Price v. Charlotte Electric Railway Co.

ClabK, C. J.,

concurring in tbe result: Louisa Price sustained serious injuries caused by tbe negligence of tbe defendant, as tbe jury find. Her right foot was amputated, her right arm was broken and permanently rendered stiff, and her bead severely gashed. For these injuries and for her physical and mental suffering, and for her diminished power to earn wages by reason of her injuries, tbe jury assessed her compensation at $5,000. Tbe able counsel for tbe railroad company strenuously argued tbat being a married woman this compensation was tbe property of her husband, and could be recovered only by him, and not by her. Fortunately for her, tbe husband bad been made a coplaintiff, and tbe Court does not pass upon the point.

*454But the contention that tbe wife’s earnings, and damages for injuries sustained by her person and for ber sufferings, physical and mental, belong to her husband, cannot be maintained except upon the principle that the earnings of a slave and damages for injuries to the slave’s person are the property of the master. This was the origin of these decisions centuries ago, when “in the eyes of the judges” the wife was merely the chattel, the property of her husband, for no English-speaking legislative body has ever so enacted. The doctrine was entirely the creation of the courts; that is, it was the “common law,” which is simply another name for “judge-made law.” It has not even the excuse that it was the custom among the Saxon tribes, for, barbarians though they were, no such system prevailed among them. The doctrine was created by the courts after the Conquest, and is based solely upon the ideas of the judges of that date as to what was the proper status of women.

Under the Constitution of 1868 a married woman owns her property as absolutely as if single, or as her 'husband owns his, and it should follow, most certainly since the act of 1911, giving a married woman the right to contract as if single, that her earnings in occupations elsewhere than in her household duties belong to her, and that she has the same right to recover them as the husband has to sue for his own earnings. For a stronger reason, damages for injuries to her person and for her physical and mental suffering must belong to her. Such damages are compensation intended to put her in statu quo, so far as she can be compensated by money for the loss, which' is peculiarly her own.

Many courts of the highest reputation have held that the statutes conferring upon married women the right of property and the right to contract carry with them the right to recover earnings and damages for injuries causing loss of capacity to earn, and for physical and mental suffering. R. R. v. Humble, 181 U. S., 57; Harmon v. R. R., 165 Mass., 100; Duffee v. R. R., 191 Mass., 563; Hatton v. R. R., 3 Penniwell (Del.), 159; Athens v. Smith, 111 Ga., 870; R. R. v. Krempell, 116 Ill. App., 253; Logan v. Logan, 77 Ind., 558; Harkness v. R. R., 110 La., 823; Rockwell v. Traction Co., 187 Pa. St., 568; Normile v. Traction Co., 57 *455W. Va., 132, and there are many others. These decisions are in accordance with the spirit of the.age and of the Constitution and laws.

It is true that under the decisions of the courts made in a ruder age, not based upon any statute, but evolved by the judges out of their own consciousness, and termed by euphemism “the common law,” a married woman could not recover her earnings, nor for damages to her person, nor for her sufferings,' physical or mental, and that compensation for all these things belonged to her husband, upon Petruchio’s theory that the wife is the chattel or property of her husband. Upon this common law it was held in North Carolina, by Pearson, C. J., in S. v. Black, 60 N. C., 263, that it was the “husband’s duty to make the wife behave herself” and to thrash her, if necessary to that end, and in S. v. Rhodes, 61 N. C., 453 (1868), this Court sustained the charge of the judge below that a man “had the right to whip his wife with a switch no larger than his thumb,” and this was cited and approved in S. v. Mabrey, 64 N. C., 593. But in S. v. Oliver, 70 N. C., 61 (in 1874), this Court overruled the numerous decisions to that effect, Settle, J., saying: “The courts have advanced from that barbarism.” Thus passed away the vested right of the husband to thrash his wife “with a whip no larger than his thumb,” without any statute to change the law.

As late as 1886, in S. v. Edens, 95 N. C., 693, the Court again held, upon the same “judge-made” law of former times, that a man -could “wantonly and maliciously slander” thé good name of his wife with impunity, or “assault and beat her” if he inflicted no permanent injury uj>on her; but a majority of this Court reversed that holding in 1908 without any statute, in S. v. Fulton, 149 N. C., 485, since which time no man has had legal authority to slander or assault and beat his wife in North Carolina. And thus passed away another vested right, or rather another vested wrong.

In view of the Constitution and statute conferring upon a married woman the absolute right to her own property and unlimited power to contract, it should not now require any statute to abolish the claim (which was never based upon any statute, but was purely the creation of the judges in a ruder age) that *456a married woman could not recover her earnings nor damages for injuries to her person causing her loss of earning capacity and great mental and physical suffering.

Even statutes have been held obsolete and unenforcible because of changed conditions and the long lapse of time. Certainly this ought to be true of decisions which rest upon no statute and which are now contrary to every sense of right and opposed to the spirit of our Constitution and of the age in which we live.

The “common law” has been praised because of the very fact that, being “judge-made,” it was flexible and could be molded from time to time to fit the changing conditions of society. ’But it loses this sole excellence when it is used to thwart beneficial statutes, expressing the demand of the age for more just and benign laws, by construing them according to the darkened and narrow views of the judges of the fourteenth century and not according to the intendment of legislators imbued with the enlightened ideas of the twentieth century. The fiction that the judges declared the “common law,” and did not make it, is a mere decency. But if the statement were true, this would only carry back its origin to more ignorant and barbarous ages. That the “common law” is the “perfection of reason” when traced to such origin is impossible, and it can be fairly judged by its rulings as to married women which, long since abolished root and branch in England, both by the courts and by statutes, are still fondly clung to by some American courts as a clog upon progressive legislation. This is true as to other common-law rulings in every department of law. In truth, every betterment in the law has necessarily come from legislation, or by decisions of the courts denying the barbarous or worn-out rulings that are unsuited to the improved conditions of society and obnoxious to the juster ideas of a more enlightened age. There are of course principles of the common law which are eternally just and which will survive throughout the ages. But this is not because they are found in a mass of error or were enunciated by judges in an ignorant age, but because they are right in themselves and are approved, not disapproved, as much of the common law must be, by the intelligence of-to-day.

*457As, however, common-law views as to the statute of women still survive among a few and are still urged as law, it would not be amiss should the General Assembly make such enactment in this regard as that body may deem just and proper. Every age should have laws based upon its own intelligence and expressing its own ideas of right and wrong. Progress and betterment should .not be denied us by the dead hand of the Past. The decisions of the courts should always be in accord with the spirit of the legislation of to-day, which should not be misconstrued to conform to the views of dead and forgotten judges of centuries long overpast who were not always learned and able, and who, if wise, were rarely .wise beyond the narrow vision of their own age. Nations, like men,

“May rise on stepping-stones Of their dead selves to higher things.”
BeowN, J\, concurs in this opinion.

Note. — The General Assembly of 1913 enacted that a married woman can recover her earnings and damages for personal injuries for her own use, and without joinder of her husband in the action.