Emerson v. Taylor

Decision Date20 June 1918
Docket Number33.
PartiesEMERSON et al. v. TAYLOR.
CourtMaryland Court of Appeals

Appeal from Baltimore City Court; Carroll T. Bond, Judge.

"To be officially reported."

Action by Rachel Taylor against Isaac E. Emerson, trading as the Emersonian Apartments, and Charles F. W. Berndt. Demurrer to declaration overruled, and judgment against defendants by default, and they appeal. Reversed, without a new trial.

See also, 103 A. 423.

Argued before BOYD, C.J., and BRISCOE, THOMAS, URNER, and STOCKBRIDGE, JJ.

Aubrey Pearre, Jr., of Baltimore, for appellants.

Augustus C. Binswanger, of Baltimore (Louis Samuels, of Baltimore, on the brief), for appellee.

STOCKBRIDGE J.

This suit is an action by a married woman to recover damages for the loss of consortium, resulting from an injury to the husband occasioned by the negligence, as alleged, of the defendants. No other element of damage to the plaintiff is claimed. She suffered no physical injury.

The husband, a hod carrier by occupation, was employed as one of the hands in the building of an apartment house under construction by the appellants. An elevator which ran from the sixth to the first floor became beyond control, as the result of which the plaintiff's husband was thrown down suffered severe contusions, the breaking of his right leg and was confined to a hospital for a period of four months. For the injury suffered, if due to the negligence of the defendants, he had a right of action. Whether he did as matter of fact present any claim for these injuries, and, if so, what was the ultimate disposition of it, does not appear from the record, but any claim of this character for the injury suffered was a claim of his, and not of his wife. The sole basis for her claim rests in the loss of consortium consequent upon the injury.

A demurrer was filed to the declaration, which was overruled. The defendants declined to plead, a judgment by default for lack of a plea was entered against them, and an inquisition found in favor of the wife, upon which a judgment for $50 was entered. Such is the case presented in this court by the record. The appeal, therefore, calls in question only the ruling of the Baltimore city court upon the demurrer to the declaration, and this presents but a single question of law.

It was well settled at common law that for personal injuries to a husband no right of action arose in favor of the wife; but with the advance of the law in the direction of according greater rights to married women, and more nearly placing her upon a footing of equality with her husband, and especially since the adoption in many of the states of this country of the so-called "Married Women's Act," the claim is made that a change has taken place in the right of a married woman to sue and recover separately from her husband for damages which she may suffer. The case has been presented with much fullness of research into the adjudications, and large numbers of the cases were referred to in the argument and cited upon the briefs. The present accepted rule of law will be found accurately and concisely stated in 13 R. C. L 1443, where many of the cases are referred to. It is sometimes said that there is great conflict of opinion in the conclusions reached in the various cases.

A close examination of the adjudications discloses that these group themselves under several distinct heads; the differences of opinion arising, as was held in the case of Wolf v. Frank, 92 Md. 138, 48 A. 132, 52 L. R. A. 102, from the source from which the married woman acquires the right, rather than whether the right existed at all. In the case just mentioned the suit was brought by a married woman to recover damages for the alienation of the affections of her husband, and this court held that the law cannot make redress in such cases otherwise than to the married woman solely, apart from all others, and especially her husband. In such cases the injury to the woman is direct, and hence of legal necessity the damages must be to her solely, and therefore the suit can be maintained in her own name.

In some of the cases of this description, the basis upon which the recovery is allowed is that an injury of this character involves the legal idea of malice, even if there be no actual malice; that the husband cannot be said to have been damaged, or have recovery therefor, and that, therefore, a suit by a married woman alone, in cases of alienation of affections, enticement, or seduction of the husband, are held to give the wife the right of action. This right of action, sustained in Wolf v. Frank, supra, is said in some of the cases to have been a right existing at common law, as well as under married women's statutes; but, however this may be, in this class of cases it is a rule which has been adopted quite generally, of which the following cases are examples: Bassett v. Bassett, 20 Ill.App. 543; Tucker v. Tucker, 74 Miss. 93, 19 So. 955, 32 L. R. A. 623; Hodgkinson v. Hodgkinson, 43 Neb. 269, 61 N.W. 577, 27 L. R. A. 120, 47 Am. St. Rep. 759; Gernerd v. Gernerd, 185 Pa. 233, 39 A. 884, 40 L. R. A. 549, 64 Am. St. Rep. 646; Westlake v. Westlake, 34 Ohio St. 621, 32 Am. Rep. 397; Jaynes v. Jaynes, 39 Hun, 40; Logan v. Logan, 77 Ind. 558, contra; Duffies v. Duffies, 76 Wis. 374, 45 N.W. 522, 8 L. R. A. 420, 20 Am. St. Rep. 79; Lonstorf v. Lonstorf, 118 Wis. 159, 95 N.W. 961; Jacobson v. Siddal, 12 Or. 280, 7 P. 108, 53 Am. St. Rep. 360, Crim. Conv.; Seaver v. Adams, 66 N.H. 142, 19 A. 776, 49 Am. St. Rep. 597; Bennett v. Bennett, 116 N.Y. 584, 23 N.E. 17, 6 L. R. A. 553; Warren v. Warren, 89 Mich. 123, 50 N.W. 842, 14 L. R. A. 545; Clow v. Chapman, 125 Mo. 101, 28 S.W. 328, 26 L. R. A. 412, 46 Am. St. Rep. 468; Nolin v. Pearson, 191 Mass. 283, 77 N.E. 890, 4 L. R. A. (N. S.) 643, 114 Am. St. Rep. 605, 6 Ann. Cas. 658; Work v. Campbell, 164 Cal. 581, 128 P. 943, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 581; Rott v. Goehring, 33 N.D. 413, 157 N.W. 294, L. R. A. 1916E, 1086, Ann. Cas. 1918A, 643; Wolf v. Frank, 92 Md. 138, 48 A. 132, 52 L. R. A. 102. Analogy to this class of cases was attempted to be drawn from certain cases of slander or libel; but these cases are all cases where the suit was by the husband for loss of the consortium of the wife, and of these the case of Garrison v. Sun Printing & Publishing Co., 207 N.Y. 1, 100 N.E. 430, 45 L. R. A. (N. S.) 766, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 288, is a good example. A right may exist in the husband, which, notwithstanding the statute, is without a correlative right in the wife.

There is another class of cases upon which reliance has been placed by the appellee, namely, where in the suit of a married woman against a third party for loss of the consortium of her husband the cause of the damage was the sale to the husband of liquor or noxious drugs. In some of these cases, the sales, as testified to, were in direct violation of state statutes; in others, the right to maintain such an action has been based upon special laws, generally described as civil damage acts; and in still a third class of cases, it has been held that sale of such liquors or drugs, particularly when made after due notice and caution to the dealer, involves an element of malice, for which no right of action subsists in the husband; that the damage to the wife is direct, not indirect, and as such a recovery by her in an independent suit can be maintained. See Flandermeyer...

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4 cases
  • Hinnant v. Tide Water Power Co.
    • United States
    • North Carolina Supreme Court
    • January 31, 1925
    ... ... Building ... Co., 93 Ohio St. 101, 112 N.E. 204, L. R. A. 1916E, 700, ... Ann. Cas. 1918D, 206; Marri v. Railroad, supra; Emerson ... v. Taylor, 133 Md. 192, 104 A. 538, 5 A. L. R. 1045; ... Tobiassen v. Polley, 96 N. J. Law, 66, 114 A. 153; ... Bernhardt v. Perry, 276 ... ...
  • Nash v. Mobile & O. R. Co.
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • March 19, 1928
    ...settling the grievance once for all, and when damages were collected the wife was supposed to receive some benefit from them. Emerson v. Taylor, 104 A. 538; Kelly v. N.Y. Co., 46 N.E. 1063; Feneff v. N.Y. C. R. Co., 89 N.E. 426; Brown v. Kistleman, 98 N.E. 631; Tobiassen v. Polley, 114 A. 1......
  • McDade v. West
    • United States
    • Georgia Court of Appeals
    • November 3, 1949
    ... ... which he can sue and the damage to the wife is too remote and ... indirect to permit her to recover. 27 Am.Jur. § 514, p. 114; ... Emerson v. Taylor, 133 Md. 192, 104 A. 538, 5 A.L.R ... 1049; Hinnant v. Tidewater Power Co., 189 N.C. 120, ... 126 S.E. 307, 37 A.L.R. 897; Annotation 59 ... ...
  • Boden v. Del-Mar Garage, Incorporated
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • May 19, 1933
    ... ... Nieberg v ... Cohen, supra; Marri v ... Stamford St. R. Co., supra; Feneff ... v. New York R. R. Co., supra; ... Emerson v. Taylor (1918), 133 Md. 192, 104 ... A. 538, 5 A. L. R. 1045; Bolger v. Boston Ry ... Co. (1910), 205 Mass. 420, 91 N.E. 389; Smith ... v ... ...

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