Huse v. Brown

The opinion of the Court was read in the ensuing September term in York, as drawn up by

Mellen C. J.

Though the present action was. commenced within one year next after the defendant assumed the trust of executor, and though he made a fender of the amount of the demand sued and brought the same into court for the plaintiff within said year, still by the terms of the Stat. 1821, ch. 52, sec. 18, the action was properly commenced and the tender and deposit of the money in court were no bar to the action, if the demand was such as would not be affected by the insolvency of the estate of the testator. Our enquiry then is, whether the demand is of that character.

In the Stat, 1821, ch. 51, sec. 25, it is provided “ that when the estate of any person deceased shall be insolvent or insufficient to pay all just debts which the deceased owed, the same shall be distributed to, and among all the creditors in proportion to the sums to them respectively due and owing, saving that debts due for taxes and debts due to the State, and for the last sickness and'necessary funeral expenses of the deceased are to be first paid.” Viewing the facts of the case as presented on the exceptions, the enquiry is Whether the verdict ought to be set aside on account of any alleged incorrectness in the instructions given by the Court of Common Pleas to the jury. As to the second instruction relating to the provision in our Stat. 1821, ch. 38, sec. 3, we consider it as perfectly correct. The words “ last sickness,” as there used, cannot be understood as explanatory of the same words as employed in the pas*169sage above quoted. We do not know that their construction has ever been settled by any judicial decision. The object which the legislature had in view, doubtless was, that a sick man, though possessed of but very little property, should be in no danger of suffering by reason of the want of medical advice and assistance, even where unfeeling physicians, if there are any such, would be tempted to refuse or withdraw their professional attentions, apprehending they might lose their reward.

The nature of the disorder and its progress are particularly described in the exceptions, and the court instructed the jury that they would decide whether the testator died of the cancer under which he was laboring, when the plaintiff attended upon him; and whether it was a continuing complaint or disorder until his death; and if they should decide those questions in the affirmative, they might consider it his last sickness. And why might they not, whether any such instruction had been given to them or not ? It Would seem, to a plain understanding, to be an indisputable fact, that the sickness which is terminated by the death of a patient, is his last sickness.— All taxes and debts due the State are to be paid before other debts, however long a time they may have been due; no limitation is here imposed ; nor is there any as to the length of time which the last sickness of a man may have continued prior to his death ; and how can the court impose a limitation in the latter ease with more reason than in either of the former ? Sickness assumes so many forms and death approaches in so many different ways, that wc know not how to lay down any legal principle in such cases, that can be applied by way of construction of the words last sickness.” What is to be considered a man’s last sickness, seems to be a question properly determinable by the jury upon the facts in each case, which can seldom, if ever, be the same in two instances. There may probably be, in a multitude of cases, a strong resemblance. On a trial for homicide, it is always a question for the jury, whether the deceased died a natural death, or in consequence of the act of the person accused. So it may be a question whether the sickness, of which a person dies, is the same under which he labored, when confined and receiving medical aid one or two months before. In the case before *170us, the question as to the cause of the testator’s death, and the continuance of his sickness, have been settled by the jury, whose business it seems to have been to settle it, as much as to determine, in a case of lunacy, whether a certain act was done in a lucid interval, or under the influence of a continuing, mental disability.

We perceive no ground for sustaining the exceptions.

Judgment on the Verdict»