delivered the opinion of the court.
This was not an action brought by the kindred of a deceased person for damages occasioned by injuries resulting in *430death, under § 1510, code of 1880. It is an action brought by the personal representative — the administratrix — for the recovery of such damages as the intestate might have sued for and recovered if he had survived the injuries complained of, and is founded on §§ 2078 and 2079 of our code. The former declares that, “ executors, administrators and collectors shall have full power and authority to commence and prosecute any personal action whatever, at law or in equity, which the testator or intestate might have commenced and prosecuted.” The latter section substantially repeats the right to this remedy, and says: “Executors and administrators shall have an action for any trespass done to the person or property, real or personal, of their testator or intestate, against the trespasser, and recover damages, in like manner as their testator or intestate would have had if.living; and the money so recovered shall be assets, and accounted for as such.”
The object of the statute is certain. At common law, actions for the recovery of damages for personal injuries abated with the death of the person injured; the statute referred to was designed to cause to survive to the personal representative any right of personal action which the deceased might have commenced or prosecuted if living.
There does not seem to us to be any ground for serious contention as to the proper construction of the statute. The sole purpose, and the manifest purpose, is to save to personal representatives the right to begin and carry on such personal actions as the deceased might have begun and carried on if he had not died. The evil of' the common law was that all personal actions died with the person; the remedy of the statute is to cause the action, or the right of action, to survive to the personal representative. Whatever suit was maintainable by the deceased shall be held maintainable by the personal representatives of the deceased. But the deceased never had any personal action which could abate at common law where the injury causing death and the death itself were simultaneous. It is impossible to conceive, at *431common law, of a right of action for injuries to be begun and prosecuted by one who died instantaneously on being injured. If, as we have declared, the statute was framed to prevent the abatement of the right of personal action b'y the death of the injured person, then it bears its own natural construction upon its own face. And if no strained or hidden meaning is to be imparted to the language of the. statute, the survivorship is to personal actions which the testator or intestate might have commenced and prosecuted. But the testator or intestate could never have begun or prosecuted an action for injuries which ended in instantaneous death.
To put the case in another form — the form in which the declaration presents it — can a recovery be had by the personal representative, for the-mental and physical pain and anguish endured by the deceased at the time of and following the injury complained of, where the death and the injury were simultaneous ? The proposition is so self-contradictory and self-confuting as to- be confusing. It appears unnecessary to pursue the thought.
¥e are of the opinion that the personal representative has no right of personal action where the deceased never had such right, and that, where death was simultaneous with injury, it is impossible, to the. healthy mind, to even conceive of a right of action in the man instantaneously killed. In such case, all recoverable damages mu3t be sought by the kindred who-have sustained loss, and the mere personal representative can have no standing in court. 1
This view is foreshadowed in V. & M. R. R. Co. v. Phillips, 64 Miss., and is clearly the only view consonant with the spirit or letter of the statute. Nor is it in irreconcilable conflict with any well-considered case which has been brought to our attention.
The case of Brown v. B. & S. L. Railroad Co., 22 N. Y., 191, is thought to be authority for a contrary doctrine. But the decision in that case involved the construction of a statute of that state, and it was said by the court that, “ the statute *432gives the action to the personal representative of the individual injured, when the injury causes death, and it makes no distinction between cases where death was immediate and instantaneous, and where it was consequential.” If this is a fair statement of the statute, the opinion is altogether correct, but not at all authority on the case before us.
An examination of the case of Railroad Co. v. Prince, 2 Heiskell (Tenn.), 580, will show that the court, in construing a statute which declares that, “the right of action which a person who dies from injuries received from another, or whose death is caused by the wrongful act or omission of another, would have had against the wrong-doer, in case death had not ensued, shall not abate or be extinguished by his death, but shall pass to his personal representative, for the benefit of his widow and next of kin, free from the claims of his creditors,” said: “It follows that the representative of the deceased has a right to recover damages sustained by the widow and children in consequence of his death, whether the death resulted instantaneously from the injuries or not. It-would have been absurd to give the right of action for damages for the mental and bodily sufferings of a person whose death was instantaneous. Yet a right of action is given for the benefit of the widow and next of kin. It follows that the damage intended to be provided for, was the loss of husband or father.”
The case in 5 Baxter (Tenn.), 663, Fowlkes v. Railroad Co., on which appellee relies, as we understand the reasoning of the court, is simply a re-affirmation of a right to a recovery in case of instantaneous death under their peculiar statute; and it seems to us unwarranted to hold the court, in this last-named case, to have involved itself in what it denominated, in the foruner case, the absurdity of giving the right of action for the mental and bodily sufferings only of a person whose death was instantaneous.
The case of Bancroft v. Railroad Co., 11 Allen, 34, referred to in the brief of appellee’s counsel, held the right of action maintainable by the personal representative where the person *433injured survived fifteen minutes. But the case of Kearney v. Railroad Co., 9 Cushing (Mass.), 108, is cited with approbation on the proposition that the instantaneous death of the intestate renders an action non-maintainable by the administratrix, and this doctrine has been steadily adhered to by that court in other and recent cases. See Cochran v. Railway Co., 133 Mass., 507, and Riley v. Railroad Co., 135 Mass., 292.
The case of Connor v. Railway Co., 71 Iowa, and the subsequent case in 72 Iowa, 202, turned upon the construction of statutes very similar to the Tennessee statutes already referred to, which declare that “ when a wrongful act produces death, the damages shall be disposed of as personal property belonging to the estate of the deceased, except that, if the deceased leaves a husband, wife, or child or parent, it will not be liable for the payment of debts.” The court held that, as the Iowa statute, in effect, declared, “when a wrongful act produces death, the perpetrator is civilly liable for the injury,” it was immaterial whether death was instantaneous or not. We express no opinion as to the correctness of the reasoning of the court in construing the statute of that state; but the cases are so unlike the one before us that the opinion sheds no light upon the question involved in the interpretation of our very dissimilar statute. It is worthy of remark, in this connection, that the supreme court of Iowa, in the case of Kellow v. Railroad Co., 21 Am. & Eng. R. R. Cases, 485 (decided in 1885, two-years before the cases in 71 and 72 Iowa, and before the peculiar statute construed in those cases had been enacted), said: “ In determining whether a cause of action accrued to him [Kellow, the administrator of the deceased], the test is whether he lived after the injury, and not the length of time he lived thereafter.”
In Cooley on Torts, 310, this misleading statement affords countenance to the position of counsel for appellee: “A question has been made in some states whether suit could be maintained when the death was instantaneous; and in Mas*434sachusetts, under a somewhat nice and technical construction of the statute, it was decided that the action would not lie in such case. But probably under no existing statute would it be so held now.”
The note appended to this very statement by the author, at the foot of the page, refers to the case of Kearney v. Railroad Co., 9 Cush., and, with refreshing inconsistency, says, “ The rule is still followed in that state,” citing the later cases. It will be seen in the same note that the author admits that in Georgia, South Carolina and New Jersey (he might have added others), if death is instantaneous, there'can be no recovery for the death of a wife or child.
The confusion in the minds of some text-writers has arisen from failure to remember that the seeming diversity of opinion in courts of last resort, has arisen out of language employed in construing variant and dissimilar statutes on this same general subject of the survival of actions to personal representatives. The conflict of authority will largely vanish when the cases giving rise to the various opinions are carefully considered.
On the few horrible facts in evidence as to the death of the deceased, we cannot consent that the evidence shows that he survived the injury. He was run over by a swiftly moving train, under circumstances undisclosed, and was ground to pieces, and the fragments strewn along the track, and near it, for seventy or eighty feet. To say the jury was warranted in holding that he survived the injury for any appreciable space of time, however short — that his death was not instantaneous — is impossible.
Reversed and remanded.