delivered the opinion of the court.
Counsel for plaintiff contend that the judgment is erroneous because the court erred in striking from the files the declaration filed October 28, 1910, and the argument is that this should not have been done for the reason that the declaration did not set up a new and different cause of action from that disclosed in the declaration filed April 22, 1910; that inasmuch as Paul Schmidt died as a result of the injuries the cause of action is the same after his death as it was before his death; and that where the cause of action is the same, amendments pertaining thereto are properly allowed.
Counsel for defendants contend (1) that the order of the court striking said declaration from the files cannot here be reviewed because no bill of exceptions was filed by plaintiff, although there is a recital in the clerk’s transcript that plaintiff excepted to the order; and (2) that the court did not err in striking said declaration from the files because the suit, as originally commenced, was a common law action to recover damages for personal injuries, and subsequently Schmidt died as a result of those injuries, and the action could not afterwards be changed into a statutory action for the benefit of the widow and next of kin of Schmidt, the cause or right of which statutory action was not in existence at the time of the beginning of the suit.
From the view we take of the second of the above contentions of counsel for the defendants it will be unnecessary for us to pass upon the first.
“One who suffers an injury to his person as a consequence of the wrongful or negligent act of another has a right of action for the damages resulting from such injury without the aid of any statute but by a right which existed at common law. His action is for the personal injury, and he may recover for pain and suffering, physical and mental, for expenses of medical treatment and attendance, and permanent effects upon his person reasonably certain to result.” (Prouty v. City of Chicago, 250 Ill. 222, 226.) “The common law rule was, that actions merely personal, arising ex delicto, died with the person, and did not survive to the representatives.” (Holton v. Daly, 106 Ill. 131, 136; Ohnesorge v. Chicago City Ry. Co., 259 Ill. 424, 429.) But our General Assembly passed an act on February 12,1853 (sections 1, 2, ch. 70, Rev. St. J. & A. 6184, 6185), entitled “An act requiring compensation for causing death by wrongful act, neglect or default,” which provided, in substance, that whenever the death of a person shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect or default, and the act, neglect or default is such as would, if death had not ensued, have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover damages in respect thereof, the person or company or corporation which would have been liable if death had not ensued shall be liable to an action for damages resulting to the widow and next of kin from his death. And in the act in regard to the administration of estates, passed in 3872, it was provided by our General Assembly (section 123, eh. 3, J. & A. 172) that: “In addition to the actions which survive "by the common law, the following shall also survive: Actions of replevin, actions to recover damages for an injury to the person (except slander and libel),” etc.
It has been held that “prior to the Survival act of 1872 it was the law of this State that an action for damages for personal injury abated with the death of the injured party in all cases where the death was not the result of the injury”; (Ohnesorge v. Chicago City Ry. Co., supra) and that since the passage of said Survival act, if the injured person “dies from some other cause than the injury the action for the injury to his person survives to his personal representative, who may recover damages for the personal injury.” (Prouty v. City of Chicago, supra; Holton v. Daly, supra; Chicago & E. I. R. Co. v. O’Connor, 119 Ill. 586, 594.)
It appears from the original declaration of Paul Schmidt in this case, filed April 22,1910, that he sought to recover damages from the defendants for injuries received by him on March 3,1910, and, therefore, when on June 16,1910, his administrator came into court and suggested his death, it was proper for the court to enter the order substituting said administrator as party plaintiff. (Section 10, ch. 1, Eev. St. J. &.A. 10.) It did not then appear of record whether Schmidt had died from the effects of the injury received on March 3, 1910, or from some other cause. "When, however, said administrator filed, on October 28, 1910, a declaration, in which it was stated that “plaintiff’s intestate died as a result of his said injuries as aforesaid,” and it appeared from the allegations of the declaration that the administrator sought to recover, for the ■exclusive benefit of the widow and next of kin of Schmidt, compensation for the pecuniary injuries sustained by said widow and next of kin resulting from the death of Schmidt, a new and different cause of action from that originally prosecuted, and one which had. arisen since the commencement of the suit, was, in our opinion, disclosed.
In the Prouty case, supra, it was decided that the right of action given by the statute of 1853 to the administrator of a person whose death has resulted from the wrongful act or neglect of another, to recover for the pecuniary loss to the widow and next of kin, is not an action for a personal injury. In the opinion of the Court (250 Ill. p. 127) it is said (italics ours):
“If an injured person survives and brings a suit for the personal injury and afterwards dies from its effects the action does not survive but abates, and a different right of action is substituted based upon a statute. That is the right of personal representatives of a deceased person to bring a suit and recover the pecuniary injuries to the widow and next of kin occasioned by his death, and that right exists in this State by virtue of the act of 1853. * * * We are asked to say that a suit of that kind is the same as a suit by a living person for damages sustained on account of an injury to his person, but it seems to us that it would require a perversion and change of language to reach such a conclusion.”
In our opinion, one of the essential elements of the cause of action as set out in the declaration filed in this case on October 28,1910, was the allegation of the death of plaintiff’s intestate “as a result of his said injuries received as aforesaid,” and it therein appeared that the death occurred on May 30, 1910,—nearly two months after the suit was commenced. “It is a fundamental principle that all pleadings in a suit must primarily relate to the time when the action was commenced and must be based on facts and causes of action as they existed then” (31 Cyc. 391). In Langguth v. Village of Glencoe, 253 Ill. 505, 509, it is said: “If the notices required by statute constitute one of the elements of the plaintiff’s cause of action, * * * that element must exist at the time the action is brought, as the plaintiff clearly cannot recover upon a cause of action one element of which * * * has been brought into existence since the suit was commenced * * *.”
In the case of Wetherell v. Chicago City R. Co., 104 Ill. App. 357, Eliza A. Pag’e brought suit to recover-damages for injuries sustained by her. 'Subsequently her death was suggested and the executors of her estate were substituted as plaintiffs. No other than mere verbal changes were made in the original declaration. Upon the trial, at the close of all the evidence, the jury were directed to return a verdict for the defendant, and from the judgment entered upon this verdict the executors appealed. The Appellate Court reversed the judgment on the ground that the trial court should have submitted the case to the jury upon the merits and also upon the cause of death, and in its opinion said (p. 361, italics ours):
“When the injured party dies, not from or as a direct result of the injuries, the right of action continues in his representative for the benefit of his estate generally. # * * However, when the injured party dies from the injuries, an action arises in favor of his representative, which requires a new suit, for the exclusive benefit of his widow and next of kin.”
In the case of Thomas v. Star & Crescent Milling Co., 104 Ill. App. 110, John C. Thomas brought suit to recover damages for injuries sustained by him on account of the alleged negligence of the milling company. After a trial resulting in a judgment for Thomas, which judgment was on appeal reversed and the cause remanded, Thomas died and his administratrix was substituted as plaintiff. Subsequently, the administratrix filed an amended declaration, which contained the identical counts filed by Thomas during his lifetime but claimed damages to his widow and next of kin for his injuries, instead of for his pain and suffering as in his original declaration. Upon the trial the Court instructed the jury to find for the defendant and judgment was entered upon that verdict, which was affirmed by the Appellate Court. In the opinion of the Court it is said (p. 113, italics ours):
“It is manifest that John C. Thomas had at no time the cause of action alleged in the declaration filed by appellant. His cause of action was for injuries sustained by and damage accruing to him; he might have recovered for pain and suffering by him endured; whatever had been recovered by him would have belonged to him and been assets that might have been reached by his creditors. His administratrix, in the declaration filed by her, claims only for damages accruing to his widow and next of kin as a result of his death. Such cause of action- had no existence until he died. * * * Such actions cannot be joined in one suit. The cause of action in one is not that of the other. * * * Appellant should not, upon her application, have been substituted as plaintiff and thereafter allowed to prosecute in that suit a cause of action which had no existence, neither accrued nor came into being, until nearly four years after that suit was begun. ’ ’
In the Ohnesorge case, supra, in speaking of the act of February, 1853, our Supreme Court said (259 111. p. 430, italics ours): “This statute was not a survival statute. It did not continue to the personal representative the cause of action that the injured party had under the common law, but it created a new and independent cause of action never before that time recognized as existing in this State. * * * It was not designed by the legislature to give damages for any injury received by the deceased, but to create a cause of action in the name of the administrator for the pecuniary loss which the widow and next of kin may have sustained by reason of the death of the injured person.” And the Court, in speaking of the Survival Act of 1872, further said:
“It was held in Holton v. Daly, supra, that the action only survived in cases where death was from some cause other than the injury. If death resulted from the injury the only action that could be maintained was by the personal representative under the Injuries statute of 1853. The entire separation of the two eauses of action and the independence of each of the other may be illustrated by supposing that a person receives an injury, for which suit is brought by him, a recovery had and judgment satisfied. Afterwards the injured party dies from the effect of the injury. The recovery by the deceased, in his lifetime, for the injury sustained by him, under a common law action, would not bar a suit by his personal representative for the benefit of the widow and next of kin under the statute of 1853. (Holton v. Daly, supra.) ”
We have seen fit to refer to the above decisions of the reviewing courts of this State for the reason that counsel seeks to support his contention (viz.: that the declaration filed October 28,1910, did not set up a new and different cause of action from that disclosed in the declaration filed by the deceased in his lifetime) by several decisions of our Supreme Court, wherein it has been held that the cause of action, under the Act of February, 1853, “is plainly the wrongful act, neglect or default causing death, and not merely the death itself.” The cases referred to are those of Crane v. Chicago & W. I. R. Co., 233 Ill. 259; Mooney v. City of Chicago, 239 Ill. 414; Devine v. Heal’y, 241 Ill. 34, and Holton v. Daly, supra. But in none of these cases was it held that the death was not an essential element of the right of action given by the Act of 1853.
Counsel for plaintiff also argue that the declaration of October 28, 1910, was properly filed in this case because of the provision of our Practice Act relative to amendments. Section 39 thereof (J. & A. )[ 8576) provides that “amendments may be allowed on such terms as are just and reasonable, * * * in any matter either of form or substance, in any process, pleading or proceeding which may enable the plaintiff to sustain the action for the claim for which it was intended to he brought * * It seems clear to us that the declaration of October 28, 1910, in no way tended to sustain the action for the claim for which the suit was originally brought.
Our conclusion is that the court did not err in striking said declaration from the files, and, inasmuch as plaintiff’s attorney stated that he would not file any further declaration but elected to stand upon said declaration, the entry of the judgment in favor of the original defendants was proper. Accordingly, the judgment of the Superior Court will be affirmed.
Affirmed.