section 2962, Comp. Laws, provides that the action shall be by the personal representatives of the deceased, and the damages awarded shall not exceed $10,000. Section 3179 provides that the action may be by the personal representative or heirs of the deceased, and places no limit on the amount of the recovery, but the jury may give such damages as “under all the circumstances of the case may be just.” This section by its terms adds no new element of damage not contained in the earlier statute, and we think nonе should be added by construction. The difficulty of proving or estimating the pecuniary loss to. the heirs occasioned by the death of a human being is recognized by all the courts. But if the mental suffering of the heirs is to be taken into the account, and compensated for in money, the difficulty is infinitely increased. Upon what rule in computing damages can the sorrows of the heirs be estimated? If their number
