delivered the opinion ojt the coubt.
■Hugh Barclay, Jr., was a fireman on the railroad of appellant, and had been so employed for some time previous to June 5, 1892. On that day a change of schedule went into effect at 7 o’clock p. m. By the old time card the regular train for Owensboro left Russellville at 7:25 a. m. By the new time card the starting time was made twenty minutes later. Barclay was acting as fireman on ah excursion train from Owensboro to Bowling Green, by way of Russell-ville. The engineer and conductor of the excursion train, under whose orders Barclay was acting, misunderstood the time card, and, supposing it to have gone into effect at 7 á. m. of that day, instead of 7 p. m., failed to stop at the proper station to permit the regular train for Owensboro to pass, which failure resulted in a collision between the two trains, near South Carrollton Barclay was frightfully ^mangled and scalded in the collision, and died about two ¡hours afterward. Appellee qualified as Barclay’s administrator, brought suit for damages against appellant, and recovered a verdict and judgment for $15,000, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.
The first question raised, in logical order, is the right of appellee to bring the suit, the point being made that the *20bank, which was by law authorised to act as administrator, was appointed by a special judge elected in pursuance of the provisions of the act of May 11, 1892, and that that act “was not adopted pursuant to the provisions of the Constitution of Kentucky, and that it is for that reason, among other reasons,, unconstitutional, null and void.” It was made to appear from the journals of the House and Senate that the act, upon its passage in the House, received the votes of two-fifths of the members elected, a majority of the members voting, and the vote being taken by yeas and nays and entered in the journal, in accordance with section 46 of the Constitution. It was amended in the Senate by the insertion of a provision that the pay of the special judge should not be taken out of the regular judge’s salary, but out of the county levy, arid was passed by that body in accordance with section 46. Upon the question of the House concurring in the Senate amendment, the journal does not show that the vote was taken by yeas and nays, nor does it appear by what majority the amendment was concurred in, nor was the vote entered in the journal; but it was enrolled as amended, signed by the speaker, and signed and approved by the Governor. Without stopping to pass upon the sufficiency of the pleading in which this objection is made, under the rule laid down in Norman, Auditor v. Board of Managers, 14 Ky. Law Rep., 529, it is sufficient to say that, in Lafferty v. Huffman, 99 Ky., in a well-considered opinion by Judge Hazelrigg, it was held: * * * “That the enrolled bill, when attested by the presiding officers as the law requires, must be accepted by the courts as the very bill adopted by the Legislature, and that its mode of enactment was *21in conformity to all constitutional' requirements. .When so authenticated it imports absolute verity and is unimpeachable by the journals.”
A further objection urged to the right of appellee to prosecute the action is the averment in the answer that the father of Hugh Barclay, Jr., had, previous to the order appointing appellee administrator, applied to the county court to be appointed; that the same order which appointed appellee denied the father’s application, and he thereupon took an appeal from the order, executed a supersedeas bond, and took all other necessary steps to bring up the judgment and proceeding of the county court to the circuit court for review and reversal, and that said appeal was then-pending in the circuit court. This pleading, however, does not state that a supersedeas was ever issued. /Unless a supersedeas was issued there was no stay of proceedings upon the judgment ■appealed from. Under the act of May 5, 1880, the circuit court has appellate jurisdiction of all orders or judgments of the county court granting, revoking or refusing letters ■of administration (Carroll’s Code, page 379). By the act of May 15, 1886, the time and manner of taking such appeals is governed (Carroll’s Code, 380) by the provisions of the ■Civil Code of Practice regulating appeals from said courts. Section 724 provides the manner of taking the appeal, and provides for the issuance of a supersedeas or order to the judge rendering the judgment to stay proceedings thereon. iWe regard the issuance of the supersedeas as a necessary averment.
It is urged as a reversible error that the trial court denied an application for a change of venue. It is unnecessary for *22us to consider whether the trial court erred in deciding that appellant could obtain a fair and impartial trial in Logan county. The statute then in force (which was the act of April 9, 1880, amending General Statutes, chapter 12), provides: “The action of the court in refusing or granting such change of venue shall be final and without appeal.”
It is insisted, however, that this provision is a mere de-laration that no appeal could be taken from an order granting or refusing a change of venue, but that an erroneous decision of the question is, nevertheless, a reversible error after final judgment. But such an order would clearly not have been a final order, from which an appeal might be taken, had there been no such declaration in the statute; and the language used, “shall be final and without appeal,” clearly indicates the legislative intent to be that such order-should not afford ground for reversal. Moreover, by an act which went into effect five days after the order complained of, the Legislature dropped from the statute the language above quoted, and provided that the court “shall exercise a sound discretion in deciding the question,” indicating the legislative construction to be in accordance with the view here given. And the Superior Court, in Howard, &c., v. Dietrich, 11 Ky. Law Rep., 235, considering this statute,, which was then in force, held that the refusal of the court to grant a change of venue in a civil case can not be reviewed on appeal. It is earnestly urged, however, that the motion for a new trial, which was made after the new statute went into effect, at a subsequent term, gave the trial court an opportunity to correct the error which it is claimed was made in denying the change of venue. We should be slow, *23however, to conclude that the Legislature, by the passage of the new act, intended to make a previous act of a court reversible error, which was not so when the action was taken.
It is further claimed that section 241 of the present Constitution, iunder which it is conceded the action was brought, is in violation of the provisions of the fifth amendment to the» ■Constitution of the United States, providing that “no' State-shall make or enforce any act which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of any citizen of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law;” * * * that if this section of the Kentucky Constitution is construed as giving the right of recovery for death caused by negligence or wrongful act to any person who had not a legal pecuniary interest in the life of the deceased, it is in conflict with the Federal Constitution, as depriving the person by whose negligence the death was caused of his property by arbitrary fiat of the Constitutional Convention; that in this case the deceased, being a young man of nineteen, unmarried and childless, no person had any legal claim upon him, or any pecuniary interest in his life, except his father, and that only for the period to elapse before he attained his majority; and it is claimed that a construction of section 241 which allows any relative having no legal,-pecuniary claim upon the deceased to recover damages for his death is a taking, of private property from one person for the private use and benefit of another person, which can not be done by constitutional provision, general law or special enactment. But it has never been h’elá, so far as we are informed, in any of the States *24that a person must have a legal claim upon another ior support in order to sustain a pecuniary loss by reason of the ■latter’s death. Under Lord Campbell’s act, the original legislation under which damages were recoverable for death % caused by negligence, it was provided that the action should be for the benefit of the wife, husband, parent, child, grandparent, step-parent, grandchild and step-child. None of those enumerated in the Campbell act had a legal claim for support upon the decedent, except the widow, child or parent of an infant.
In the case of Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. v. Barren, 5 Wallace, 90, which was a case brought by the administrator of a person who left neither wife nor child, the Supreme Court said: ■“It has been suggested frequently in cases under these acts, for they are found in several of the States, and the suggestion is very much urged in this case, that the widow and the next of kin are not entitled to recover any damage unless it is shown that they had a legal claim on the deceased, if he had survived, for support. * * * The only relation, mentioned in the statute, to the deceased essential to the maintenance of the action is that of widow or next of kin; to say they must have a legal claim on him for support would be an interpolation in the statute changing the fair import of its terms, and hence not warranted. This construction, we believe, has been rejected by every court before which the question has been made.” * * *
' “If the person injured had survived and recovered, he would have added so much to his personal estate, which the law on his death, if intestate, would have passed to his wife and next of kin; in case of his death by the injury the equiv-*25aient is given by a suit in tbe name of Ms personal representative.”
And in Bush v. Cork R. R. Co., C. & J., 48, it was said: * * * “That damages for the death must be given in reference solely to pecuniary loss, which, however, may be evidenced by proof of a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit, as of right or otherwise, from the continuance of life.”
Moreover, this court seems to have frequently held that suits under section 1, chapter 57, General Statutes, might be maintained by the personal representative, regardless of whether there was a widow, child or other person having a legal claim upon the decedent for support. (Givens v. Ky. Cent. Ry. Co., 11 Ky. Law Rep., 452; L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Morris, 14 Ky. Law Rep., 467.)
The question of whether section 241 of the Constitution, before the enactment of section 6 of the Kentucky Statutes, authorized the recovery of any other than compensatory damages was fully considered and decided in the affirmative in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Kelly’s Admx. (100 Ky.)
'But the petition averred not only the death of appellee’s intestate by the gross negligence of appellant, but alleged specifically the physical and mental suffering of the intestate during the period between the accident and the death. Motions to require appellee to paragraph its petition and to elect which cause of action it would prosecute were overruled by the trial court. The instructions, moreover, 'authorized the jury to find not only damages for the physical and mental suffering of the intestate, but for the destruction of the intestate’s power to earn money. A -most ingenious argu-*26iment has been made by counsel for appellee to the effect that there was no misjoinder of causes of action, but that . there was only one act of negligence, and that the cases upon this subject go only to the extent of requiring the plaintiff ■to recover in one action all that he is entitled to recover for that act. But whatever may be the logic of the question, and whatever might be our opinion were-the question now submitted to us for the first time, we regard this question as so authoritatively and distinctly settled in this State that the maxim of stare decisis shoulcL be applied. .At common law a cause of action existed for damages for the physical and mental suffering of the intestate between the. time of his injury and his death; and by section 1, chapter 10 of the General Statutes, this cause-of action survived to the personal representative. By the-(Constitution, as well as by statutes in force prior to its-adoption (section 241), a cause of action is given to the per-isonal representative, for the damage to the estate of the-decedent caused by his death. In Hansford v. Payne, 11 Bush,, 882, the death was cause! by negligence in filling a physician’s prescription with croton oil instead of linseed oil, and. suit was brought, alleging the suffering and agony, and also the death, resulting from the negligence. It was held in that casé that the order dismissing the petition on the face of the pleadings was error, as a cause of action was stated, but the court said: “We do not anticipate that this ruling will (as appellees’ counsel fears) enable parties to sue under the third section of the act of 1854 for the death, and also under the provisions of chapter 10 for the damages accruing anterior to the time of dissolution. A recovery of pun*27itive damages for the destruction of the life will certainly bar any other action for the injury or any of its consequences, and if a party elects to sue and enforce the right of action that survives to him he will not be allowed afterward to avail himself of the benefits of the punitive statute and also to recover under its provisions.”
In Conner’s Admr. v. Paul, 12 Bush, 144, the personal representative of Conner instituted one action for the recovery of damages for the mental and physical suffering of his intestate between the times of the injury and death, and also instituted another action for damages sustained by his* death, caused by the same act. A motion was made to require him to elect which of the two he would prosecute,, the motion was sustained by the circuit court and its judgment affirmed by this court. Said the court through Judge-Pryor: “The party entitled to bring the action, either un- , der the common law or under the statute, must make his. election; and while the right of recovery under our statutes for willful negligence may increase the measure of the recovery, such an action is a bar to a cause of action that survived at the common law upon the same facts.”
In Hackett’s Admr. v. Lou., St. L. & Tex. R. R. Co., 95 Ky., 236, this court held: “Now this court has decided and settled the question that where certain acts cause death, they can not be divided so as to make two actions, one to-recover for the suffering caused, and the other to recover for death. The party must elect.”
In that case an amended -petition averring the suffering which took place between the injury and the death was held lo be a separate count, and the plaintiff was required to-elect which cause of action he would prosecute.
*28And in the most recent case upon this súbject, L. & N. R. R. Co. v. McElwain, 98 Ky., 700, the wiie having been killed by the negligence of the railroad company, the personal representative, who was the husband, recovered a judgment for damages for her death, and instituted another action in •his individual capacity for damages for the loss of her society from the date the injury was inflicted until her death. ¡In that case, after a careful review of the authorities, the court, through Judge Paynter, said: “It was not the intention of the Legislature to multiply cases. The husband must accept the benefits which the statute secures to him in lieu of those he possessed at common law.”
Without further elaboration or argument, we conclude the rule to be established that, in such cases, the party complaining is restricted to the common-law cause of action or the statutory cause, and must elect which one he will pursue.
This being our view, it is unnecessary to consider the terrors alleged in the instructions given, which will certainly not be given upon a retrial.
For the reasons given the judgment is reversed and the •cause remanded, with directions to award the appellant a ¡new trial, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.