118 A. 77 | Md. | 1922
The appellant sued the executor of William A. Marburg for alienation of the affections of his wife. There was a demurrer *595 to the original declaration, which was sustained, and an amended declaration was filed, containing three counts. The first and third counts set out the allegations of the plaintiff in about the same language, except the first concludes by saying:
"By means whereof, the said plaintiff from thence hitherto has wholly lost all the affection, comfort, fellowship, society, aid and assistance of his said wife, Louise W. White, and was and is caused to suffer great mental anguish, distress and pain, and great annoyances and suffering in his household, and was and is wholly humiliated among his neighbors, acquaintances and friends, and has been otherwise damaged." * * *
While the third concludes by alleging that:
"By means whereof the said plaintiff from thence hitherto has wholly lost the aid and assistance of his said wife, Louise W. White, in his household, and in the rearing, education and care of his children, and has been permanently deprived of her aid and assistance in the same, and has been put to great expense in employing the services of others to attend to his household, and the care, nurture and education of his children, and has been otherwise injured and damaged in his property and estate."
The second is like the first until the last paragraph, which alleges that the plaintiff, upon the discovery of the matters set forth, was going to bring suit against the said William A. Marburg of A., but he continuously to the time of his death requested the plaintiff not to bring suit, and at all times admitted his liability and assured the plaintiff that a settlement would be made; that negotiations were begun between them, and continued up until the time of the death of the said Marburg, and were about to be completed when his death occurred, and that plaintiff, acting upon the assurance of the said Marburg that a settlement would be made, and for no other reason whatsoever, did not bring suit, believing *596 that said matters would be settled, but after his death his executor refused further to negotiate for settlement or to acknowledge any liability therefor.
The Baltimore City Court sustained a demurrer to the amended declaration, and to each and every count thereof, and, the plaintiff having declined to amend the declaration, judgment on the demurrer in favor of the defendant for costs was entered. From that judgment this appeal was taken.
As the appellant in his brief states that "the sole question decided by the lower court, and the only question to be decided by this Court, is whether the action survived against the executor of William A. Marburg of A.," we do not understand that any distinction between the second count and the other two is relied on in this appeal.
As such an action could not be sustained against the personal representative of a deceased person at common law, it is necessary to ascertain whether the modifications of the common law rule by the Maryland statutes sustain an action for such an alleged wrong, brought, after the death of the wrongdoer, against his personal representative. It is clear that it is not justified by the provisions of article 67 of the Code, the title of which is, "Negligence causing death," as that is a new cause of action brought in the name of the state for the benefit of the wife, husband, parent and child of a person whose death was caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of the defendant, being what is generally spoken of as "Lord Campbell's Act," although under our statute the suit is in the name of the State, and not in that of the personal representative of the deceased.
Section 25 of article 75 of the Code provides that:
*597"No action of ejectment, waste, partition, dower, replevin or any personal action, including appeals from judgments rendered by justices of the peace, in any court of law in this State, shall abate by the death of either or any of the parties to such action * * * This not to apply to actions for injuries to the person, where the defendant dies, nor to actions for slander."
Section 26 of that article is that:
"No action hereafter brought to recover damages for injuries to the person by negligence or default shall abate by reason of the death of the plaintiff, but the personal representatives of the deceased may be substituted as plaintiff and prosecute the suit to final judgment and satisfaction."
Neither of them applies to this case, as there was no action to "abate by the death of either or any of the parties to such action," as provided in section 25; and section 26 in terms applies only to the death of the plaintiff. They apply to actions already instituted in the lifetime of the alleged wrongdoer.Stewart v. United Electric Light Power Co.,
"Executors and administrators shall have full power to commence and prosecute any personal action whatever, at law or in equity, which the testator or intestate might have commenced and prosecuted, except actions of slander; and they shall be liable to be sued in any court of law or equity, in any action (except for slander and injuries to the person) which might have been maintained against the deceased. * * * The words `actions for injury done to the person,' hereinbefore used, shall not be held to embrace actions for illegal arrest, false imprisonment or violation of the twenty-third, twenty-sixth, thirty-first and thirty-second articles of the Declaration of Rights, or any of them, or of the existing or any future provisions of the Code touching the writ of habeas corpus, or proceedings thereunder; for all of which enumerated wrongs actions may be maintained by and against executors as they may be or might have been by and against the party or parties deceased."
The important question in this case, therefore, is what is the meaning of the exception "injuries to the person" as used in the statute. In Stewart v. United Electric Light Power *598 Co., supra, it was for the first time determined that the administrator of a person who had been killed by the wrongful act, neglect and default of the defendant, could, by virtue of section 104 of article 93, recover damages for the suffering and losses sustained by the deceased in his lifetime, and that such suit was independent of and not affected by one brought under article 67 — that neither was a substitute for the other, and that both could be maintained concurrently. CHIEF JUDGE McSHERRY reviewed the various statutes in this State which had changed or modified the common law doctrine. After referring to the Code of 1860, where the acts referred to were condensed and codified in section 1 of article 2 of that Code (now section 25 of article 75), to the Act of 1861, ch. 44, which was in section 103 of article 93 of the Code of 1904 (now section 104 of Ann. Code) and the Act of 1888, ch. 262, which added what is now section 26 of article 75, JUDGE McSHERRY said that the clause added to section 24, article 75 of the Code of 1888 by the adoption of that Code, caused "`actions for injuries to the person, where thedefendant dies, and actions for slander' to abate." After further consideration of the subject he said: "Whilst this legislation relates to the non-abatement of actions actually pending when the plaintiff dies, there are other statutes which concern the right of executors and administrators to sue, and which have a direct bearing on the question here involved." He then considered the statute which is now section 104 of article 93, and held that it provided for the survival of a cause of action which the deceased himself had, and in comparing that action with the one given by article 67 of the Code, he said: "The points of difference between this statute (referring to article 67) and the provisions of the Code giving to executors and administrators full power to commence and prosecute any personal action whatever, which the testator or intestate might have commenced and prosecuted (except actions of slander and anaction where the person causing the injury is dead) are striking and marked, even upon a *599 casual comparison of the two enactments." What we have just italicized, and other parts of the opinion, show that in the judgment of the Court, a suit for such damages as were sought in that case could not be maintained if the person causing the injury was dead.
In Demczuk v. Jenifer,
It would certainly be very remarkable if the Legislature of this State would except, from the broad language used in statutes intended to permit suits to be brought either by or against administrators, such suits as one to recover damages for personal injuries sustained, of the character referred to in the Stewartcase, and one to recover for the loss of a wife's services, as in Demczuk's case, but permitted a suit such as this, for alienation of affections. Yet it is said in the Stewart case
that recovery could not have been had if the suit had been against the personal representative of a wrongdoer, and inDemczuk's case it was distinctly held that there could be no recovery against the administrator. While we quoted at some length from the case of Mulvey v. Boston and concurred in the meaning that the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts gave to "injuries to the person," we did not intimate or indicate that such a suit as this would not come within the exception. On the contrary, we find that in Hurle's Case,
In Taylor v. Bliss,
In 1 C.J., 204, under title "Abatement and Revival," par. 388, it is said: "A cause of action, or action by husband for criminal conversation with, or alienation of the affection of, his wife, being based on a tort, and the injury being personal, does not survive at common law, nor, as a rule, under the statutes. Under the statutes in some jurisdictions, however, such an action survives." See also Tinker v. Colwell,
It will be noticed, in most of the statutes passed for the purpose of changing or modifying the common law as to abatement of actions by reason of the death of parties, such an expression as "injuries to the person" is used in the body of the statute, while in ours it is used as an exception to the broad language used in authorizing suits against executors and administrators. The meaning to be given such an *603
expression may therefore well differ in the one case from that in another. Indeed the latter part of section 104 of article 93 may be referred to to show that it was not intended to apply merely to physical or bodily injuries, or give a narrow meaning to the words of the exception, "injuries to the person." In Clark v.Carroll,
In Clark v. Carroll, supra, it was contended that the Act of 1861, ch. 44, saved that action from abating, but the Court held that it abated, and said: "Obviously it does not fall within the class of grievances which the statute of 1861 was intended to meet." The case of Ott v. Kaufman,
There is no case in this State precisely in point, but there is none sustaining the position taken by the appellant, and we are of the opinion that the decisions elsewhere are correct, which hold that the expression "injuries to the person," or some similar phrase, in a statute of this kind, includes injuries for alienation of the affections. The action, therefore, did not survive against the executor, and without prolonging this opinion, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, the appellant to pay the costs above andbelow. *604