The right which section 284 of the Revised Statutes of Indiana
gives to the personal representative of a deceased person whose
death has been caused by the wrongful act or omission of another to
maintain an action against the latter within two years after the
death accrues when the death so caused occurs, whether it happens
before or after the expiration of a period of a year and a day from
the date of its cause.
The common law rule in prosecutions for murder, appeals of
death, and inquisitions against deodands does not apply to the
right of action given by that statute.
In an action by the personal representative of a deceased person
whose death has been caused by the wrongful act or omission of the
defendant, evidence as to the income of the deceased previous to
his death is admissible.
When, in an action founded upon a state statute, a federal
judge, in instructing the jury, adopts the construction given to
the statute by the highest court of the State, it is no error to
add that he had formerly been of a different opinion, and so
instructed former juries.
This was an action brought by the executor of a deceased person
under Rev.Stats. Indiana, § 284, against the plaintiff in error,
defendant below, to recover damages for the death of the
plaintiff's testator alleged to have been caused by the wrongful
act of the defendant. The accident by which the plaintiff was
injured was alleged to have taken place November 25, 1886, and the
death to have happened by reason of his injuries February 23, 1888.
The defendant demurred on the ground that the complaint did not
state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, contending
that, as the death did not occur until after the expiration of a
year and a day from the infliction of the injury, it could not be
held in law to have been caused by the act of the defendant. The
demurrer was overruled, the defendant answered, issue was joined,
and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff,
to which this writ of error was sued out. The
Page 152 U. S. 231
overruling of the demurrer was one of the assignments of error.
There were also other assignments which are noticed in the opinion
of the Court.
Page 152 U. S. 234
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought April 28, 1888, by the executor of
Augustine Clarke, whose death, the plaintiff alleged, was caused by
the wrongful act and omission of the defendant, the Louisville,
Evansville and St. Louis Railroad Company,
Page 152 U. S. 235
a carrier of passengers for hire. The gist of the action is the
negligence of the company, its agents and servants, in consequence
of which the decedent, on the 25th day of November, 1886, while
traveling on the defendant's cars, in the State of Indiana,
received injuries in his person from which death ensued. The
plaintiff's testator died February 23, 1888.
The action was founded on section 284 of the Revised Statutes of
Indiana, providing:
"When the death of one is caused by the wrongful act or omission
of another, the personal representative of the former may maintain
an action therefor against the latter if the former might have
maintained an action, had he lived, against the latter for the
injury, for the same act or omission. The action must be commenced
within two years. The damages cannot exceed ten thousand dollars,
and must inure to the exclusive benefit of the widow and children,
if any, or next of kin, to be distributed in the same manner as
personal property of the deceased."
It appeared from the complaint that plaintiff's testator lived
more than a year and a day after being injured, and the question
was presented upon a demurrer interposed by the defendant whether,
within the meaning of the statute, it could properly be said that
death was
caused by the wrongful act or omission of
another if it did not occur until after the expiration of a year
and a day from such act or omission. The argument in support of
this limitation upon the right of action given by the statute is
based upon certain rules at common law in prosecutions for murder,
appeals of death, and inquisitions against deodands. Before
examining this question, it will be well to ascertain the object of
the statute, as declared by the Supreme Court of Indiana.
In
Lofton v. Vogle, 17 Ind. 105, 107, which was an
action under this statute, it was contended that the plaintiff
could not maintain his suit without showing that he had criminally
prosecuted the defendant to conviction; that such prosecution was a
condition precedent to a civil action. It was held that this rule
did not prevail in the United
Page 152 U. S. 236
States, as we do not in this country depend upon the injured
party or his representative to institute criminal prosecutions.
In
Jefferson Railroad v. Swayne, 26 Ind. 459, 486, the
court, observing that it was a maxim of the common law, too
familiar and long established to require the citation of authority
to support it, that a cause of action for an injury to the person
dies with the party injured, and does not survive to his personal
representative, said:
"The statute does not profess to revive the cause of action for
the injury to the deceased in favor of his personal representative,
nor is such the legal effect, but it creates a new cause of action
unknown to the common law. The action given by the statute is for
causing the death, by a wrongful act or omission, in a case where
the deceased might have maintained an action, had he lived, for an
injury by the same act or omission. The right of compensation for
the bodily injury of the deceased, which dies with him, remains
extinct. The right of action created by the statute is founded on a
new grievance, namely, causing the death, and is for the injury
sustained thereby, by the widow and children or next of kin of the
deceased, for the damages must inure to their exclusive
benefit."
"The provision that the personal representative may maintain an
action, if the deceased could have maintained one, if the injury
and caused death," the court said in
Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne
&c. Railway v. Vining's Administrator, 27 Ind. 513,
"has been heretofore ruled to be applicable to the cause of
action, and not to the person bringing it. In other words, an
action may be maintained when the deceased, had he lived, would not
have been prevented from recovering by reason of his want of
care."
In
Mayhew v. Burns, 103 Ind. 328, the court said that
the statute
"gives to the widow or next of kin, through the personal
representative, a right to recover any injury which they may have
sustained by reason of the death of an adult, or one emancipated
from parental service, and in whose life they may have had a
pecuniary interest."
In
Hanna v. Jeffersonville Railroad Co., 32 Ind.
113,
Page 152 U. S. 237
the court, discussing the question whether the two years'
limitation prescribed by the statute ran from the death of the
person injured or from the qualification of his administrator,
said:
"The statute was intended mainly to be operative against
carriers of passengers, and in a very large measure against
corporations, whose duties are exclusively performed by hired
servants, who are being constantly changed, and in whose knowledge
the facts in such cases would generally rest, or who are to be
depended upon for such information as would lead to a discovery of
the facts and witnesses to establish them. The reasons for
requiring a suit to be brought within some short period after the
occurrence were therefore very forcible, and must have been
perceived. While a proper regard for the security of human life
required that a right of action should be given which did not exist
by previous law, the consideration already noted required that the
remedy should be promptly sought, else a door would be open wide
for injustice and wrong."
It was therefore held that the time limited for suit began to
run from the death.
In
Burns v. Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad, 113
Ind. 169, the court, construing the statute, said that
"the recovery is not a penalty inflicted by way of punishment
for the wrong, but is merely conpensatory of the damages sustained
by the heirs or next of kin, who had, or are supposed to have had,
a pecuniary interest in the life of the intestate."
And in
Hecht v. Ohio & Miss. Railway, 132 Ind. 507,
514:
"The wording of Lord Campbell's Act and the statute of this
state differ somewhat, but are in effect the same. The purpose of
each was to give to the personal representative of the deceased a
right of action if the deceased at the instant of his death, would
have had a right of action for the same act or omission had he
survived."
It was consequently held that a personal representative could
not maintain an action under the statute if the party injured, in
his lifetime, sued and recovered full compensation for the injuries
inflicted, and had thereby, if he had lived, precluded himself from
maintaining any further action on account of such injuries. The
same construction was placed upon Lord Campbell's Act in
Read
v.
Page 152 U. S. 238
Great Eastern Railway, L.R. 3 Q.B. 555, and in
Littlewood v. New York City, 89 N.Y. 24, upon a statute of
New York not differing materially from the Indiana statute.
It thus appears to be the settled construction of this statute
that the right of a personal representative to bring an action for
the exclusive benefit of the widow and children or next of kin of
one whose death was caused by the wrongful act or omission of
another depends upon the existence or nonexistence of a right in
the decedent, immediately before his death, to have maintained an
action on account of such act or omission. Consequently the words
of the Indiana statute, "the action must be commenced within two
years," means two years from the death of the person injured, not
from the time he received the injuries from which death
resulted.
In the light of this construction, it would seem to be an
unreasonable interpretation of the statute to hold that the
personal representative has no right of action in any case where a
year and a day passes after the injury before death occurs. The
statute, in express words, gives the personal representative two
years within which to sue. He cannot sue until the cause of action
accrues, and the cause of action given by the statute for the
exclusive benefit of the widow and children or next of kin cannot
accrue until the person injured dies. Until the death of the person
injured, the "new grievance" upon which the action is founded does
not exist. To say, therefore, that where the person injured dies
one year and two days after being injured, no action can be
maintained by the personal representative is to go in the face of
the statute, which makes no distinction between cases where death
occurs within less than a year and a day from the injury and where
it does not occur until after the expiration of one year and a day.
Although the evidence may show beyond all dispute that the death
was caused by the wrongful act or omission of the defendant, and
although the action by the personal representative was brought
within two years after the death, yet according to the argument of
learned counsel, the action cannot be maintained if the deceased
happened to survive his injuries for a year and a day. We
cannot
Page 152 U. S. 239
assent to this view. Was the death in fact caused by the
wrongful act or omission of the defendant? That is the vital
inquiry in each case. The statute imposes no other condition upon
the right to sue. The court has no authority to impose an
additional or different one. If death was so caused, then the
personal representative may sue at any time within two years from
such death.
Ought we to allow this obvious construction of the statute to be
defeated by any rule recognized at common law as controlling upon
an inquiry as to the cause of death in cases of murder, appeals of
death, or inquisitions against deodands?
In cases of murder, the rule at common law undoubtedly was that
no person should be adjudged
"by any act whatever, to kill another who does not die by it
within a year and a day thereafter, in computation whereof the
whole day on which the hurt was done shall be reckoned first."
Hawkins' Pleas of the Crown, Bk. 1, c. 13;
id., Bk. 2,
p. 23, § 88; 4 Bl.Com. 197, 306. The reason assigned for that rule
was that if the person alleged to have been murdered
"die after that time, it cannot be discerned, as the law
presumes, whether he died of the stroke or poison, etc., or a
natural death, and in case of life, a rule of law ought to be
certain."
3 Inst. 53. And such is the rule in this country in prosecutions
for murder, except in jurisdictions where it may be otherwise
prescribed by statute. Wharton's Amer.Cr.L. § 1073;
State v.
Orrell, 1 Devereaux Law (N.C.) 139.
An appeal, when spoken of as a criminal prosecution, denoted,
according to Blackstone, an accusation by a private subject against
another for some heinous crime -- a "private process for the
punishment of public crimes," having its origin in a custom,
derived from the ancient Germans, of allowing a pecuniary
satisfaction, called a
weregild, to the party injured or
his relations, "to expiate enormous offenses." 4 Bl.Com. 312, 313.
Bacon defines it to be a "vindictive" action --
"the party's private action, seeking revenge for the injury done
him, and at the same time prosecuting for the crown in respect of
the offense against the public."
Bacon Abridg. Title Appeal. These appeals could be brought
"previous to
Page 152 U. S. 240
an indictment, and if the appellee be acquitted thereon, he
could not be afterwards indicted for the same offense." 4 Bl.Com.
315; Comyn's Dig. Title Appeal, G, 11, 16. While, during the
continuance of the custom referred to, a process was given for
recovering the
weregild by the party to whom it was
due,
"it seems that when these offenses, by degrees, grew no longer
redeemable, the private process was still continued in order to
insure the infliction of punishment on the offender, though the
party was allowed no pecuniary compensation for the offense."
Bk. 4, 314. By statute of 59 Geo. 3, c. 46, appeals of murder,
treason, felony, and other offenses were abolished.
During the time when appeals of death were allowed at common
law, the rule established by the Statute of Gloucester, 6 Edw. I,
c. 9, was that "the appeal must be sued out within a year and a day
after the completion of the felony by the death of the party." 4
Bl.Com. 315. This, the author said, seemed to be only declaratory
of the common law. And Hawkins says:
"It seems clear that the appeal of death must set forth the day
when the hurt was given, but also the day when the party died of
it, as it appears from all precedents of this kind, both in Coke
and Raslat and also from the manifest reason of the thing, that it
may appear that the party died within a year and a day after the
stroke, in which case only the law intends the death was occasioned
by it."
Bk. 2, c. 23, § 88. Bacon, referring to the statute of
Gloucester, says that by that statute,
"an appeal shall not be abated for default of fresh suit if the
party sue within the year and day after the deed done, the
computation whereof, as the law is now settled, shall be made not
from the day when the wound is given, but
from the day when the
party died; also, the year and day shall be computed from the
beginning of the day, and not from the precise time when the death
happened, because regularly no fraction shall be made of a
day."
Title Appeal, D. And Comyn:
"By the Statute of Gloucester, 6 Edw. I. c. 9, an appeal shall
not abate by want of fresh suit if brought in a year and a day
after the fact done, which statute is, by construction, restrained
to an
Page 152 U. S. 241
appeal for the death of a man. And therefore an appeal upon the
death of a man may be within the year and day, though there be not
any fresh suit; within a year and a day
after the death,
though the blow was given before."
2 Inst. 320, Title Appeal, D.
The rule of a year and a day was also applied at common law to
inquisitions of deodands, brought to forfeit to the king, "to be
applied to pious uses and distributed in alms by his high almoner,"
personal chattels that were the immediate occasion of the death of
any reasonable creature. 1 Bl.Com. 300. The rule in those cases was
that the law does not look upon such a wound as the cause of a
man's death "after which he lives so long." Hawkins' P.C., Bk. 1 c.
8, § 7.
We have made this full reference to prosecutions for murder,
appeals of death, and inquisitions against deodands because of the
earnest contention of counsel that the rule applied at common law
in such cases should control the construction of the Indiana
statute. In our judgment, the rule of a year and a day is
inapplicable to the case before us. In prosecutions for murder, the
rule was one simply of criminal evidence. Appeals of death and
inquisitions against deodands, although having some of the features
of civil proceedings, were in material respects criminal in their
nature. Besides, as we have seen, the statute of 6 Edw. I. c. 9,
was construed as giving a year and a day from the death of the
party killed, not from the time the would was inflicted, and we do
not understand that any different construction was placed upon the
statute of 3 Hen. 8, c. 1, to which counsel referred.
But be that as it may, in prosecutions for murder and appeals of
death, the principal object was the punishment of public offenses.
In cases of murder and appeals of death, human life was involved,
while in inquisitions against deodands it was sought to forfeit
property that had caused the death of some one. In such cases, the
rule of a year and a day might well have been applied. But actions
under a statute like the one in Indiana are, in their nature and
consequences, wholly of a civil character. What the legislature
Page 152 U. S. 242
had in view was to make provision for the widow and children or
next of kin of one whose death has been caused by the wrongful act
or omission of another. The reasons upon which the rule of a year
and a day were applied in the above-mentioned cases at common law
do not apply with the same force in purely civil proceedings that
involve no element of punishment, but only provide compensation to
certain relatives of the decedent who have been deprived of his
assistance and aid. As the statute, according to the construction
placed upon it by the highest court of Indiana, allows the personal
representative to sue within two years after the death of the
testator or intestate where death was caused by the wrongful act or
omission of the defendant, we cannot by mere construction restrict
that right to cases in which the death occurred within a year and a
day after such act or omission. We repeat that where death was
caused by the wrongful act or omission of another, the
right of the personal representative, suing for the benefit of the
widow and children or next of kin, to recover damages on account of
such death is complete under the statute, and may be asserted by
action brought at any time within two years from the death.
It is assigned for error that the court below permitted the
plaintiff, against the objection of the defendant, to testify as to
the income of the deceased previous to his death. It is conceded by
counsel that it was competent to have shown the testator's ability
and capacity for labor, as well as his skill in his calling. But it
is insisted that the evidence as to his income for a particular
period was not competent. We are of the opinion that the evidence
to which the defendant objected was properly admitted. It tended,
in connection with other evidence, to show the extent of the loss
sustained by the widow and children on account of the death of the
husband and father. The age of the deceased, his probable
expectancy of life, his occupation, his ability to labor, and his
accustomed earnings were all proper elements of the inquiry as to
the compensation proper to be awarded on account of his death.
Wade v. Leroy,
20 How. 34;
Nebraska City v.
Campbell, 2 Black 500;
District of Columbia v.
Woodbury, 136 U. S. 450;
Page 152 U. S. 243
Texas & Pacific Railway v. Volk, 151 U. S.
73;
Howard County v. Legg, 110 Ind. 479;
Hudson v. Houser, 123 Ind. 309;
Collins v.
Davidson, 19 F. 83;
Hall v. Galveston, 39 F. 18;
Serensen v. Northern Pacific Railroad, 45 F. 407.
Certain observations made by Judge Woods at the case of his
charge to the jury are also assigned for error. They were as
follows:
"Some years ago, in a case in this court involving this
question, I instructed that the jury was not restricted in its
award of damage to the proof of pecuniary loss suffered by the
widow or next of kin, for whose benefit the action was prosecuted,
and, if left to myself, should so rule now. The statute provides
that the damages awarded shall 'be distributed in the same manner
as personal property of the deceased,' and this, it seems to me, is
inconsistent with the proposition that the damages to be allowed
cannot exceed the proven pecuniary loss. Some of the next of kin
might be dependent and shown to have a pecuniary interest in the
life of the deceased, and others to have no such interest, and yet
the damages allowed must go to those who had no such interest as
well, and as much as to those on account of whose interest it was
allowable; but the supreme court of the state, in a somewhat recent
case, as I understand, has put an interpretation upon this statute
which is binding upon this and other courts, and in accordance with
that decision, as I remember it, I instruct you -- and for the
purpose of this case you will accept it as the law -- that you will
allow only the pecuniary loss suffered by the widow and surviving
children on account of this death, not exceeding the limit of ten
thousand dollars fixed by the statute."
The defendant, of course, makes no objection to the principle of
law announced by the court, for the charge was in exact conformity
to its request for instructions upon the question of damages. But
it insists that the jury were probably influenced to its prejudice
by the statement that the court below had expressed a different
view from that announced by the state court.
We are of opinion that the action of the court below in respect
to this matter is not ground of error. What the judge
Page 152 U. S. 244
said was in deference to the decision of the state court, whose
interpretation of the local statute was accepted as the law of the
case. The jury were distinctly informed that they were to follow
the rule of damages announced by the state court, notwithstanding
the court below had, on a former occasion, acted on a different
interpretation of the statute. It is not to be supposed that the
jury misapprehended or disregarded the explicit injunction of the
court to allow, in the event of a verdict for the plaintiff, only
the pecuniary loss suffered by the widow and surviving children on
account of the death of the husband and father.
We perceive no error in the record, and the judgment is
Affirmed.