Illinois Central Railroad v. Johnson

Oalhoon, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Under the laws of this state, can the illegitimate half sister bring an action for damages against a railroad company for negligently causing the death of her illegitimate half sister ?

Bora Beard, a young woman of illegitimate birth, was killed in the incorporated municipality of Brookhaven by the employes of the appellant company by what is known as a “kicking switch.” Sophronia Johnson, the appellee, was the illegitimate half sister of Bora Beard. They were both the offspring of the same mother by different fathers, and Sophronia brought this action and recovered damages.

We look first, of course, to the common law, and we cannot better define the condition of the deceased, or the rights of plaintiff, than we find in the brief of her accomplished counsel, who say: “At common law they [illegitimates] were the children of nobody, not even their own mother, and had no kindred. They could inherit nothing, nor could any one inherit from them save their own legitimate offspring. They were the beginning of their race, not even akin to humankind' — -monsters, so to speak, conceived in sin and born in iniquity, with no rights, no name, and no people.”

We should be glad, if we had space, to follow by quoting the subsequent remarks of this very able brief, since they illustrate true eloquence, the lightning of passion playing along the line of thought. But we must content ourselves with the ice-cold law, from which no friction will excite sparks.

The common law must govern us except where it is modified by statutory enactment.

Accepting, as we do, the description of the status of bastards at common law furnished us by appellee’s counsel, it may be *733noted that the basis of the rule was the discouragement of immorality in the promiscuous intercourse of the sexes not sanctioned by the public contract of marriage. The effect of the law on the millions who were governed began, after the lapse of centuries, to dawn on the minds of the select few who governed them. These few, at occasional intervals between the numerous avocations o.f the multitudinous pleasures afforded by wealth, began to observe that bastardy continued to prevail, that illegitimacy of birth, notwithstanding the thunders of the law from parliament house, the right reverend clergy and the wigs and gowns of the courts, continued to be,- as it always had before, a “condition, and not a theory.” Bastards still dotted and spotted the kingdom as before, and, while the particular kingdom was in no worse situation in this shocking regard than the other kingdoms, empires and suzerainties of ehrth, still it was in no better, to say the least of it. It was seen to prevail still.

So, the premises being well considered for seven hundred years or so,, it finally dawned on the benevolent minds of a few of “my lords and gentlemen,” who, we must assume, were not at all interested personally in the question, that the unoffend-ing, unconsuited and innocent off spring of unhallowed natural appetite, ought to have some sort of consideration. Thereupon a law was enacted magnanimously recognizing that bastards were, in its eye, as in fact,- the children of their own mothers.

The slow process of evolution has, up to the date of this opinion, on the doctrine of gradual deviation from the original type, developed § 1549 of the code. This section, on the point now being considered, has these words: “And illegiti-mates shall inherit from their mother, and from her other children, and from her kindred according to the statutes of descent and distribution; and the children of illegitimates and their descendants shall inherit from, the brothers and sisters of their father or mother, whether legitimate or illegitimate, and from *734their grandparents. But the children of illegitimates shall not inherit from any ancestor or collateral kindred, if there be legitimate heirs of such ancestor or collateral kindred, in the same degree, to whom the estate would otherwise descend.”

This statute gives bastards something in the neighborhood of half a showing.

The common law and the statute law being stated, it is now necessary to show both on the subject of the rights of kindred to sue for damages for the wilful or negligent killing of one of their blood, premising the observation that there is nothing whatever in the statute of descent and distribution making any right of action inheritable either by legitimates or illegiti-mates.

By the wisdom of the common law, so profound as to be quite undiscemible, if a man was hurt by the negligence of another he might sue for damages, but if he was killed by the negligence, neither his heirs, nor his executor or administrator, could sue at all, thus making it much cheaper to kill him than to hurt him. This was the law for twelve or thirteen hundred years, or such a matter of time, when there was a sudden, sportive variation of type shown by Lord Campbell’s act of 1846, which gave the right to the personal representatives.

This variation has, fortunately, been persistent. It has evolved a new type, and has developed it into so improved a condition as that, in our own state, we find in the acts of 1898, p. 82, a provision that a “sister” or “brother” may sue for the death of a sister or brother.

It will be seen that the code in the chapter on descent and distribution makes an innovation on the common law in favor of illegitimates in regard to inheritance, but nowhere in that chapter makes rights in action for torts transmissible by descent, and at common law they were not so transmissible.

Lord Campbell’s act, the progenitor of the act of 1898, and this act, give the right to sue to certain survivors, and these acts are also an innovation on the common law, which gave no *735such rights, and neither act deals with inheritance, nor makes any mention of illegitimates.

Now, it has been held, under Lord Campbell’s act, and on acts similar to ours, that the courts will not extend by construction so as to encourage immorality, and that when legislative acts enabling survivors to sue use the word “kin” they mean legitimate kin, and when they say father or mother, children or brothers or sisters, they mean only legitimate father or mother, children, brothers or sisters. Black’s Law and Pr. in Ac. Cases, sec. 109, note 31; Tiffany, Death by Wrongful Act, sec. 85, note 15.

Where a statute gave the right to a “parent,” it is held that even the mother cannot recover for the death of her own ille-. gitimate child, as Mr. Tiffany says, and he refers to Harkins v. Philadelphia Railroad Co., 15 Phila., 286, and he says the rule is the same under the Missouri statute, giving the right to sue for the death of a “minor unmarried child, whether natural born or adopted,” and he cites Marshall v. Wabash Railroad Co., 46 Fed. Rep., 269. He also cites Dickinson v. N. E. Railroad Co., 2 Hurleston & Coltman, 2 Exchequer, 735, and two other eases not accessible to us, and he refers also to Good v. Towns, 56 Vt., 410, which holds that, under a statute giving action for death from liquor illegally sold, an illegitimate child cannot recover for the mother’s death. We have verified all the eases he- cites except the two not accessible, and they fully sustain the text. See, also, Hibson v. Midland Railway Co., 15 A. & E. R. R. Cases, 507, old series. The only case to be found contra is Muh’s Admr. v. So. Mid. R. R. Co., 10 Ohio St. Rep., 276, and there it was the administrator who sued, as he might by the statute, and the court said en- passant, under a statute using the words “nearest of kin,” that the nearness or remoteness of kin where the mother was concerned, did not depend “upon the circumstances of his (the child’s) being born within or without lawful wedlock.” The court seems to assume this as being a mat*736ter without question, does not cite or discuss an authority, and manifestly had not examined into the question.

It is certain that in all those states applying strict construction to statutes innovating on the common law, it is uniformly held that illegitimates are never considered as being included unless they are expressly included, and that statutes giving persons remedies which they did not have at common law cannot be helped by reference to statutes of descent so as to take in the kin of bastards.

Now, it is well known that no state has gone farther than our own in this line of strict construction of enactments changing the common law so as to intend nothing not expressly mentioned changing that law. This rule runs through all our decisions, of which we refer to Edwards v. Gaulding, 38 Miss., 118, and Porter v. Porter, 7 How. (Miss.), 111, 112, as directly pertaining to the subject in hand.

We feel compelled, much against our inclination, to declare, as the existing law of the land, that plaintiff below could not sue.

Reversed and remanded.