State Ex Rel. Kansas City Stock Yards Co. of Maine v. Clark

BARDGETT, Judge

(dissenting).

I respectfully dissent. This is prohibition and was filed here to prevent respondent circuit judge from proceeding with the trial of a wrongful death action. The death action was instituted by a widow and three minor children for damages resulting from the death of Roy Ruiz, the husband of the widow and father of the minor children, against relator Kansas City Stock Yards Company of Maine (Stockyards). Stockyards was the employer of Roy Ruiz who was killed while working for Stockyards on June 12, 1970. In addition to the widow and minor children, deceased was survived by his mother and father.

In due course, the widow filed a claim under the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law against Stockyards. Stockyards denied it had elected to come under the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law and also denied that it was engaged in one of the hazardous employments listed in the act which is mandatorily covered by that act. Hearings were held in March and May 1971, and on June 8, 1971, the hearing examiner found that Stockyards had not elected to come under the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law and that Stockyards’ business was not one of those which is mandatorily covered as hazardous and, on that basis *150alone, denied the claim. Claimant filed for review of the examiner’s determination to the director of the division of workmen’s compensation. On August 12, 1971, the director affirmed the examiner’s determination denying the claim. By this time more than one year had passed since the death of Roy Ruiz.'

On May 25, 1972, the widow and minor children filed their suit for wrongful death in the circuit court of Jackson County, Missouri, against Stockyards. This, of course, was more than one year after the death of Roy Ruiz but was within two years of that death.

Stockyards contends that the widow and minor children cannot maintain the wrongful death claim under the Missouri wrongful death statute, sec. 537.080, because, in addition to a widow and minor children, deceased was survived by his mother and father and therefore the widow and minor children had only one year to institute suit.

In the circuit court action for wrongful death, Stockyards stipulated in stipulation # 10 that the parents of the deceased “received no money or support of any kind from Roy Ruiz between 1945 and June 12, 1970 [date of deceased’s death]” and in stipulation # 11 stipulated that the deceased’s parents “sustained no pecuniary loss as a result of the death of Roy Ruiz . . . .” The parties also stipulated that the widow filed a claim for workmen’s compensation against Stockyards in accordance with the Workmen’s Compensation law of Kansas on the basis that the death arose out of the course of Roy Ruiz’s employment with Stockyards; that hearings were held thereon; that on June 10, 1971, the examiner denied the claim; that claimant filed her request for director’s review and on August 9, 1971, the director sustained the denial of the compensation claim.

As noted supra, the claim was not denied on its merits but on the grounds that Stockyards had not accepted the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law and that the business of Stockyards was not hazardous as defined in the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law and, therefore the Kansas Workmen’s Compensation law was not mandato-rily applicable.

The principal opinion does not say in so many words that the Missouri wrongful death act must be strictly construed because it created a right of action nonexistent at common law, yet, that is the theory that pervades many of the earlier cases cited therein. Although at common law there was no right of action denominated a wrongful death action, I am somewhat impressed by the fact that in 1853, two years before the first wrongful death statute was enacted in Missouri, this court in James v. Christy, 18 Mo. 162 (1853), upheld the right of a father to sue for the loss of services of his fifteen-year-old son who was negligently killed by another. That case came here on the question of whether the father’s cause of action survived to the father’s personal representative or died with the father. This court held, 18 Mo. at 164:

By our law, the father has a property in the services of his son during his minority, and whilst he is under his guardianship. If, by the misconduct of another, he is deprived of these services, or the son is disabled from performing them, the law awards him a compensation in damages. The measure of damages, in such cases, is governed by the circumstances, which will be weighed by the jury. This controversy involves the construction of the twenty-fifth section of the second article of the act concerning executors and administrators. That section formerly underwent a discussion in this court, in the case of Higgins v. Breen, 9 Mo.Rep. 497. That case settles the principles which will govern this. It was there held, that the statute extends to all acts by which personal property is lessened in value. Here, the father was entirely deprived of all property in his son’s services. The recovery will be limited to the actual value of the services, as they may be ascertained by a jury. The administrator will not be entitled to any remuneration for the loss of the society or comforts afforded by a child to his parent. Damages of this character died with the par*151ent, and Ms estate is entitled to compensation, only so far as it has been lessened by the loss of the son’s services. The father was no longer entitled to those services than during his life. Had the son been alive, on the death of his father, his services would not have belonged to his estate, but would have been due to the individual who succeeded him in the relation of parent, or would have belonged to himself.
The other judges content, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.

Now I cite the James v. Christy case in order to show that the supreme court of this state was cognizant of the loss to a parent occasioned by the death of his minor son and, as is seen from the quotation supra, the father was in 1853 allowed to recover for at least the same items of loss that the subsequently enacted wrongful death statute allowed. And so, James v. Christy, although not called a wrongful death action, was an action by which the father could recover what is now compensatory wrongful death damages. Additionally, it might be noted that the damages to the father in James v. Christy included loss of society and comfort and there was no limitation on the amount. Although courts of this and other states have repetitively said there was no action for wrongful death prior to the enactment of death damage statutes, the fact is that in Missouri there was a cause of action available, at least to the parent when the minor child was negligently killed, for loss of services during minority and the other damages spoken of in James v. Christy, supra.

What is also rather striking about the opinion in James v. Christy, supra, is that it simply states the situation as it existed in and prior to 1853. In other words, here were judges of this court who had practiced law in Missouri and by their experience knew what was going on at that time simply reciting that this type of suit was then being entertained in courts of this state. I can hardly believe that the judges of this court would have acknowledged the existence of such a cause of action unless it did actually exist.

It may be speculative to guess at what the courts would have held with respect to the right to sue for pecuniary losses occasioned by the death of a parent or spouse had wrongful death statutes not been enacted, but it seems clear that by 1853 this state was well on the way to allowing suits for such damages. However, courts of this state were relieved of the task of deciding those questions because two years later in 1855 the legislature enacted a wrongful death statute which, in effect, mooted the question, and thereafter courts could adjudicate those matters under statutory law.

In some instances where the legislature did not specifically grant a right to sue where none existed at common law this court has held the right exists. In Novak v. Kansas City Transit, Inc., 365 S.W.2d 539 (Mo. banc 1963), this court held a married woman had a course of action for loss of her husband’s services due to injury to the husband and overruled prior decisions to the contrary. In R_ v. R_, 431 S.W.2d 152 (Mo.1968), the court held that, although no cause of action existed at common law by an illegitimate child to enforce support from a putative father, such a right must be recognized under the equal protection clause of Amendment Fourteen of the United States Constitution.

In 1917 the general assembly amended sec. 1.010, RSMo 1909, which relates to the common law of England being in force in this state by adding the following, “but no act of the general assembly or law of this state shall be held to be invalid, or limited in its scope or effect by the courts of this state, for the reason that it is in derogation of, or in conflict with, the common law, or with such statutes or acts of parliament; but all acts of the general assembly, or laws, shall be liberally construed, so as to effectuate the true intent and meaning thereof.” In Almcrantz v. Carney, 490 S.W.2d 59, 61 (Mo.1973), the principal opinion held sec. 1.010, as amended, applicable to a construction of sec. 537.080, RSMo 1969 (wrongful death statute) and held that *152where no parent survived the deceased the plaintiff widow had two years within which to sue. See also Montemayor v. Harvey, 490 S.W.2d 61 (Mo.1973).

There is no specific provision in 537.080 which says that if there is no mother or father surviving then the widow or minor children have two years to sue nor that the children after two years can join in the widow’s action begun before the two-year statute expired, but the court held this to be proper in Almcrantz and Montemayor and earlier cases. I agree with these decisions because they give effect to the true intent and meaning of our wrongful death statute which, in my opinion, is that these laws were principally intended to provide a remedy for those persons who naturally suffer the greatest loss by the death of another. Those persons are, in my opinion, the widow and minor children of the man who is killed.

In the instant case, the widow and children seek to maintain this action and they did sue prior to the expiration of the two-year statute, sec. 537.100. There has been no effort by the surviving parents of the deceased to sue or intervene in the pending circuit court case and the two years have expired. Thus, we are not here confronted with a contest as between the widow and minor children on the one hand and the surviving parents on the other as to whom shall be allowed to maintain the action. That issue can be met when it is presented but it is not presented in this case.

In Almcrantz and Montemayor, I filed concurring opinions in which I stated that, in my opinion, the two-year statute of limitations is the only time limitation available to a defendant, and the priority of the right to sue as set forth in 537.080 is not available to a defendant and does not shorten the two-year statute. Sec. 537.100, RSMo 1969.

The instant case, however, does not require that those views be adopted in order to allow the action to be maintained by the widow and minor children. That specific issue would arise only where there was a contest as between beneficiaries with respect to who can maintain the action and that issue is not in this case.

Insofar as Stockyards is concerned, it is exposed to no more liability in this case than if the parents of the deceased did not survive him and in such circumstances, under the prior decisions, the widow and minor children had two years to sue.

Can it reasonably be said that the legislature intended to absolve a defendant from liability for wrongful death to the surviving widow and minor children merely because a parent of the deceased survived him even though the parent declined to sue and, by the parents’ own admission, sustained no pecuniary loss?

I do not believe such a holding to .be in accord with sec. 1.010 which requires the laws to be liberally construed so as to effectuate the true intent and meaning thereof and particularly when 1.010 specifically proscribes against a court limiting the scope or effect of a statute because the statute is in derogation of the common law. Where, as here, the surviving parents have not sued and have declared that no pecuniary loss was sustained, I believe the court should consider the case the same as one where the parents did not survive the deceased and allow the widow and children the full two years in which to sue rather than to provide the defendant with a windfall derived from a technical construction of the statute which in effect “throws the baby out with the bathwater.”

The principal opinion is premised on prior holdings of this court that the cause of action for wrongful death did not exist at common law; that the statute created the right and therefore the right to sue was conditioned upon the recipient exercising that right upon the conditions and within the period provided for in the statute granting the right; and that the conditions set forth in the statute with respect to the widow having only one year to sue if the deceased was survived by a parent is not merely a limitation or bar to the remedy of the wife but is a bar to the right itself.

The underpinning for the decisions of the courts of this country which have held that *153there was generally no cause of action for wrongful death at common law is the opinion of Lord Ellenborough in Baker v. Bolton, 1 Camp. 493, 170 Eng.Rep. 1033 (1808), and its progeny.

Lord Ellenborough stated, “In a civil court, the death of a human being could not be complained of as an injury . . . .” (Emphasis mine.) That statement may have been technically correct but, it so, it was only a half truth. The other half is that compensation for death was paid in conjunction with or in substitution for a criminal proceeding. In any event, it was obtainable under the general common law. See “The Genesis of Wrongful Death”, 17 Stanford L.Rev. 1043 (1965). This concept was carried over into the colonies. In the Court of Assistants of Massachusetts Bay Colony, one Foster was charged in 1675 with “accidentally discharging gun[s] at foules on ye neck thereby wounding Samuel Fflacks son so as he djed.” It was adjudged that he should pay the father of the boy ten pounds. 1 Mass.Ct.Assts. 54-55; 17 Stanford L.Rev., 1063. After reviewing many early cases in which money was awarded to the deceased’s family, Professor Malone, the author of “The Genesis of Wrongful Death”, concluded. “In conclusion, the writer has discovered no observation in colonial statutes or decisions lending any support to a belief that a death claim would have been denied by our colonial ancestors.” 17 Stanford L.Rev. 1065.

When one considers the historical development of death claims under the common law and colonial practice, in my opinion, one cannot help but conclude that the origin of the death damage claim is firmly rooted in the common law and is not merely of statutory origin.

The first decision in the United States to hold there was no action for wrongful death at common law was Carey v. Berkshire R. R. Co., 55 Mass. 475 (1848). It relied totally on Baker v. Bolton, supra, to support that conclusion.

In Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc., 398 U.S. 375, 90 S.Ct. 1772, 26 L.Ed.2d 339 (1970), a unanimous United States Supreme Court overruled The Harrisburg, 119 U.S. 199, 7 S.Ct. 140, 30 L.Ed. 358 (1886). The Harrisburg held that there was no common law action for wrongful death and, interestingly, our case of James v. Christy, supra, was cited as being one of the cases in common-law courts which was against that rule. The Harrisburg held that the state wrongful death statute created the right of action and the time within which the suit must be brought operates as a limitation on the statutorily created liability itself and not on the remedy alone. Although Harrisburg discussed the maritime law, as the death there occurred in a ship collision off the coast of Pennsylvania and Massachusetts, the court based its decision on common law holding that the common law as applied on the land was also applicable to the sea.

As stated, The Harrisburg was overruled by Moragne. Moragne involved the death of a longshoreman while aboard a ship in the navigable waters within the state of Florida. The maritime law provided no recovery for wrongful death within a state’s territorial waters and the Florida court held that the Florida wrongful death act did not allow recovery for unseaworthiness as that concept is understood in maritime law — the result being that there was no statutory grant of right for the maintenance of the action for death damages. The United States Supreme Court in Moragne reviewed the history of actions for death. At 398 U.S. 384-385, 90 S.Ct. 1779, the court stated:

The historical justification marshaled for the rule in England never existed in this country. In limited instances American law did adopt a vestige of the felony-merger doctrine, to the effect that a civil action was delayed until after the criminal trial. However, in this country the felony punishment did not include forfeiture of property; therefore, there was nothing, even in those limited instances, to bar a subsequent civil suit. E. g., Grosso v. Delaware, Lackawanna & West. R. Co., 50 N.J.L. 317, 319-320, 13 A. 233, 234 (1888); Hyatt v. Adams, 16 Mich. 180, 185-188 (1867); see W. Prosser, Law of *154Torts 8, 920-924 (3d ed. 1964). Nevertheless, despite some early cases in which the rule was rejected as “incapable of vindication,” e. g., Sullivan v. Union Pac. R. Co., 23 Fed.Cas. pp. 368, 371 (No. 13,599) (C.C.Neb.1874); Shields v. Yonge, 15 Ga. 349 (1854); cf. Cross v. Guthery, 2 Root 90, 92 (Conn.1794), American courts generally adopted the English rule as the common law of this country as well. Throughout the period of this adoption, culminating in this Court’s decision in Brame [Insurance Co. v. Brame, 95 U.S. 754, 24 L.Ed. 580 (1878)], the courts failed to produce any satisfactory justification for applying the rule in this country.

The court approvingly quoted Mr. Justice Holmes, who, speaking in dissent in Panama R. Co. v. Rock, 266 U.S. 209, 45 S.Ct. 58, 69 L.Ed. 250, said (398 U.S. 391, 90 S.Ct.):

(I)t seems to me that courts in dealing with statutes sometimes have been too slow to recognize that statutes even when in terms covering only particular cases may imply a policy different from that of the common law, and therefore [the courts] may exclude a reference to the common law for the purpose of limiting their scope. Johnson v. United States [5 Cir.], 163 F. 30, 32. Without going into the reasons for the notion that an action (other than an appeal) does not lie for causing the death of a human being, it is enough to say that they have disappeared. The policy that forbade such an action, if it was more profound than the absence of a remedy when a man’s body was hanged and his goods confiscated for the felony, has been shown not to be the policy of present law by statutes of the United States and of most if not all of the States.1 [Emphasis mine.]

The court quoted Dean Pound at 398 U.S. 391-92, 90 S.Ct. “Today we should be thinking of the death statutes as part of the general law”, and further stated at 393, 90 S.Ct. at 1783, “However, it is sufficient at this point to conclude, as Mr. Justice Holmes did 45 years ago, that the work of the legislatures has made the allowance of recovery for wrongful death the general rule of American law, and its denial the exception.”

On the heels of Moragne, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decided Gaudette v. Webb, 362 Mass. 60, 284 N.E.2d 222 (1972), and, in light of Moragne, overruled its earlier decision in Carey v. Berkshire, *155supra, which, as indicated, was the first case in the United States which followed Baker v. Bolton, supra. In Gaudette, one Joseph Gaudette was killed in an automobile collision on April 15, 1967, and left surviving a widow and minor children. His widow was appointed administratrix of his estate on March 4, 1970. The wrongful death action was filed March 6, 1970. The Massachusetts wrongful death statute of limitations expired on April 15, 1969. If the provisions of the Massachusetts tolling statute with respect to minors applied, then the minors could maintain the action even though the two-year statute had expired. The court noted that Massachusetts “has long subscribed to the rule that there is no common law right to civil recovery for death, and that any right to such recovery is solely a creation of the statutes. As such, the period of limitation appearing in our wrongful death statute has been held to be ‘a limitation upon the right as well as upon the remedy, and the right was lost when [the period of limitation] expired.’ ”

The Massachusetts court then overruled Carey v. Berkshire, supra, and the other cases holding there was no common law cause of action for wrongful death and quoted extensively from Moragne, saying at 229:

Based upon its view that recovery for wrongful death had now become a part of our common law, the court in the Moragne case held that there was a common law right to recovery for wrongful death under general maritime law. The court’s decision was founded in large part upon the general prevalence of nonmaritime wrongful death statutes, and it is thus applicable with equal force to nonmari-time actions for wrongful death.
Upon consideration of the Moragne decision and the sound reasoning upon which it is based, we are convinced that the law in this Commonwealth has also evolved to the point where it may now be held that the right to recovery for wrongful death is of common law origin, and we so hold. To the extent that Carey v. Berkshire R. R., 1 Cush. 475, and any other prior decisions of this court conflict with our present holding, those decisions are no longer to be followed.
Consequently, our wrongful death statutes will no longer be regarded as “creating the right” to recovery for wrongful death. They will be viewed rather as: ... (d) requiring that the action be commenced within the specified period of time, as a limitation upon the remedy and not upon the right. We further hold that statutes limiting the period for bringing actions for death are to be construed in the same manner as the limitations contained in G.L. c. 260, the general statute of limitations, and that in appropriate cases they may be tolled by the various provisions of G.L. c. 260. [Emphasis mine.]

Gaudette did not allow the widow to maintain the action because the two-year statute of limitations had expired prior to suit, but upon its holding that the right to recover for wrongful death was a common law origin the court treated the wrongful statute as one of general law which allowed the general tolling statutes to apply and resulted in the statute of limitations as to wrongful death actions to be tolled as any other limitation statute is tolled. This permitted the minor children to maintain the action even though instituted more than two years after their father’s death.

The significance of Moragne and Gaudette is that, perhaps for the first time, courts of this country have fully recognized that there was a common law origin for death damage recovery, however crude it may have been; that the combined effect of wrongful death statutes having been enacted in all of the states and by the Congress of the United States is to establish beyond a doubt that it is and has been the policy in this country to allow such actions to a point where, as stated in Moragne, the courts “ ‘may exclude a reference to the common law for the purpose of limiting their scope.’” 398 U.S., at 391, 90 S.Ct. at 1782.

I believe the purpose of the 1917 amendment to sec. 1.010 noted supra was to tell *156the courts of this state that they should “exclude a reference to the common law for the purpose of limiting their scope.” That is really what 1.010 means when it states that “ .. .no act of the general assembly . . . shall be . limited in its scope or effect by the courts of this state, for the reason that it is in derogation of, or in conflict with, the common law . .” (Emphasis mine.)

In my opinion, it is time for this court to recognize that compensation for wrongful death, in some form, existed at common law and, therefore, such actions are of common law, and not exclusively statutory, origin.

Whether the court recognizes that compensation for death existed at common law or gives effect to sec. 1.010, as amended 1917, so as not to limit the scope of our wrongful death statutes because of alleged conflict with the common law the same result obtains. That result is the two-year statute of limitations found in sec. 537.100, RSMo 1969, becomes the only limitation period which a defendant can interpose so as to bar the remedy. This would, in my opinion, allow the wrongful death statute to be afforded its true intent and purpose and permit the instant widow and minor children to have what the law allows — a cause of action for the damages resulting from the death of the husband and father.

In the instant case there is, in my opinion, another sound reason to allow the action to proceed. Sec. 537.100, RSMo 1969, provides in part, “that if any such action [wrongful death] shall have been commenced within the time prescribed in this section, and the plaintiff therein take or suffer a nonsuit . such plaintiff may commence a new action from time to time within one year after such nonsuit suffered or such judgment arrested or reversed; . . . .”

If there were no workmen’s compensation law, the instant widow and children could have proceeded to a verdict in a wrongful death action and, in this case, the action would have been against Stockyards, the same defendant against whom the compensation claim was filed for the same wrong— death of Roy Ruiz.

Claims under the workmen’s compensation law have been held to constitute a complete substitute for the common law remedies. Glick v. Ballentine Produce, Incorporated, 396 S.W.2d 609 (Mo.1965), appeal dismissed 385 U.S. 5, 87 S.Ct. 44, 17 L.Ed.2d 5; Sheets v. Hill Brothers Distributors, Inc., 379 S.W.2d 514 (Mo.1964).

This being so, then the claim filed under the workmen’s compensation law should be considered as the action referred to in sec. 537.100, RSMo 1969, because it is a complete substitute for the action (wrongful death) provided for therein. “Substitute” simply means “put in place of”. Webster’s Third International New Dictionary, p. 2280. The workmen’s compensation law put the claim under that act in the place of the claim for wrongful death under 537.080, RSMo 1969.

Here the claim was filed under the workmen’s compensation law. The claimants could not know whether they would prevail or not until the decision on that claim was handed down. If claimants prevailed then they would have no cause of action in the courts for wrongful death. The award was for Stockyards but not on the merits. It was held that Stockyards had not accepted the workmen’s compensation act and that its business was not of the hazardous type mandating acceptance but it took over a year for this to be determined.

Had the widow filed a suit for wrongful death initially and if in that court proceeding it was .determined the deceased was an employee and defendant an employer and subject to the .workmen’s compensation law, and for that reason was nonsuited, the time for filing the claim for workmen’s compensation under 287.430 would have been tolled and the widow would have had one additional year from the ultimate determination of the court action to file the workmen’s compensation claim. Sec. 287.440, RSMo 1969.

When this section, 287.440, is considered in pari materia with 537.100, it seems clear that the legislature has established a policy to toll the statute of limitations during that period when the same basic claim is pending *157in another forum. This, I believe, provides substantial support for holding that the terminology “such action” appearing in 537.100 includes within its scope the substituted claim for death benefits under the workmen’s compensation law.

Because the compensation claim involved the same parties as the wrongful death action involves, and because the event giving use to both claims is the same (death of Roy Ruiz), and because the compensation claim is a substitute for the wrongful death suit against that same defendant, I believe the provisions of sec. 537.100 allowed the widow and minor children to institute the instant action within one year after they were “nonsuited” on the workmen’s compensation claim.

The fact that the tolling statute was not pleaded is not, in my opinion, of any significant moment. In Lynch v. St. Louis Public Service Co., 261 S.W.2d 521 (Mo.App.1953), the administratrix of the deceased’s estate filed suit for wrongful death but did not plead “the necessary elements of dependency and pecuniary loss”. After verdict and judgment for plaintiff, defendant appealed. The court held the petition jurisdictionally defective and reversed because of the insufficiency of the petition but held that “since the petition may be amended to bring it within the statute relied upon the case should be remanded.”

The same is true in the instant case. If pleading the tolling statute is necessary to make the petition sufficient, then leave to do so should be granted.

The instant wrongful death case was filed within one year after the workmen’s compensation claim was terminated by a decision not on the merits of the action and therefore should be allowed to proceed. Sec. 537.100, RSMo 1969.

For the foregoing reasons I would quash our preliminary rule in prohibition and therefore I dissent.

, The “appeal” referred to was not an appeal as we know it today. “The criminal appeal was a criminal proceeding brought by a private person, and was for many years more common than indictment as a means of punishing homicide. Though a successful appeal would not produce a monetary recovery, the threat of one served as an informal substitute for a civil suit for damages. Over the years, indictment became more common, and the criminal appeal was abolished by statute in 1819. 59 Geo. 3, c. 46. See Holdsworth, The Origin of the Rule in Baker v. Bolton, 32 L.Q.Rev. 431, 435 (1916); Admiralty Commissioners v. S. S. Amerika, [1917] A.C., at 58-59.” 398 U.S. 389, 90 S.Ct. 1782 footnote 7. As stated, appeal as a method of obtaining compensation for death existed at common law and was not done away with until abolished by statute in 1819. 59 Geo. 3, c. 46. The “appeal of murder”, the “wer and wite”, and “the compromise” were methods whereby the family of the deceased obtained compensation for the death at common law.

COMPROMISE: The compromise produced the same general result as an action for damages. Woodbine, The Origins of the Action of Trespass, 33 Yale L.J. 799, 803 (1924).

WER: “In the old days of wer and bot the person who slew another, even though it was by misadventure or in self-defence, had been liable to pay the statutory sums to the deceased’s kin.” 3 Holdsworth, A History of English Law, 257-58 (1909).

WITE: “The vengeance of the members of the deceased’s clan was bought off by an award of money, the wer (or capitis oestimatio), the amount of which was fixed in terms of the status or rank of the deceased and which was distributed in definite proportions to his paternal and maternal kin. In the same proceeding there was exacted of the wrongdoer the wite, which was a reparation to the King or overlord for the breach of his peace or mund.” Malone, The Genesis of Wrongful Death, 17 Stanford L.Rev. 1043, 1055 (July 1965).

APPEAL: The appeal of murdrum was probably used to exact monetary payment from the accused. 2 Holdsworth, A History of English Law 362-64 (3d. ed. 1923); Woodbine, The Origins of the Action of Trespass, 33 Yale L.J. 799, 803-06 (1924).