Gaston v. Pittman, 38217
Decision Date | 28 May 1969 |
Docket Number | No. 38217,38217 |
Citation | 224 So.2d 326 |
Parties | Angela Dorothy GASTON, Appellant, v. John PITTMAN, Appellee. |
Court | Florida Supreme Court |
W. H. F. Wiltshire, of Harrell, Caro, Middlebrooks & Wiltshire, Pensacola, for appellant.
W. Spencer Mitchem of Beggs, Lane, Daniel, Gaines & Davis, Pensacola, for appellee.
This case is presented on Certificate as authorized by Fla.Stat., § 25.031, F.S.A., and Rule 4.61, Fla.App. Rules 32, F.S.A., from the United States Court of Appeals fof the Fifth Circuit, 405 F.2d 869, in an appeal from a decision of the trial court granting defendant's motion for a summary final judgment in an action by a divorced woman against her former husband for a tort committed by him prior to their marriage.
The Court states that:
'Appellant brought this action seeking to recover damages for the death of her minor child, born during a prior marriage, allegedly caused by the negligence of the defendant-appellee. Thereafter, plaintiff and the defendant were married. They were divorced on January 18, 1966, and plaintiff subsequently initiated this suit. The United States District Court held that the wife's action had been extinguished upon her marriage to the defendant by virtue of the common law theory of the unity of husband and wife, as recognized and applied by Florida courts, Bencomo v. Bencomo, Fla.1967, 200 So.2d 171. Accordingly, the Court entered a summary final judgment in favor of the defendant and dismissed the complaint.
'Plaintiff, citing Amendola v. Amendola, Fla.App.1960, 121 So.2d 805 as authority for her position, argues that her 'cause of action,' the substantive right, was vested and therefore unaffected by her marriage to the defendant, and further, that her 'right of action,' the procedural right, though barred during coveture, was only 'abated or suspended,' and therefore revived by the divorce. The district judge concluded, however, that statements in Florida decisions, notably Webster v. Snyder, 1932, 103 Fla. 1131, 138 So. 755 and Amendola v. Amendola, supra, to the effect that the wife's 'right of action' was 'abated or suspended' during the marriage meant that the wife's action was extinguished or terminated by the marriage. Accordingly, even if the 'cause of action' were vested, the wife's suit would be permanently barred. Although both parties insist that Florida law is clear in their favor, there are no Florida decisions directly dispositive of this controversy.
'(3) Question of Law to be Answered.
'Whether under Florida law a divorced woman can maintain an action against her former husband for a tort committed by him prior to their marriage.'
This Court considered Amendola v. Amendola (Fla.1960), 118 So.2d 13, on appeal from the Circuit Court. The Court determined that the appeal was improvidently taken and transferred the cause to the appropriate District Court of Appeal. Justice Roberts dissented on the jurisdictional question and filed an opinion discussing the merits of the case. In his opinion Justice Roberts states:
'The sole issue on this appeal is whether the common-law rule that a cause of action for tort abates upon the marriage of the female who was injured to the person alleged to have caused the injury, should be judicially declared to be of no force and effect in this state. * * *
'* * * In Webster v. Snyder, 1932, 103 Fla. 1131, 138 So. 755, it was held that the common-law rule referred to above did not operate to abate a suit against the Employer of the tortfeasor for injuries sustained by the plaintiff prior to her marriage to the tortfeasor allegedly due to a negligent act committed by him in the course of his employment. This court said:
(Emphasis added.)
'It will have been noted that the husband-tortfeasor was not named as a party defendant in the Webster case, since at the time that suit was filed the common-law fiction of the unity or identity of the husband and wife still obtained in this state. This fiction, plus the inability of a person to sue himself, precluded suits at common law by a wife against her husband on a cause of action arising out of a tort committed against her prior to the marriage. See Brown v. Gosser, Ky.1953, 262 S.W.2d 480, 43 A.L.R.2d 626. It should also be noted that the decision in the Webster case permitted the wife to do indirectly that which she could not do directly--that is, hold the husband accountable for his tort committed against her prior to the marriage--since the court expressly pointed out that the marriage did not affect the husband's liability over to the defendant, his employer.
'The Florida Married Women's Emancipation Act of 1943, §§ 708.08 and 708.09, Fla.Stat., F.S.A., enacted subsequent to the decision of this court in the Webster case, supra, has State v. Herndon, 1946, 158 Fla. 115, 27 So.2d 833, 834. A married woman is now empowered 'to take charge of, and manage and control her separate property * * * to sue and be sued * * * without restraint * * * in all respects as fully as if she were unmarried.' She has and may exercise 'all rights and powers with respect to her separate property * * * to the same extent and in like manner as if she were unmarried.'
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...provision changing the common law, a wife could not maintain an action against her husband for a personal tort. In Gaston v. Pittman, 224 So.2d 326 (Fla.1969), we recognized the validity of the public policy arguments supporting the doctrine: that interspousal tort actions disturb domestic ......
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Waite v. Waite, 89-868
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