The respondent moved for a rehearing, and the following opinion was filed Eebruary 21, 1899:
Marshall, J.The motion for a rehearing, made on behalf of the respondent, has received careful, tireless, and patient consideration, as did the case when originally considered, notwithstanding some suggestions to the contrary made in the second argument of the - distinguished counsel who made such motion. It is not considered that there was any warrant for such suggestions. They had no proper place in counsel’s argument. The importance of the case furnished a. sufficient excuse for the motion, and counsel’s resources for legitimate argument are too well known to warrant the belief that there was any necessity of resorting to other means of enforcing their logic, even by way of emphasis. Calm, fair, consideration of legal questions, while not as necessary to the proper performance of the duties of counsel as those of the court, is quite as helpful in the one case as in the other. It would be well to bear that in mind, especially in presenting motions for re-argument. The situation of counsel at such a time, especially where great in*151terests are involved, and the decision disappoints hopes and .convictions born of much careful study of a subject, is well suited to test to the uttermost their power of calm consideration and courteous review of reasons and authorities judicially declared-to lead to and require the decision objected to. But whether counsel stand successfully such test or not, the duty of the court to carefully and dispassionately consider, and judicially determine, the questions presented, uninfluenced by any other consideration than to discover and pronounce the law correctly, remains the same.
The suggestion of the learned counsel as to the importance of this case and the far-reaching character of the decision rendered is fully appreciated, and was from the start. It is also fully appreciated that the result of the decision will probably be additional labor for this court, but it is not perceived why that can by any possibility change the law. Legislative enactments are to be rigidly enforced within constitutional limitations, according to the legislative will. If courts were permitted to read them so as to minimize, to .any degree, judicial labor, or to adapt them to individual notions of judges as to the best governmental policy, it would be very easy to nullify or change the written law so as to defeat the people’s will and destroy the very foundation of a government by the people. So the menace of an increase of judicial labor, and the difficulties of administering the law as we have declared it to be, does not appear, at all weighty in favor of changing the decision heretofore •rendered.
We should say in passing that the suggested difficulties in administering the law, and danger of injustice to defendants, are largely imaginary, and will gradually disappear as we adapt ourselves to the new conditions which the revival statute creates. The trial judge can easily, by proper instructions, limit the recovery in a revived action to the loss actually caused to the deceased prior to his death; and in *152the action under sec. 4255, to the pecuniary loss sustained by the surviving relatives entitled to the benefits of that provision. If the two causes of action are joined, the court can readily require the jury to mate separate findings as to. damages. As the elements entering into each are entirely distinct, it will readily be seen that there is no more danger of a double recovery under such circumstances than in any one of the numerous cases that might be suggested where two causes of action result from a single wrong. The injustice of two recoveries for distinct grievances, suggested by the learned counsel and by some courts that have taken the view pressed upon us, is not perceived. A little dispassionate reflection on the subject, it would seem, would prevent unqualified condemnation of the legislative wisdom that says, if a person be wrongfully injured, the pain and suffering and expenses to him in consequence thereof shall not be lost to his estate by the circumstance of his death from the injury before receiving satisfaction for his damages, even though the damages to his surviving relatives, to satisfy their own grievance, may be recovered.
What has been said sufficiently meets the preliminary observations and reasons given in the argument for the rehearing. We will now endeavor to take up in their order the objections to the decision, relied upon.
It will not be necessary to go over, to any great length, the subjects discussed in the former opinion. As before indicated, they have all been once considered with all the deliberation and care that should characterize the work of a tribunal of last resort, whose judgments must stand as the infallible truth, there being no power under our system by-which such judgments can be changed after the brief time for review allowed by the Code shall have expired.
Our attention is called to the rule stated in the opinion of Chief Justice Marshall in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, to the effect that, though general expressions in an opinion *153which go beyond the case may be respected, they ought not to control the judgment in a subsequent suit. That proposition is familiar, and is not liable to be forgotten by judges who have been called upon to apply it in their daily work for a series of years. The trouble with the learned counsel’s argument is that they apply the rule, as it seems, to everything in a legal opinion not a part of the final conclusion reached,— to what is judicial diotvm and even to the reasons upon which the decision is based and are essentially a part of it, when that seems necessary to dispose of authorities that are clearly opposed to their contention; and again, treat mere observation made by a judge in writing an opinion by way of illustration or argument, referring to collateral topics for that purpose, as a part of the deliberate judgment of the court, when, if so considered, they support counsel’s contention. There are few decisions of any court but that might be successfully attacked if such a method were permissible. "What is here said will be borne out, in our judgment, by what follows.
It is conceded by the learned counsel that if we were right as to what was- decided in Lehmann v. Farwell, 95 Wis. 185, the decision heretofore reached in this case rests on authority. The question there was whether a claim for a personal injury based on actionable negligence is assignable. The court decided that the question turned on whether a cause of action to enforce such a claim survives the death of the original owner; that by the common law the answer must be in the negative, but under sec. 4253, as it now stands, making all causes of action for false imprisonment, assault and battery, or other damages to the person, survivable, all bodily injuries-resulting from actionable negligence are included, and therefore the question must be answered in the affirmative. Said Mr. Justice Wihslow, the statute “includes every action the substantial cause of which is a bodily injury,” ‘"and the lan-. guage in that regard is too plain to leave any room for rules *154of construction to operate.’ To support that, the decisions of the Massachusetts court, made under a similar statute adopted in 1842, the first act of its kind in this country, and from which our own was doubtless taken, holding the same, were cited. It needs no discussion to show that the familiar rule stated by Chief Justice Marshall, with which the learned counsel prefaced his review of Lehmann v. Farwell, has no application to it whatever. The expression, that the survival statute includes every actionable personal injury, and is too plain to that effect to require construction, was not obiter,— it was not even judicial dictum. It was the very groundwork of the opinion itself, and governs this case beyond reasonable controversy, unless we are to overrule it.
It is a mistaken opinion that nothing is decided in a case except the result arrived at. All the propositions assumed by the court to be within the case, and all the questions presented and considered, and deliberately decided by the court, leading up- to the final conclusion reached, are as effectually passed upon as the ultimate questions solved. Trustees of School Dist. v. Stocker, 42 N. J. Law, 115. The judgment is authority upon all points assumed to be within the issues which the record shows the court deliberately considered and decided in reaching it. Quackenbush v. W. & M. R. Co. 71 Wis. 472; Pray v. Hegeman, 98 N. Y. 351. Nothing is obiter, strictly so called, except matters not within the questions presented — mere- statements or observations by the Judge in writing the opinion, the result of turning aside for the time to some collateral matter by way of illustration. Buchner v. C., M. & N. W. R. Co. 60 Wis. 264; Rohrbach v. Germania F. Ins. Co. 62 N. Y. 47; Michael v. Morey, 26 Md. 239; Clark v. Thomas, 60 Tenn. 419; State ex rel. Nourse v. Clarke, 3 Nev. 566; Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 137. The test of what is obiter, by means of which counsel confidently brush aside the decisions of this court on the very point at issue, and the deliberate decisions of many other *155courts on the same point or on questions essentially involved, was pressed upon our attention in Buchner v. C., M. & N. W. R. Co., supra, was there fully considered, and was rejected. A study of the opinion in that case, written by the present chief justice, is commended as the most effectual remedy for the mistaken notion, not only that a decision is not authority except upon the very point necessary to it, but that obiter is to be rejected, always, as entirely without authority. The opinion quotes the rigorous rule by which counsel test authorities fatal to their contention; then the observation of an eminent text writer, whose writings stand as authority in every country where the common law to any extent prevails, that “ it is difficult to see why, in a philosophical point of view, the opinion of the court is not as persuasive on all the points which were so involved in the cause that it was the duty of counsel to argue them, and which were deliberately decided by the court, as if the decision had hung upon but one point,” and adds: “ Such dictum, if dictum it is, should be regarded as ‘judicial dictum,’ in contradistinction to mere obiter dictmm,— that is, an expression originating with the judge alone, while passing, by the way, in writing his opinion, as an argument or illustration drawn from some collateral question.” And further adds that even such expressions are by no means to be rejected as not entitled to be regarded at all; that while they are not binding, they are not without authority; neither is their use reprehensible, as evidenced by the fact that some of the most sacred canons of the common law have their origin in the mere dicta of judges.
At this point a suggestion should be noticed, that in considering sec. 4253 we overlooked the familiar rule of “Noscitur a sociis.” Hiner v. Fond du Lac, 71 Wis. 82, where there is an intimation that such maxim may play an important part in determining the meaning of the statute under consideration, is referred to. Why the discovery of such a *156serious omission in this case, and not in Lehmann v. Farwell, 95 Wis. 185, where the statute was first considered and its meaning judicially determined, or in the multitude of cases in other courts where similar statutes were construed, in none of which was it supposed that the rule was applicable ! That is not easily comprehended. The maxim “ Nos-eitur a socUs ” is not a rule of interpretation by which the meaning of one word or designation, or that of several such, used in close connection, governs in determining the meaning of other, words or designations used in the same connection. You may know a person by the company he keeps. You may know the meaning of a term by its associates,— what precedes and what follows it. "When ? Not in every case; but when not apparent from the language itself. It is a rule of construction to be resorted to where there is use for construction, not otherwise. The court said in Lehmann v. Farwell that the statute is too' plain to admit of construction, hence no rule to that end has any application. The hitter familiar rule was evidently not in mind when it occurred that, through forgetfulness in writing the former opinion, the maxim “ Lfoseitur a soeiis ” was overlooked. To seek to apply it in determining the meaning of the statute under consideration, in view of the fact that similar statutes have existed in other states for nearly half a century, and been universally supposed to cover injuries from actionable negligence, and thereby reach a different conclusion, would be what might be called judicial recklessness.
The idea that our statute (sec. 4255) does not grant a new right of action, but continues an old one, with different beneficiaries and different rules for assessing damages, is urged as correct with such confidence that we are called upon to go over the subject anew. No attempt will be made to harmonize all the conflicting observations found in decisions elsewhere regarding the nature of Lord Campbell’s act. That cannot be done, and it is not necessary, for most of the *157conflicts will disappear as one applies judicial observations to the particular facts in regard to which they were made. We said in the former opinion that the view that the statute for the benefit of surviving relatives confers a new right of action for a grievance separate and distinct from that of the injured person, is supported by the better reasoning and the greater weight of authority. That is adhered to, and it is considered that what follows* leaves little or no room for reasonable controversy as to its soundness, if reliance can be placed upon the evident purpose of the statute or authorities elsewhere. It is suggested that the conclusion was reached by illogical reasoning based upon obiter observations in judicial decisions. We will consider that.
We said that the cause of action of the injured party, which survives, is separate and distinct from the cause of action in favor of surviving relatives under sec. 4255; that a cause of action unsatisfied at the death of the injured party, for compensation for his injuries, is a condition of the operation of such section so as to give a right of action to the survivors therein named; that the extinguishment of the primary cause of action leaves the statute with no office to perform; that in the absence of such extinguishment there are two rights or causes of action for distinct and separate losses. That was supposed to be supported by numerous authorities cited in the opinion, and it does not seem to have occurred to the courts where such decisions were rendered that the reasoning was illogical or the conclusion arrived at a non seguUur. That characterization was made of the reasoning and conclusion referred to. How one can draw from such reasoning and conclusion the idea that the premises reasoned from contemplated the existence of two causes of action before the death of the injured party, and that the idea expressed was that the satisfaction of one of such existing causes of action satisfied the other, as counsel seems to have assumed in designating the conclusion reached as a non seg-*158uitur, is not perceived. It seems perfectly clear that the idea expressed was, that before the death of the injured party there is hut one cause of action; that if that be not extinguished before such death, by the operation of sec. 4255 there may be another cause of action; that while before the death there can be but one such cause, if that survive there may be two. The learned counsel evidently forgot for the moment that the reasoning, though clothed in the language of the writer of the opinion, was based on the same premises, and proceeded by the same mental process, with language definite and clear, to the same conclusion as that in the opinion of Justice Coleridge in Blake v. Midland R. Co. 10 Eng. Law & Eq. 443; Justice Brewer in Hulbert v. Topeka, 34 Fed. Rep. 510; Justice Wilson in Needham v. G. T. R. Co. 38 Vt. 294, and many others in numerous opinions in cases-cited, and still others that will be cited in this opinion, which, on account of counsel’s labor, must be assumed not to have escaped their notice.
Our attention is again called to Read v. G. E. R. Co. L. R. 3 Q. B. 555, decided in 1868, and Griffiths v. Earl of Dudley, 9 Q. B. Div. 357, in support of the continuation of the old cause of action theory The question in both cases was, Does the satisfaction of the claim of the injured party in his lifetime leave Lord Campbell’s act still applicable to the situation created by the death of such party ? The nature of the statute otherwise, particularly its proper construction in connection with a statute preserving, for the benefit of the estate, the common-law right of action for damages to the injured person, was not thought of. What is said as to the statutory right not being new, but a right conferred in place of an old right, is much nearer pure obiter than what is called such in the argument on the motion for rehearing in reviewing decisions cited by this court as authority. In neither of the cases is Blake v. Midland R. Co., supra, decided in 1852, referred to, where the exact nature of the *159statutory action, was considered, and, in the learned opinion given by Justice Colebidge, said to be a new right and not a right by transfer or continuation of the claim of the deceased, which opinion has been referred to as' an authority in many courts and by many text writers since that time. “ The- statute does not,” said Justice Colebidge, “ transfer the right of action of the deceased to his representatives, but gives to them a totally new right on different principles.” The three cases are, really, in perfect harmony when rightly understood. On the one hand it is said Lord Campbell’s act is in the nature of a survival statute and does not confer a new right. That is true in the sense the English court doubtless understood its own language; that is, that the compensation to surviving relatives was conferred in place of that of the injured person, which, by the common law, was extinguished by death. On the other hand, it is said Lord Campbell’s act confers an entirely new right, which, too, is obviously true in the sense that it is a right of recovery by different persons, for different losses, on different principles than were known to the common law. That there is any such material variance between the two ideas as courts in some jurisdictions have discovered and assigned as a justification for holding that plain language in a legislative act, making survivable all claims based on actionable negligence, does not mean that but something else, is not perceived. Lush, J., said in Read v. G. E. R. Co., supra, that it was not the intention of the English statute to make the wrongdoer pay twice for the same injury, so the right was there spoken of as not new and independent, but a right in substitution for the lapsed right. That does not conflict with the other idea that none of the elements of damage, of the right which lapsed by common-law rules, are transferred by the statute to the beneficiaries therein named, and in that sense that the right conferred by statute is new. Therefore, the purpose of Lord Campbell’s act was *160not to mate the wrongdoer pay damages twice for the same wrong; it was to give to the surviving relatives a right on condition. That condition, in case of a survival of the right of action, which fails by the common law, exists nevertheless ; and if the original inducement for the granting of the new right be removed by preserving the old right under another statute, that does not by any means affect the situation, for a sufficient inducement is yet left to uphold the statutory right.
That we have expressed correctly the views of the English courts is abundantly borne out by numerous cases, some decided before and some after Griffiths v. Earl of Dudley, not before cited, including a very recent case passing directly on the question, which was not before us when the previous opinion was prepared and which has evidently not received the attention of respondent’s counsel. Leggott v. G. N. R. Co. (1876), 1 Q. B. Div. 599; Bradshaw v. L. & Y. R. Co. (1875), L. R. 10 C. P. 189; Barnett v. Lucas (1872), 6 Ir. R. C. L. 247; Robinson v. C. P. R. Co. [1892], App. Cas. 481; Canadian Pac. R. Co. v. Robinson, 19 C. S. C. 292; Seward v. Vera Cruz, 10 App. Cas. 59; Pym v. G. N. R. Co. 4 Best & S. 396.
In Leggott v. G. N. R. Co. the question was, Does a recovery under Lord Campbell’s act preclude a recovery for the benefit of the estate, of damages to the injured person ?— the precise question in this case. The affirmative, unless barred by a recovery under Lord Campbell’s act, was conceded for the purposes of the case, though the rule generally as to that was otherwise. The direct question left was the one indicated, namely, Does a recovery after death in one right bar a recovery in the other ? And on that the court decided in the negative. Quads', J., in deciding the case said, the two actions are entirely different things, one for the loss the estate has suffered and the other under Lord Campbell’s act, which “ enables an action to be brought in *161a case where it could not have been brought before that act, namely, when the man has suffered a personal injury- and dies in consequence. After his death, before Lord Campbell’s act, no such action could have been maintained, because the. death destroyed it. It fell with the life of the individual injured. Now Lord Campbell’s act gives an entirely new action, not an action connected with the estate of the deceased in the slightest degree, and the damages recoverable in it would be no part of the estate of the deceased. ... I therefore feel clear upon the point that these actions are not brought in the same right, and that, therefore, the finding in the one does not constitute an es-toppel in the other.”
• If the foregoing leaves doubt in the minds of the most skeptical, as to the position of the English courts, it will be removed by Robinson v. C. P. R. Co., decided by the House of Lords in 1892. That is probably the most recent expression of such courts on the subject. The case arose in Canada. The statute is similar to our sec. 4255, except it requires, as a condition of its operation, death of the injured person without having satisfied his claim. The word “ satisfied ” does not occur in our statute, but words equivalent so far as relates to the extinguishment of the claim. The Canadian act further provides that the beneficiary may bring the action direct. There is a limitation of the right of the injured person to commence an action to enforce his claim for damages, to one year after the happening of his injury. Ip. the given case the period was allowed to lapse and death then occurred; Action was then commenced to enforce the statutory liability to surviving relatives. The loss by prescription of the primary claim was urged in bar of the statutory right. The Canadian supreme court sustained that, and by special leave the cause was carried to the House of Lords where, all the members of the privy council who heard it concurring, Lords Watson, Maonag-hten, Mobeis, Hannen, *162Shand and Sie RichaRD Couch, the judgment of the lower court was reversed upon the ground that the right of action of surviving relatives, contingent on the death of the injured person without having satisfied his claim, is a new and independent right which vests on the happening of the contingency mentioned in the statute; and that such contingency is death from the negligent injury without the injured party having satisfied his claim,; that an extinguishment of such claim by prescription is not the satisfaction thereof contemplated by the act, which requires the active participation of the injured party, and is not satisfaction by mere operation of law. There was no difference of opinion between the last decision and the one reversed, except as to the scope of the word “satisfied” used in the Canadian act. Roth courts held that the statutory action was to enforce a new right. Justice Strong, in delivering the opinion of the lower court, said: “ It has been determined in England that the action under Lord Campbell’s act is not the same action as that which the deceased person would himself have had at common law if he had survived, but a new action given by statute.” Again he said: “ As I have said before, I am of the opinion that the action, being of the same nature, and indeed the same action in all respects, as that conferred by Lord Campbell’s act, it must, as an action on that statute is considered in England, be deemed to be a new action, but still a new action dependent on the condition that the action of the deceased had not, at the time of his death, been barred or extinguished.” With this we rest the subject under discussion as to the holdings of the English courts.
In support -of what was formerly said, that the great weight of authority in this country is in favor of the doctrine that there may be two independent causes of action for distinct losses for a single injury, in the circumstances presented by this case, the following additional authorities are referred to: Safford v. Drew, 3 Duer, 627; Chicago v. *163Mayor, 18 Ill. 349; Davis v. Railway, 53 Ark. 117; Whitford v. Panama R. Co. 23 N. Y. 465; Hedrick v. Ilwaco R. & N. Co. 4 Wash. 400; Vicksburg & M. R. Co. v. Phillips, 64 Miss. 693; Connors v. B., C. R. & N. R. Co. 71 Iowa, 490; Putman v. S. P. R. Co. 21 Oreg. 230; Mulchahey v. Wash. C. W. Co. 145 Mass. 281; Belding v. B. H. & Ft. P. R. Co. 3 S. Dak. 369; Hamilton v. M. L. & T. R. & S. Co. 42 La. Ann. 824. They are all to the effect that the right tinder statutes similar to our sec. 4255 is new and independent, subject only to the conditions therein named, and that if the primary cause of action survive, both may be enforced, and at the same time. Said Denio, J., in Whitford v. Panama R. Co., supra, speaking of a situation where there, was no survival statute: “At common law the right of action for damages on account of bodily injuries, which belonged to the deceased while he lived, was extinguished by his death. The statute does not profess to revive that cause of action in favor of the executor or administrator. The compensation for bodily injuries remains extinct, but a new grievance of a distinct nature, namely, the deprivation suffered by the wife or children or other relatives, of their natural support and protection, arises upon his death and is made the subject of 9 new cause of action in favor of those surviving relatives, though prosecuted in point of fact by the executor or administrator.”
In Davis v. Railway, supra, the court by Cookrill, C. J., speaking of statutes similar to our secs. 4255 and 4253, said: “ The English rule, which is commonly followed by the courts of the states whose statutes embody the provisions of Lord Campbell’s act, is that the right of action, given by the latter statute to the personal representative of one whose death has been caused by the default of another, is created by the statute and is not a continuation of the right of action which the deceased had in his lifetime, although the new right arises only by preserving the cause of action which was in the de*164ceased. II the deceased never had a cause ol action, none accrues to his representative or next of kin. The right which accrued to the deceased revives to the administrator by virtue of the statute [our sec. 4253]. The newly created right [our sec. 4255] results from, and accrues on, the death of the injured party. Both actions are prosecuted in the name of the personal representative and may proceed pari passu without a recovery in the one having the effect of barring a recovery in the other. The suits are prosecuted in different rights and the damages are given upon different principles to compensate different injuries. One is for the loss sustained by the estate and for the suffering from the personal injury in the lifetime of the decedent, the recovery of which goes to the benefit of decedent’s creditors if there are any; the other takes no account of the wrong done to the decedent, but is for the pecuniary loss to the next of ldn occasioned by the death alone. The death is the end of the period of recovery in one case and the beginning in the other. In one case the administrator sues as legal representative of the estate for what belonged to the deceased, in the other he acts as trustee for those upon whom the act confers the right of recovery for the pecuniary loss inflicted upon them.”
Further quotation from opinions would only unnecessarily prolong this opinion. Those given are in line with the other decisions cited. It is quite likely that the lapsing of the cause of action in favot of an injured party by his death, according to the rule of the common law, was the inducement for the passage of Lord Campbell’s act,— the very bottom of it; as said in Hecht v. O. & M. R. Co. 132 Ind. 507, and from that we find some judges regarding the new cause of action as a continuation of the old, and others holding that the cause of action under the statute is an entirely different cause of action for the benefit of different persons, recoverable in a different right, and including entirely different elements of damage. That the actual loss sustained by the *165surviving relatives "was ample inducement for the passage of the act for their benefit, and that, in providing for the survival of the cause of action of the injured party for the benefit of the estate, it was so deemed, is too clear from the unmistakable language used to admit of a contrary view. "We leave this branch of the subject, suggesting, in closing, that our statutes are substantially the same as those of Massachusetts, so .long back as 1842, the survival statute there having been adopted at that date as before indicated. The decisions which subsequently followed, construing such statutes, are all in accordance with the conclusion we have reached.
We proceed now to show that what the learned counsel was pleased to call loose talk and obiter in opinions of other courts cited in our former opinion, was the deliberate judicial determination of such courts, or such judicial dicta as should be regarded as authority on the subjects treated.
We referred to the language of Justice Beewee in pronouncing judgment in the United States circuit court for the district of Kansas, in Hulbert v. Topeka, 34 Fed. Rep. 510. Counsel call that obiter, and suggest that the justice’s idea was based on obiter observations of other courts. Needham v. G. T. R. Co. 38 Vt. 294; and Blake v. Midland R. Co. 10 Eng. Law & Eq. 443, were cited by Justice Beewee. As to the English decision sufficient has already been said. Reference is had to that at this point. Justice Beewee was called upon to judicially consider what the situation was under the Kansas statutes, which are similar to ours, in circumstances similar to those we have in this case. As a member of the supreme court of Kansas he had participated in a decision to the effect that if death ensue from an injury no cause of action for the benefit of the estate survives; that the right of action to the surviving relatives is exclusive. As an original proposition the learned judge clearly indicated that he deemed such decision wrong, but that it was *166binding on the federal court in a case arising in Kansas. His expressions of opinion were properly made in the case, and undoubtedly such as he felt bound to make, in order that the court might not be embarrassed by the decision rendered, in the event of a case being thereafter presented where the court would be free to decide according to its judgment of the law, unbridled by the decision of some other court. What was said should be treated with more deference than loose talk. So far as other courts are concerned, it is entitled to consideration quite equal with the Kansas decision to which it refers.
How a few words in regard to the Vermont case, Needham v. G. T. R. Co. 38 Vt. 294, which will be considered in the light of Legg v. Britton, 64 Vt. 652. What is said in the former on the subject before us, in the argument for rehearing here is called obiter and said to have been disapproved as such in the later case. True, the question of whether the right of action to surviving relatives is a new and independent right, and whether the right of the deceased may survive and under any circumstances the two rights be enforced independent of each other, was not necessarily decided in the Needham Case; yet the subject was considered, was unquestionably presented by counsel on both sides, was supposed at the time to be a question proper for determination, and was deliberately determined. As we have before shown, what was said in reaching that determination is not obiter. It is at least judicial dictum. The case has been regarded as authority by courts and text writers generally. With but few exceptions it has been given all the force of an adjudication by the court on the very point referred to. Of course it was not controlling on the Vermont court, neither would it be here, even if the case had depended on the question. It was not discredited, but rather was affirmed, in the subsequent decision in Legg v. Britton. All there said is that the language of the for*167mer decision, on the subject here discussed, was not controlling, because the question was not necessarily decided in reaching the final conclusion on the point at issue in the case. There is no intimation that the point was not deliberately passed upon, or but that what was said in regard to it was entitled to respect. The idea expressed was that the court was free to consider the subject in the subsequent case as an original question, not disregarding, however, as without authority, the early case. After reaching that conclusion the question was considered anew, and a result reached, as said in our former opinion, substantially the same as before. Chief Justice Ross, who delivered the opinion, met the contention respondent supports here, by saying, in substance, that the statutes conferred separate and distinct rights, one by survival and the other a new right dependent on conditions mentioned in the statute. “ In conferring this new right of recovery,” said the chief justice, “for the same wrongful act, the legislature could place such limitations upon it as it judged expedient. . . . The same wrongful act frequently furnishes two independent rights of recovery, as in the case of an injury to the wife, or an injury to a servant. . . .. Hence whether the damages recovered, if two actions are given, may to some trifling extent be double, or whether the same injury sometimes gives two independent legal rights of recovery, throws very little light upon the intention of the legislature in passing the act of 1849 [the survival statute]. A wrongful injury resulting in the death of the person injured may work serious loss and damage to him while living, and to his estate, and at the same time deprive his widow and next of kin of what he would have earned and saved but for the injury.” There is nothing new in the decision. It is in perfect harmony with Needham v. G. T. R. Co., which, instead of being considered overruled, should be considered as affirmed; and so it is considered by other courts that have reviewed the sub*168ject. The case is referred to by Rapallo, J., in Littlewood v. New York, 89 N. Y. 24, as being the necessary result of a situation where there is a statute reviving the cause of action of the injured person in favor of his estate, and a statute conferring a cause of action upon his surviving relatives.
A word is required in regard to Hurst v. Detroit City R'y, 84 Mich. 539, wherein it is said that the cause of action which survives is a separate thing from the new cause of action given to surviving relatives under the statute. Counsel quotes the language of Justice Long in that case, and follows with the observation that it needs no argument to-show that it is pure obiter. The miscalled obiter states one of the principal reasons given by the court for the conclusion finally reached, and is by no means obiter within the proper significance of the term, as we have before remarked. Instead of the later case of Sweetland v. C. & G. T. R. Co. (Mich.), 75 N. W. Rep. 1066, to which our attention was-earnestly invited, changing the rule of the Hurst Case, it stands as a clear affirmance of it. The two cases, together, are very much in the situation of the two Yermont cases. If the first, by itself,- is not to be regarded as a clear adjudication upon the point under discussion, it should be so-regarded in connection with the affirmance of the principle in the later case. True, Justice Loira-, Justice Gisant concurring, said that the language of his former opinion was-obiter, but it was not such within the rule stated in this opinion, and was not so considered by a majority of the Michigan court. The opinion of the court, given by Mr. Justice Geant, is to the effect that no cause of action accrued to the injured person in the absence of conscious existence after the injury; that there was no evidence warranting a finding that there was such conscious existence; hence the recovery of damages to the deceased was reversed. Justice Mont-gomeby dissented because, in his judgment, the question of *169conscious existence was for the jury on the evidence. Justice HooKER dissented because, in bis judgment, life after the' injury was all that was necessary to a survival of the-cause of action. On the whole, bow anything can be seen in the case to weaken what was said in the Hurst Case is not understood. True, the court was divided on the question, but the majority of the justices held to the doctrine that the cause of action of the injured person is not lost by bis death. That seems plain beyond reasonable controversy.
We now come to a suggestion that this court has expressly decided that in case of .death, from actionable negligence no cause of action survives. At this point the signification of the term “ obiter diet/am ” suddenly changes, as it seems. Formerly everything was included not necessary to the conclusion reached, but when Ean v. C., M. & St. P. R. Co. 95 Wis. 69, is. reached, an observation regarding the subject beyond the case,— something far less entitled to weight than those mere general expressions based on correct premises but beyond the case, covered by the maxim to which Chief Justice Marshall alluded in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, to which counsel referred in the-opening, as the test to be applied to the authorities cited by this court, a. statement made in passing regarding an outside and not even collateral topic, the purest kind of obiter and worse, because the premises upon which it was based omitted the change in the statute regarding the revival of actions, which varied the whole situation, and had not theretofore been passed upon by this court as affecting negligent injuries,— is cited to us. as the deliberate judgment of the court on the very point covered by the observation. The question was, If death happened to an employee from the negligence of a co-employee under such circumstances that, had death not ensued, he-would have had, by statute, a cause of action against the-common employer to recover damages for his injury, may surviving- relatives recover their loss under sec. 4255 ? That *170was the sole question considered and decided. Sec. 4253, as it now exists, was not thought of, nor was it in any way involved, even collaterally. In making the observation, decisions were in mind made before the change in the statute in regard to the survival of causes of action for injuries to the person. All that is so obvious, .even by a casual reading of the case, that it is not seen why it was cited to our attention as authority, especially in view of Lehmamn v. Farwell, subsequently decided, where the survival statute was fully considered and it was said that it covered every cause of action for a bodily injury based on actionable negligence, and in view of the further fact that we have heretofore said in this case that the court decided that way in the Lehmann Case, and that it rules here. There are many cases where a contention regarding what has been decided is justifiable} but when once made and considered, and the court deliberately passes judgment as to what it'before decided, that at least should set the matter at rest.
There are some references, made in the argument for a rehearing, to statutes of other states and decisions under them. That field was covered in the former opinion. It was recognized that those decisions, and some others, are in conflict with our conclusions. No reason is perceived why that can have any greater weight now than before, or why we should again consider them.
We have now referred point by point to every suggestion found in the argument in support of the motion for a rehearing, and have treated anew those considered of importance, with as much care as if the subject were before us for the first time. Notwithstanding the result reached is the same as before, the motion and this opinion upon it will add strength and stability to the judicial declaration of the law originally made. The labor of counsel for respondent has not been without good results. It has placed before us all suggestions, liable to occur to members of the profession, *171why a different result should have been reached.. The court has been enabled thereby to consider such suggestions and pass upon them as a part of this case, instead of their being left for consideration in future cases. That adds to the authority of a decision, and may rightly be considered fortunate.
To recapitulate why the motion for a rehearing should be denied, notwithstanding the reasons urged to the contrary:
(1) The statute (sec. 4253) we were called upon to construe is too plain to admit of any other construction than that which the ordinary meaning of the words suggests.
(2) The statute is not open to construction in this case, because the subject was fully covered in Lehmann v. Farwell.
(3) The suggestion that the maxim “ Foseitur a soeiis” should be applied to the statute cannot be adopted, because a rule for construction is not applicable where there is no use for construction.
(4) The contention that the illustration used in the former opinion, to make apparent the false theory drawn by some courts from the English decisions, is illogical and involved a non seqwvt/wr, is based on a misconception of the premises on which the conclusion was based.
(5) The contention that language in judicial opinions, cited in support of the decision, are obiter expressions, is based on a misconception of the cases where such opinions were given, and what is properly considered obiter in a judicial decision.
(6) The assumed conflict in English decisions as to the character of Lord Campbell’s act, is not there when they are viewed from the situations of the judges who delivered the opinions.
(T) If the conflict mentioned does exist, that does not change the situation where the legislative purpose is plain to preserve the cause of action of the injured person without prejudice to the cause of action to surviving relatives.
(8) The imagined menace of a double recovery in the sit*172uation as we find it, does not exist in fact, as the damages in one riglit are limited to the loss which accrues to the injured person before death, and the damages in the other to the pecuniary loss of surviving relatives, as before the survival statute. The two rights in no way overlap each other.
By the Court.— The motion for a rehearing is denied.