Gaston v. Pittman, 1827.
Decision Date | 23 May 1968 |
Docket Number | No. 1827.,1827. |
Citation | 285 F. Supp. 645 |
Parties | Angela Dorothy GASTON, Plaintiff, v. John PITTMAN, Defendant. |
Court | U.S. District Court — Northern District of Florida |
W. H. F. Wiltshire, of Harrell, Caro, Middlebrooks & Wiltshire, Pensacola, Fla., for plaintiff.
W. Spencer Mitchem, of Beggs, Lane, Daniel, Gaines & Davis, Pensacola, Fla., for defendant.
Under Florida law, may a woman, after divorce from her husband, maintain an action against him for a personal tort committed by him prior to their marriage?
That is the question here presented. I conclude she may not.
Plaintiff brought suit against the Defendant alleging the death of her minor child as the proximate result of the negligence and carelessness of the Defendant. Defendant, by motion, seeks summary judgment in his favor. It is undisputed and established on the record before the Court that the minor child died on May 4, 1965; Plaintiff and Defendant were married on October 2, 1965, and divorced on January 18, 1966, with this suit instituted thereafter by Plaintiff. Defendant seeks summary judgment on the ground the cause of action was extinguished by the marriage so that this suit cannot be maintained.
This is a diversity case before this Court, and Florida law applies.
The courts of Florida have established that, under Florida law, a divorced wife may not bring a suit against her former husband for personal tort committed during coverture (Bencomo v. Bencomo, Fla.1967, 200 So.2d 171), nor may a wife, while still married, sue her husband for a pre-marital tort committed on her by him (Amendola v. Amendola, Fla.App.1960, 121 So.2d 805; Webster v. Snyder, (1932), 103 Fla. 1131, 138 So. 755). But Florida has not decided the question here presented.
Bencomo grounded its holding on the proposition that one spouse cannot sue the other because, under the common law,1 they are one person. It referred to and quoted approvingly from its prior decisions in Corren v. Corren, Fla.1950, 47 So.2d 774, and Taylor v. Dorsey, (1944), 155 Fla. 305, 19 So.2d 876, recognizing the unity doctrine. It expressly rejected the conclusion in Alexander v. Alexander, W.D.S.C.1956, 140 F.Supp. 925, that the common law of Florida has been abrogated and that one spouse can sue the other for tortious acts committed by one on the other.
Among the states, a strong and perhaps growing minority view is that a spouse may sue the other for tort as though they were not married; and many of the courts reach such results by so construing their respective states' married women emancipation acts. 43 A.L.R. 2d at page 647; 41 C.J.S. Husband and Wife § 396, page 881. In Florida, however, her statute in that regard has been construed as not abrogating the unity doctrine, and as requiring specific legislative action to change it. Corren, supra, and cases therein cited.2
It thus appears Florida maintains the rule squarely on the common law unity doctrine.
Under these Florida decisions, the common law in effect on July 4, 1776, must provide the answer to the question here presented.
The omitted portion of the quotation in Bencomo from 27 Am.Jur., Husband and Wife, Section 594, reads as follows:
"A like rule applies to the right of action for an antenuptial tort, which is extinguished by marriage."
Cited in support is Henneger v. Lomas, (1896), 145 Ind. 287, 44 N.E. 462.3 That opinion recognized and discussed at some length the common law unity doctrine. From the opinion:
In Phillips v. Barnett, cited in Henneger, a divorced wife brought suit against her husband for assault committed on her during coverture. Her contention was in effect Plaintiff's contention here—that the dissolution of the marriage removed the impediment, and that the wife is now entitled to sue. The Court rejected the contention. It based its decision on the unity doctrine, pointing out there was no cause of action during coverture and that the dissolution of the marriage does not give one. (The same contention was rejected, for the same reason, in Bencomo; see also Sullivan v. Sessions, Fla.1955, 80 So.2d 706).
From Mew's English Case Law Digest of 1897, Vol. 7, par. 1166:
From Coke upon Littleton, 112 b, Sect. 168:
"Also, though a man may not grant, nor give, his tenements to his wife, during the coverture, for that his wife and he be but one perfon in the law; yet by fuch cuftome he may devife by his teftament his tenements to his wife, * * * for that fuch devife taketh no effect but after the death of the devifor."
From 1 Blackstone's Commentaries, 442, 443:
From American and English Encyclopedia of the Law, page 795:
Under these authorities, at common law, any right of action possessed by a woman for a tort of the kind here involved was extinguished by her marriage to the tort feasor. As pointed out in Webster v. Snyder, supra, her marriage abated4 her right of action. Indeed, the merger concept of the unity doctrine could permit no other conclusion than that the right of action was abated, or, to use a dictionary synonym, demolished; such is the logical and inevitable concomitant of merger under the unity doctrine. It was, as the authorities point out, extinguished—it was and could not be classed as merely suspended subject to revival on the dissolution of the marriage by death or divorce. Being extinguished, absent legislative action, divorce could not revive it or recreate it.
At common law, on marriage the husband became the owner of the wife's personal property in possession and had the right to appropriate to himself her choses in action, or all the rest of her personal property. If she survived him, she took only such of her choses in action remaining undisposed of and unappropriated. Schouler, Husband and Wife, Part IV, page 181, § 86. So the marriage extinguished the right of action for a premarital tort of this kind.
It was in the same status as premarital debt between the parties. The wife's debt to the husband was discharged, for, being liable for her debts, he could not owe himself, and so the right of action was extinguished. His debt to her was discharged for, having the right to appropriate to himself her choses in action and keep the proceeds, he could have no such right against himself, and so the right of action was extinguished.
As premarital interparty debts were thus affected by the marriage, so were premarital interparty torts of the kind here involved. Being extinguished by the marriage, divorce could no more revive or recreate a right of action on a premarital tort than it could revive or recreate for her a right of action on a premarital chose of action against a third person that had been extinguished by the husband, during marriage, reducing to his possession and appropriating.
The rule is rigid, but no more rigid than the common law rule that death of an injured party merged the civil right of action in the criminal act of death, and so extinguished it. At common law injury to a minor child gave rise to a right of action for damages to the father, but that right was merged and extinguished by the death...
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