8 S.E.2d 380 | Ga. | 1940
1. A temporary administrator is authorized to maintain the suit provided for under the Code, § 105-1309.
2. Where a married woman living with her husband and receiving support from him has an unmarried sister living in the house with her and performing all duties connected with housekeeping, but receiving food, lodging, and clothes from her or her husband, the value of which is less than her services, such married woman is dependent upon and receives contributions to her support from the sister, sufficient to authorize a recovery under the Code, § 105-1309.
3. Where the unmarried sister lives in like manner with another married sister and a brother, spending three months yearly with each sister and six months with the brother, recovery is authorized on behalf of each for the tortious homicide of such unmarried sister.
4. In order to authorize a recovery under the Code, § 105-1309, both dependency and contribution must exist.
"2. Is a married woman who lives with and is supported by her husband, and who is the next of kin to her sister who lives in the house with the married woman and her husband, `dependent' upon the sister, and does the sister contribute to the married woman's support, in the sense of dependency and contribution to support as *75 provided in the Code, § 105-1309, which gives an administrator or executor of a decedent the right to recover for the benefit of the next of kin of the decedent, for the tortious homicide of the decedent, where such next of kin is `dependent upon the decedent, or to whose support the decedent contributed,' where the sister lives at the home of the married woman three months each year and dies while living there, and while living in the home of the married woman the sister performs such services in the home and about the house and the premises as general housework, cooking, washing, ironing, sewing, sweeping the yard, working in the garden, and doing `everything that goes with general housekeeping,' where the sister, while living in the home of the married woman, receives food, lodging, and clothing from the married woman or her husband, for which she pays nothing other than by the rendition of the services by her to the married woman, but where the services rendered by the sister are more valuable than the food, lodging, and clothing received by her? The Code, § 105-1309, reads as follows: `In cases where there is no person entitled to sue under the foregoing provisions of this chapter, the administrator or executor of the decedent may sue for and recover and hold the amount recovered for the benefit of the next of kin, if dependent upon the decedent, or to whose support the decedent contributed. In any such case the amount of the recovery shall be determined by the extent of the dependency or the pecuniary loss sustained by the next of kin.'
"3. Where a person is dependent upon a sister who lives in the house with him, and the sister contributes to his support by reason of the rendition to him of services such as those performed by the sister, as narrated in question No. 2, in the sense of dependency, and contribution to support, which would afford him a right of action as next of kin for the tortious homicide of the sister, upon whom he is dependent and who contributes to his support, as provided in the Code, § 105-1309, is such person dependent upon the sister, and does the sister contribute to his support in the sense of dependency and contribution to support as provided in the Code, § 105-1309, where at the time of the homicide of the sister she had moved away from the home and was not in fact performing such services, but where it had been her custom to live in the home for a part of the year, and to live in the home of other kin people and perform similar services for them another part of the year? *76
"4. Is it essential to a recovery for the benefit of the next of kin of a deceased person, for the latter's homicide, as provided in the Code, § 105-1309, that the next of kin must have been dependent upon the decedent, and that also the decedent must have contributed to the next of kin's support? Must there be both dependency by the next of kin and contribution by the decedent to the next of kin's support, or is it only required that there be either dependency by the next of kin upon the decedent or that the decedent contributed to the next of kin's support?"
1. In determining whether or not the word "administrator" in the Code, § 105-1309, embraces a "temporary administrator," it is important to consider the legislative purpose in enacting the law. No special rights are conferred upon the administrator or executor, nor is there imposed upon such administrator or executor a single duty or responsibility to be performed in a representative capacity. The sole purpose of the legislature in using the words "administrator or executor" is to designate an agency for the prosecution of the suit thereby provided for. Manifestly there is no intention to involve the estate represented by such administrator or executor in the suit provided for in this section. Any recovery in such a suit is the property of the relative for whose benefit the suit is brought, and it at no time constitutes a part of the estate of the decedent. The defendant strongly emphasizes the fact that a temporary administrator is appointed in vacation on his application, without notice, and without approval of any of the heirs of the estate, and is empowered to collect and hold the assets of the estate without being authorized to pay out any funds belonging to the estate. Based upon these facts, it is contended that the competency and judgment required of the administrator in deciding whether or not he shall bring the suit provided for under the Code, § 105-1309, has nowhere been considered and determined as is done with reference to a permanent administrator. The suit here involved places no responsible duties on the administrator, but simply identifies a person in whose name the suit must be maintained for the benefit of those entitled to recover under the act. It is not contended that the general law of this State with reference to a temporary administrator withholds from him the *77
right to maintain a suit in behalf of the estate which he represents. That such temporary administrator is authorized to sue on behalf of the estate can not be denied. Code, § 113-1511;Reese v. Burts,
2. The mere fact that there exists a legal duty of a husband to support his wife will not prevent the wife, although living with her husband who contributes to her support, from being dependent upon an unmarried sister who also contributes to her support, as contemplated under the Code, § 105-1309. In Daniels
v. Savannah, Florida Western Railway Co.,
3. The statute contemplates present support. The test is applied at the time of the death. Neither the past, nor the uncertainties, nor the possibilities of the future are to be considered. Clay v. Central Railroad Banking Co.,
4. The fourth question requires a construction of the following language found in the Code, § 105-1309: "if dependent upon the decedent, or to whose support the decedent contributed." This construction requires consideration of (a) legislative intention, and (b) previous constructions by this court. The act of 1887 (Ga. *79
L. 1887, pp. 43-45; Code, § 105-1307) provided for a recovery by a mother, or, if no mother, a father, for the tortious homicide of a child, minor or sui juris, "upon whom she or he is dependent, or who contributes to her or his support." In Clay
v. Central Railroad c. Co., supra, approximately fifty years ago, this court construed the language just quoted to require both dependency and contribution, to support a recovery under that act. It was held that the word "or" should be construed to mean "and," so that as a basis for recovery dependency and contribution, rather than dependency or contribution as used in the statute, must exist. This construction of that language was approved in Smith v. Hatcher, supra; and the Court of Appeals has followed that construction in the following cases: Western Atlantic Railroad Co. v. Anderson, supra; Kent v. ConsumersCo.,
But we are here dealing, not with the act of 1887, but with an amendment of that act, adopted in 1924. Ga. L. 1924, p. 60. The Code of 1910, § 4424, embraced the act of 1887 (Code, § 105-1307), and the act here under consideration was adopted as an amendment to section 4424 of the Code of 1910. At the time of the enactment of the amendment the legislature knew the construction that had been given to the Code section thereby amended; that is, the language with reference to dependency and contribution. The amendment contained substantially the same language as that contained in the Code; for certainly there can be found no substantial difference in the meaning of the language "upon whom she or he is dependent, *80
or who contributes to her or his support," as contained in the original Code section, and the language "if dependent upon the decedent, or to whose support the decedent contributed," as contained in the amendment. By the use of the quoted language in the amendment, without any indication or intimation that it should have a meaning different from that given to the quoted language from the Code section, the legislature manifestly intended that the language of the amendment should have the same meaning as the similar language of the Code section. In Lane v.Morris,
What is here ruled is in harmony, rather than conflict, with the rulings made in Board of Tax-Assessors of Decatur County v.Catledge,
Questions 1, 2, and 3 are answered in the affirmative. The answer to question 4 is that dependency and contribution must both exist, and that the existence of either dependency, standing alone, or contribution, standing alone, will not authorize a recovery.
All the Justicesconcur.