dissenting: The defendant reserved exceptions to the exclusion of its Exhibits A, B, C, D, E, E, and G, and is now awarded a new trial by the majority of this Court on the specific basis that the rejection of Exhibits A, D, E, E, and G constituted error. I cannot agree with this decision.
It is a fundamental rule of appellate practice that a judgment will he upheld on appeal unless the appellant shows affirmatively by the record that some reversible, material, substantial, or prejudicial error was committed by the lower court. S. v. Gibson, 229 N.C. 497, 50 S.E. 2d 520; Roberts v. Bus Co., 198 N.C. 779, 153 S.E. 398; Hare v. Grantham, 158 N.C. 598, 74 S.E. 102; Biggs v. Waters, 112 N.C. 836, 16 S.E. 921. Consequently, the burden devolves on defendant to establish by the record that the trial court erred in excluding the exhibits which it presented.
To be admissible, evidence must satisfy these two requirements: (1) It must he relevant to the issue; and (2) its reception must not he forbidden by some specific rule of law. Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.), Sections 9-10; Peebles v. Idol, 198 N.C. 56, 150 S.E. 665.
The documents offered in evidence by defendant as its Exhibits E and F are respectively the summons and complaint in an action for divorce which the intestate brought against the" plaintiff in her individual character as his wife in the Superior Court of Forsyth County on 11 January, 1947, the day before his death. The complaint alleges that the decedent and his wife had entered into a specified contract with reference to the future support of their three children. Since the summons and the complaint were returned to the court unserved two days after the intestate’s death and never formed the basis for any judicial action, they constituted at most mere admissions of the deceased, which the trial judge rightly rejected because their reception in evidence was barred by the specific rule of law excluding hearsay.
This conclusion is fully supported by Dowell v. Raleigh, 173 N.C. 197, 91 S.E. 849, and Holmes v. Wharton, 194 N.C. 470, 140 S.E. 93, recognizing and applying the rule which prevails in this jurisdiction that the admissions of the deceased are not competent against his personal representative in an action to recover damages for death by wrongful act. The reasons for the rule were thus stated in Dowell v. Raleigh, supra: “The declaration of the intestate as to the condition of the wagon was incompetent. It was not a declaration against interest, as at that time he had no interest to serve or disserve. He had no cause of action himself, as his death was instantaneous, nor did he even have any interest *186in this canse of action. It is one not known to tbe common law, but created by tbe statute, and tbe beneficiaries take, not by any inheritance or succession from him, but solely because they are named in tbe statutes as the recipients of tbe fund recovered for tbe death caused by tbe defendant’s negligent or wrongful act. Tbe cause of action never arose until tbe death of tbe intestate, and then not to him, but to those who are designated by tbe statute to take tbe fund recovered. They acquire their right by tbe statute alone, and not because of any privity with tbe intestate, for none exists between them, in any proper sense of tbe term.” Though not pertinent to this case, it is observed, in passing, that tbe rule under consideration is now subject to a single statutory exception created by tbe Legislature in 1919 providing that “the dying declarations of the deceased as to tbe cause of bis death shall be admissible in evidence” in actions for wrongful death. Gr.S. 28-173.
Exhibits A and D are duly authenticated copies of records of tbe Municipal Court of Winston-Salem reciting that on 7 October, 1943, tbe intestate was tried in such court on the criminal charge of nonsupport of bis first and second born children; that be “entered a plea of guilty” and was “adjudged guilty”; and that be was thereupon ordered to pay tbe sum of $10.00 per week to tbe clerk of tbe court during tbe next succeeding fifteen years for tbe support of bis first and second born children. There is no evidence in tbe record tending to show that this judgment ever controlled tbe contributions of tbe decedent to tbe support of his family outside of an allegation in Exhibit B set out below that such was tbe case during tbe brief period beginning 7 October, 1943, and ending 29 January, 1944.
Exhibit B was verified by plaintiff on tbe date last mentioned and is tbe original complaint in an action for alimony without divorce brought about that time by tbe plaintiff in her individual character against her husband, the intestate, in tbe Superior Court of Forsyth County. In this complaint, tbe plaintiff averred that tbe deceased abandoned tbe plaintiff on 26 September, 1943; that thereafter, namely, on 7 October, 1943, be was convicted of nonsupport in tbe Municipal Court of Winston-Salem and ordered to make payment for tbe support of bis children as set out above; that from tbe date of tbe judgment in tbe criminal action down to tbe time of tbe verification of tbe complaint tbe intestate paid $10.00 per week for tbe support of bis first and second born children in conformity to tbe order of tbe Municipal Court of Winston-Salem; that tbe plaintiff was again pregnant by tbe decedent and that tbe sum of $10.00 per week was insufficient for tbe support of tbe plaintiff, and tbe first and second born children, and tbe defraying of tbe expense incident to tbe future birth of tbe third child with which tbe plaintiff was then pregnant; and that tbe court ought to award tbe plaintiff alimony both *187pending the action and on final hearing sufficient for the support of plaintiff and the children of her marriage with the deceased. Exhibit 0 is the original of an order signed by Judge H. Hoyle Sink on 7 February, 1944, in the action for alimony, making findings of fact in harmony with the allegations of Exhibit B and ordering the intestate to pay to the clerk of the Municipal Court of Winston-Salem as alimony pending the áction for the support of plaintiff and his children the sum of $25.00 weekly, which was to include the payment of $10.00 mentioned in the judgment in the criminal action. Nothing in the recitations in Judge Sink’s order or elsewhere in the record reveals that any process or notice was ever served on the intestate in the action for alimony without divorce, or that he ever appeared therein either in person or by counsel, or that he ever acquired any knowledge of the institution or pendency of the action or the rendition of the order for temporary support. Furthermore, it does not appear that any proceedings were had in the action after 7 February, 1944, or that the contributions of deceased to the support of his family subsequent to that date bore any relation whatever to the allowance for support specified in the order.
Exhibit G is the inventory of the estate of the intestate. It was filed by plaintiff in her representative capacity on 6 May, 1947, and reveals that the deceased left personal property worth only $110.33.
Since it does not appear that the court ever acquired any jurisdiction of the deceased by service or appearance in the action for alimony without divorce, Exhibits B and C are not admissible in evidence as a judicial record. In consequence, Exhibit G, the order for temporary alimony, is barred from admission at all events. Rainey v. Hines, 121 N.C. 318, 28 S.E. 410; 32 C.J.S., Evidence, section 647. Likewise, it is plain that the contents of Exhibit B, the complaint, cannot be received as admissions of the plaintiff in her representative capacity as administratrix because the complaint was drafted before her appointment and qualification. Coble v. Coble, 82 N.C. 339; May v. Little, 25 N.C. 27. Furthermore, it cannot be received on the theory that the plaintiff is beneficially interested in the litigation in her individual character for the reason that she shares in any recovery as widow of the deceased, and that by reason thereof the contents of Exhibit B ought to be received in evidence against the plaintiff in her representative capacity as administratrix as admissions of the real party in interest. The cause of action for death by wrongful act was created by the Legislature. Under the pertinent statutes, the widow and three children of James Garfield Hanks share equally and in severalty any damages recovered for his death. G.S. 28-149, 28-173. Hence, there is no basis for any contention that the children are in privity with the mother or that they have any joint interest with her in the matter in suit in a legal sense. Moreover, there *188can be only one finding as to the pecuniary injury resulting from the death of the deceased. This cannot be one thing to the widow and another thing to the children. The admissions of the widow contained in Exhibit B were made without any authority from the children, and cannot possibly be received in evidence to affect the interest of the widow without prejudicing the interests of the children. Eor these reasons, the trial judge properly excluded Exhibit B under the rule that declarations are not receivable in evidence even against the declarant if it is impossible to admit them without prejudicing the rights of nondeelarants who did not authorize the making of the declarations, and are not in privity with the declarant, and have no joint interest with the declarant in the matter in suit. In re Casada, 228 N.C. 548, 46 S.E. 2d 468; 31 C.J.S., Evidence, section 320. The plaintiff did not testify on the trial. Thus, the question of the competency of Exhibit B for the purpose of contradiction does not arise.
It is noted here that the opinion of the majority concedes that no error was committed in rejecting Exhibits B and C.
Since it appears that Exhibits B, C, E, and E were rightly excluded under specific rules of law, we now take up the question of whether Exhibits A, D, and G meet the other test of admissibility, to wit: relevancy, which is, in essence, a matter of logic rather than law. We doubt that a more illuminating criterion of relevancy can be devised than the one implicit in the following quotation from 31 C.J.S., Evidence, section 158 :• “An offer of a party to prove a fact in evidence involves an assertion by him that such a relation exists in reason as a matter of logic between the fact offered and a fact in issue that the existence of the former renders probable or improbable the existence of the latter, and the relation thus asserted is termed relevancy.”
It is indisputably clear that Exhibits A, D, and G bear no logical relationship to the issues of negligence and contributory negligence. In determining whether they are relevant to the issue of damages, we must examine the legal rules governing that issue.
When the Legislature created a cause of action for death by wrongful act, it decreed that “the plaintiff in such action may recover such damages as are a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injury resulting from such death.” G.S. 28-113. It has been settled by repeated adjudications that the measure of damages for wrongful death is the present worth of the net pecuniary value of the life of the deceased to be ascertained by deducting the probable costs of his own living and usual and ordinary expenses from the probable gross income derived from his own exertions based upon his life expectancy. Rea v. Simowitz, 226 N.C. 379, 38 S.E. 2d 194; Coach Co. v. Lee, 218 N.C. 320, 11 S.E. 2d 341; White v. R. R., 216 N.C. 79, 3 S.E. 2d 310; Carpenter v. Power Co., *189191 N.C. 130, 131 S.E. 400; Purnell v. R. R., 190 N.C. 573, 130 S.E. 313; Gurley v. Power Co., 172 N.C. 690, 90 S.E. 943; Coley v. Statesville, 121 N.C. 301, 28 S.E. 482. The cost of the deceased’s own living and his usual and ordinary expenses under this rule do not include his contributions to the support of his dependents, -and such contributions are not deducted from gross earnings in calculating the net pecuniary value of his life. Rigsbee v. R. R., 190 N.C. 231, 129 S.E. 580; Roberson v. Lumber Co., 154 N.C. 328, 70 S.E. 630; Carter v. R. R., 139 N.C. 499, 52 S.E. 642.
It necessarily follows that a trial court should admit in an action for wrongful death any evidence not excluded by some specific rule of law having a logical tendency to show either the probable gross income which would have been derived from the deceased’s own exertions, or the probable cost-of the deceased’s own living and ordinary and usual expenses during the period he would have continued to live if his life had not been cut off by the wrongful act of the defendant. Hicks v. Love, 201 N.C. 778, 161 S.E. 394; Burns v. R. R., 125 N.C. 304, 34 S.E. 495.
It is evident that Exhibit G, the plaintiff’s inventory of the deceased’s personal estate, standing alone, has no intrinsic relevancy to the facts in issue on the question of damages. The observations made in Cooper v. R. R., 140 N.C. 209, 52 S.E. 932, 3 L.R.A. 391, 9 Ann. Cas. 71, where similar evidence was rejected, seem appropriate here: “If these papers should show a large estate, there are so many ways by which it could be explained otherwise than by the capacity of the deceased to accumulate money, and if it is small, there are so many and various ways it could be accounted for, consistent with the highest capacity to earn and acquire, that these admissions, we think, would tend rather to confuse than aid the investigation, and would open up a field of inquiry entirely too extensive and often foreign to the issue. We hold the papers to be irrelevant, and affirm the ruling of the trial judge on that question.”
The defendant’s position is not improved by combining Exhibit G and Exhibits A and D. Exhibit B was barred from admission by specific rules of law, and no other evidence was presented on the trial tending to show that the criminal judgment mentioned in Exhibits A and D controlled or limited the contributions of the deceased to the support of his dependents even for a day. It does not appear from the record that Exhibits A, D, and G have any logical tendency to prove or disprove any fact in issue in respect to deceased’s probable earnings, or probable personal expenses, or probable contributions to the support of his dependents. Indeed, they leave these matters to speculation.
Moreover, the isolated fact that the intestate was convicted of nonsupport on a single occasion as set forth in Exhibits A and D is not admissible to show his character or habits. Edwards v. Griner, 42 Ga. *190App. 282, 155 S.E. 189; Stansbury: North Carolina Evidence, section 95; Wigmore on Evidence (3rd Ed.), section 376.
In my judgment, the appellant has failed to establish the admissibility of any of the rejected papers. Hence, my vote is for an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court.
I am authorized to say that Mr. Justice Devin and Mr. Justice Seawell concur in this dissent.