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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Clement v. Thomas Bell & Sons [1899] ScotLR 36_725 (13 June 1899)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1899/36SLR0725.html
Cite as: [1899] SLR 36_725, [1899] ScotLR 36_725

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 725

Court of Session Inner House Second Division.

[Sheriff-Substitute at Dundee.

Tuesday, June 13. 1899.

36 SLR 725

Clement

v.

Thomas Bell & Sons.

Subject_1Parent and Child
Subject_2Reparation
Subject_3Title to Sue
Subject_4Bastard — Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 (60 and 61 Vict. cap. 37).
Facts:

Held that an illegitimate child has no title to sue for damages in respect of the death of its mother either at common law or under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897.

Headnote:

The following case was stated in terms of the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 (60 and 61 Vict. cap. 37), Schedule II. 14 ( c), by the Sheriff-Substitute of Forfarshire at Dundee (J. C. Smith) on an appeal to the Second Division of the Court of Session, in an action under said Act, at the instance of

Page: 726

Christina Clement, a pupil child residing with Mary Chalmers or Wallace, wife of John Wallace, waggon driver, at 11 Lyons Close, Dundee, appellant, against Thomas Bell & Sons of Dundee, Limited, spinners and manufacturers, respondents:—

“Upon the 27th day of January 1899 a petition was presented under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 to the Sheriff Court of Forfarshire, at Dundee, at the instance of the appellant against the respondents, to pay to the appellant £150 with interest.

In her condescendence the appellant stated—(Art. 1) That she was about two years of age, and was the illegitimate and only child, and the only known dependent of the late Mary M'Intyre, spinner, who resided at 14 Lyon's Close, Dundee. (Art. 2) That the said Mary M'Intyre was employed by the respondents as a spinner in their said Heathfield Works. (Art. 3) That on the morning of 3rd December 1898, while the said Mary M'Intyre was working in respondent's said Heathfield Works at a spinning-frame, her right hand was caught at a part of the said machine, and she was severely injured. She was removed to the Dundee Royal Infirmary, and died there from the effects of the said injuries on 11th December 1898. (Art. 4) That said Heathfield Works are a factory within the meaning of the Factory and Workshop Acts 1878 to 1891, and the respondents are occupiers thereof within the meaning of the Factory and Workshop Acts 1878 to 1895. That the said late Mary M'Intyre's employment was one to which the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 applied, and that the personal injuries sustained by the said Mary M'Intyre were the result of an accident arising out of and in the course of her employment.

The petition was served upon the respondents upon 27th January 1899. On 8th February 1899 the said John Wallace was appointed curator ad litem to the pursuer, and a hearing took place before the Sheriff. No defence was stated in writing. The only defence insisted upon was a denial of the appellant's title to sue in respect of her being an illegitimate child.

On 26th April 1899 the Sheriff dismissed the petition in respect that an illegitimate child has no title to sue.

The question of law for the opinion of the Court was—Whether an illegitimate female child, dependent upon the earnings of her mother at the time of the mother's death, has a title to sue the employers of the mother for compensation under the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 in respect of the death of the mother?”

Argued for appellant—It was contended that the case was ruled by the case of Clarke v. Carfin Coal Company, July 27, 1891, 18 R. (H.L.) 63, which had affirmed the decision in Weir v. Coltness Iron Co., March 16, 1889, 16 R. 614, and overruled Samson v. Davie, November 26, 1886, 14 R. 113. Two circumstances, however, differentiated the present case from Clarke and Weir, viz., (1) The present case was that of a pupil child suing for the death of its mother, not that of a parent suing for the death of a child. There was no liability on the part of illegitimate children to support their parents, but deceased if she had lived would undoubtedly have been bound to aliment her child, and therefore the latter had a claim for pecuniary loss for the death of her mother. (3) Both Clarke and Weir were actions in which solatium and damages were sued for. In the present case the appellant did not sue for solatium but for damages alone. The claim of an illegitimate child to damages for the death of a parent had been recognised in the old case of Children of Forrest v. Clerkington, June 24, 1542, M. 13,903.

Argued for the respondent—The appellant had no title to sue. At common law all actions of this kind were confined to a very limited class, viz., husbands and wives and parents and lawful children. A brother had no such action for reparation for the death of a sister, and there was less reason for extending to an illegitimate child what the law did not give to a brother or sister. Under section 7 of the Act the dependent entitled to sue under it must have a title to sue at common law. It would not do to argue that the illegitimate child had a title to sue merely because she had sustained some pecuniary loss by reason of her mother's death, because if that reasoning were sound, then if a workman, who was in debt, died by reason of accidental injury received in the course of his employment, any creditor who had sustained loss by reason of his debtor's death would have a title to sue the employer for damages. The decision in Clarke was fatal to the present claim.

At advising—

Judgment:

Lord Justice-Clerk—The question in this case is, whether an illegitimate child can claim compensation for the death of its mother under the Workmen's Compensation Act. I am of opinion that the Sheriff-Substitute has rightly decided that it can not. I do not find any ground in any of the cases quoted to justify our holding that there is in such a case a title to sue. The whole general policy of the law is to an opposite effect, and the special considerations which lead to a legal claim for aliment of bastards do not seem to me to afford any ground for holding that where a statute makes special provision for claims of a novel character in favour of relatives of a person accidentally killed that such claim extends, although not so expressed, to the illegitimate child of a person so killed.

Lord Young concurred.

Lord Trayner—The appellant can only insist in a claim under the Workmen's Compensation Act if she has a title to sue the respondents for damages at common law on account of her mother's death. It has been laid down in the House of Lords that such a claim of damages can only be insisted in by one between whom and the deceased person there existed a reciprocal obligation of support. As an illegitimate child is not bound to support its mother, there

Page: 727

was no such reciprocal obligation between the appellant and her deceased mother. The Sheriff has therefore rightly decided that the appellant has no title to sue.

Lord Moncreiff—In the Workmen's Compensation Act 1897 the word “dependents” is defined by section 7, sub-section as meaning in Scotland “Such of the persons entitled according to the law of Scotland to sue the employer for damages or solatium in respect of the death of the workman as were wholly or in part dependent upon the earnings of the workman at the time of his death.”

The question, therefore, which we have to decide is, whether at common law an illegitimate child has a title to sue in its own right for damages and solatium in respect of the death of his or her mother. In view of the decision in this Court in the case of Weir v. Coltness Iron Co., 16 R. 1614, and the grounds of judgment in the House of Lords in Clarke v. Carfin Coal Co., 18 R. (H.L.), p. 63, the point can scarcely be said to be still open.

In Weir v. Coltness Iron Co. it was decided in terms that the mother of a bastard child has no title to sue an action of reparation in respect of his death.

The question in Clarke v. Carfin Coal Co. was the same, viz., whether the mother of an illegitimate child was entitled to sue such an action. The House of Lords approved of the decision in the case of Weir, Lord Watson expressing an opinion that the right to sue a derivative claim of this kind is limited to a small class of persons, viz., husband and wife and their legitimate children.

The House of Lords thought it necessary to incidentally overrule the earlier decision in the case of Samson v. Davie, 14 R. 113, in which it was decided that a bastard son was liable to support his mother upon the ground that between the mother (as distinguished from the father) of an illegitimate child and the child there exists a mutual obligation of support in the event of necessity, which taken in connection with the natural though not lawful relationship existing between the two, is sufficient to satisfy the definition given by Lord President Inglis in Eisten v. North British Railway Co. in 8 Macph. 984. But the House of Lords in Clarke v. Carfin Coal Co. held that the decision in Samson v. Davie was not warranted by the authorities or by custom; and accordingly it must now be taken that the mother of an illegitimate child has no better claim for support from the child than has his putative father.

It is urged, however, that while it must now be held that a mother has no claim of support against an illegitimate child and no right to sue for damages in the event of his death, it does not follow that an illegitimate child has no such rights, because he has a claim for aliment against his mother. This does not seem to me to affect the question, because the claim for aliment against the mother is precisely of the same character as that which the child has against his putative father, viz., a claim of debt, and a creditor has no title to sue for reparation merely in respect of the death of his debtor.

I am therefore of opinion that the pursuer not being within the limited class who are entitled to sue such actions has no title to sue.

This being so, it is not necessary to consider whether the deceased having survived for some time the accident which resulted in her death, and the right of reparation having vested in her, that right did not pass to her next-of-kin as her representatives (among whom the pursuer does not stand) to the exclusion of the present claim. The question may hereafter arise whether this is not involved in the decision of the case of Darling, 19 R. (H.L.) 31.

The Court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the interlocutor appealed against.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellant— Dove Wilson. Agent— Charles T. Cox, W.S.

Counsel for the Respondents— Sym. Agents— Anderson & Chisholm, Solicitors.

1899


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1899/36SLR0725.html