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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Eistens v. North British Railway [1870] ScotLR 7_638 (14 July 1870)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1870/07SLR0638.html
Cite as: [1870] ScotLR 7_638, [1870] SLR 7_638

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 638

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

Thursday, July 14 1870.

7 SLR 638

Eistens

v.

North British Railway.

Subject_1Title to Sue
Subject_2Reparation
Subject_3Contract.

Per Lord President
Subject_4
Facts:

Collaterals have no title to sue for reparation for the death of a brother.

Such reparation is only granted where the relationship was near, and a mutual obligation of support existed between the claimant and the deceased.

It is the contract of carriage that makes a railway company liable for the death of a passenger whilst its train is on another company's line.

Headnote:

The pursuers are the two sisters of the deceased Mr Eisten, who was killed in the collision at Thirsk Junction in May 1869. The accident occurred on the North-Eastern line; but the defenders admitted that they would be responsible in damages if the pursuers could show that they had a title to ask for them. Mr Eisten was at his death about forty years of age, and was the only surviving brother of the pursuers. Their father and mother were dead; and as their father, at his death six years ago, had left no means, the pursuers would have been destitute but for their brother's support. He was the principal bill-clerk of the City of Glasgow Bank at Glasgow, and in receipt of a salary of £215, with a prospect of increase. He left about £185, from which his funeral and outstanding debts fell to be deducted. The pursuers said they had been led to believe they would receive reparation from one or other of the railway companies, but they had received nothing. They had lived with their brother, and as they had now no means of subsistence, they claimed damages to the extent of £2000, as reparation for his loss, and solatium, for their feelings. The Lord Ordinary ( Ormidale) dismissed the action, in respect

Page: 639

the pursuers had no title to sue. He held that the case of Greenhorn v. Millers in 1855 settled conclusively that the pursuers had no title to sue on the ground that they had suffered in their feelings; and that they had no right otherwise to reparation, as neither could a creditor or annuitant of the deceased insist on reparation; nor, if the deceased had merely been injured, and raised an action for compensation, but died before it was concluded, could his executor or representatives have continued the action.

The pursuers reclaimed.

Shand and Moncreiff for them.

Solicitor-General and M'Laren in answer.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord President observed that this was not an action of assythment, for no crime had been committed by the defenders, nor was there delict on their part on account of which damages could be claimed. The fault was that of a servant of the North-Eastern Railway Company; and the defenders came to be responsible because of the contract between the deceased and the North British Railway Company that they were to carry him safely to the end of his journey, and in order to do so they had to convey him over the line of the North-Eastern Railway Company. The action, therefore, lay upon the contract; and the action was just the actio injuriarum of the civil law. If Mr Eisten had survived the accident he could have claimed damages for bodily injury. But as he had not survived the accident the question was whether any one could now make this claim? Hitherto our law had only allowed the claim to be made by one who was the husband or wife, or an ascendant or descendant of the deceased; and in these cases reparation was allowed though the party claiming could not qualify pecuniary loss. The grounds on which such a claim was allowed were the nearness of relationship, and the mutual obligation of support in case of necessity between the claimant and the deceased. It was for the combination of these reasons that an action for reparation could be brought. In the case of collateral relationship there was no example in our law of an action being sustained on the one ground or on the other. In the case of Greenhorn, it was decisively settled that solatium could not be allowed to collateral relations of the deceased for the mental distress his death had caused. But if a claim for solatium could not be sustained, still less could one for pecuniary loss. It could not rest on the mere fact of the parties' affection for one another and their residence together; and it was settled law that in the case of collaterals there was no obligation for mutual support. His Lordship therefore thought, if the judges who decided the case of Greenhorn had also had to consider the question of damages for pecuniary loss, they would have held there was even less reason for affirming it than that for granting solatium for injured feelings. If people were to be liable in a further degree than they were at present, it was difficult to see where the practice was to stop. At present there was a clear line of distinction; but if those who were related in blood, and suffered pecuniarily and mentally, were to be held entitled to reparation, no one could see where the line was to be drawn. The affection between friends was often of the most tender description; and frequently there was affection of the strongest character between those who were related only by affinity. There was also often an artificial relationship, coupled with affection of an intense kind, and where the element of pecuniary injury was also present. Such was the case of a bastard child and its putative father, or a person and his adopted child. And in this last case the strength of the affection was generally the ground of the adoption. If the Court were to go the length asked in the present action, it could scarcely stop where between the claimant and the deceased there had subsisted a close affection, and where the death had caused mental distress and pecuniary loss to the claimant. At present, within the line where the law allowed a person to sue for reparation, it presumed the loss of the deceased was an injury to the claimant's affection, and would not allow it to be shown, and between the deceased and the claimant there was the mutual obligation of support. His Lordship, therefore, thought that the title of the claimants to sue must be negatived.

Lord Deas and Lord Ardmillan concurred.

Lord Kinloch—I think it clear that the present is not a case of assythment. For the action is not laid on crime, which is essential to support a claim of assythment. It may be doubtful whether such a claim can ever be prosecuted against a Company, which cannot as such commit a crime. But at any rate the action is not laid on crime. It is a civil action of reparation, and nothing else.

As such the action is not derivative or founded on any right possessed by the deceased, and transmitted to the pursuers. It is a proper personal action pursued by them in their own alleged right. They sue for damages as directly due to them in consequence of the loss of their brother, from his being killed on the railway represented by the defenders.

That such an action is competent by our law, though not recognised by some other systems of jurisprudence, is undoubted. But the privilege has been hitherto confined to relatives in the nearest degree—to husband and wife, to parent and child; perhaps generally to ascendants and descendants. Admittedly it is not extended to all relatives; and a limit must be fixed somewhere. I am of opinion that, both by principle and practice, the line must be held drawn so as to exclude collaterals, such as brother and sister. One reason for this may justly be stated to be that collaterals are not liable to a legal claim for support: and the loss of one of these is not therefore a patrimonial loss, in the sense of anything being lost to which a legal right was held. Another reason may lie in a due discrimination between the feelings possessed in the different cases. I think it is a wise arrangement of the law which confines the right to the nearest relatives, of the injury to whom there can be no doubt; and does not take cognisance of the very varying state of things which may exist in the circle beyond.

Whilst thus considering the present claim to be excluded in legal principle, I am further of opinion that its exclusion directly follows from the decision in the case of Greenhorns v. Millers. It is true that in that case nothing was in controversy but a solatium to wounded feelings; and that the Court did not decide any more than the point actually before them. But in sound legal inference I consider the exclusion of a legal claim for solatium to infer the exclusion of a claim for all other reparation. The principle of liability is the same in both cases; there are only involved two different

Page: 640

items of damage. Of the two the claim for solatium is perhaps the more clear and strong. At any rate, if the one of these claims be admissible, 1 think the other must be so equally. If the one is rejected, the other must be so also. The foundation of the claim is relationship; and the relationship which admits the one must equally admit the other. If the limit is passed in the one case, it is as much passed in the other. The decision in the case of Greenhorns fixed that brothers and sisters had no legal title to sue for reparation of the loss of a brother, so far as concerned solatium to feelings. I think it follows that the present pursuers have no legal title to sue for the damages now claimed by them, which, though different in kind, I consider to stand in point of law in no different position from the other.

I am, on these grounds, of opinion that the Lord Ordinary's judgment should be adhered to.

Counsel:

Agent for Pursuers— M. Macgregor, S.S.O.

Agents for Defenders— Dalmahoy & Cowan, W.S.

1870


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1870/07SLR0638.html