Gorke v. Le Clerc
Decision Date | 31 January 1962 |
Docket Number | No. 127371,127371 |
Citation | 23 Conn.Supp. 256,181 A.2d 448 |
Court | Connecticut Superior Court |
Parties | David GORKE, Administrator, et al. v. Audrey LE CLERC. |
Lessner, Rottner, Karp & Jacobs, Manchester, for plaintiffs.
Schofield, Fay & Courtney and Bieluch, Barry & Covello, Hartford, for defendant.
The substance of the plaintiff's complaint is that plaintiff is the administrator of the estate of Baby Boy Gorke, that the baby was en ventre sa mere and due to be born in about two weeks when, as the result of the defendant's negligent operation of her automobile, he was killed and caused to be born dead. To this complaint the defendant has demurred on the ground that there is no right of action to a stillborn child or to the representative of such stillborn child's estate for injury or death which occurred to the child before birth.
The demurrer admits for the purpose of the present proceeding the truth of the allegations of the complaint. Vogel v. Bacus, 133 Conn. 95, 97, 48 A.2d 237, 169 A.L.R. 910; Hardy v. Scott, 127 Conn. 722, 723, 19 A.2d 420. It should also be noted that although the complaint does not expressly allege that the fetus was viable at the time of injury and such an allegation would seem necessary in most circumstances, that such was the situation here is conceded by the defendant. Accordingly, as stated in the defendant's brief, 'the specific issue raised by the defendant's demurrer is whether or not recovery by an administrator is warranted for the death of a stillborn child where the fetus was viable at the time of the alleged injury which produced the death.' There appears to be no reported decision of a Connecticut court on this issue.
Basic to a determination of the issue is the history and language of Connecticut's so-called 'death statute,' which is now § 52-555 of the General Statutes, and our 'survival of actions statute,' § 52-599. They provide, in part, as follows: * * *' * * *'
In the absence of such statutes the common law governs. At common law two relevant principles were clearly established. One was expressed in the maxim 'actio personalis moritur cum persona' (a personal right of action dies with the person). Under this principle, one's death, whether due to an actionable wrong or to natural causes, abates a pending action for personal injuries, or, if suit for the wrong has not been instituted, bars a representative from enforcing the right which the decedent had possessed during his life to recover damages from the tortfeasor. The other common- law rule was that the destruction of human life is not an actionable injury. Both of these common-law rules formed part of our law and prevail today except as modified or changed by statute. Broughel v. Southern New England Telephone Co., 72 Conn. 617, 620, 45 A. 435, 49 L.R.A. 404; Mitchell v. Hotchkiss, 48 Conn. 9, 16; Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. New York & N. H. R. Co., 25 Conn. 265, 272.
It is unnecessary in this memorandum to trace the detailed history of statutory modification of these 'barbaric' common-law rules. They are well noted in many opinions, among which are those just cited. See also Kling v. Torello, 87 Conn. 301, 87 A. 987, 46 L.R.A.,N.S., 930; Porpora v. New Haven, 122 Conn. 80, 187 A. 668; Perlstein v. Westport Sanitarium Co., 11 Conn.Sup. 117. In the latter opinion (p. 120) O'Sullivan, J., makes the cogent comment: 'These rules, which not infrequently are thought of as a single, composite legal principle, are, in truth, separate and distinct and a failure to appreciate this fact may lead to confused thinking.'
It suffices to note that statutory alleviation of the harsh common-law rules followed two separate and distinct theories. They are well differentiated by Prentice, C. J., in Kling v. Torello, supra, 87 Conn. 304, 87 A. 987, 46 L.R.A.,N.S., 930. One line of approach followed Lord Campbell's Act, 9 & 10 Vic. c. 93, on a 'new cause of action' theory. Under this approach, a right of action is given where death results from injuries, which is entirely independent of and unrelated to any which the deceased might have had in life. It does not rest upon the basis of an injury suffered by the deceased's estate; its foundation is the loss sustained by certain persons designated as beneficiaries of the recovery. Ibid., and cases there cited.
The other theory is known as the 'survival theory,' and it is this principle which Connecticut has followed since the first 'death statute' was adopted here. See Public Acts 1848, c. 5; and for the predecessor of present § 52-555, see Public Acts 1877, c. 78. The principle is well set forth by Prentice, C. J., in Kling v. Torello, supra, 305, 87 A. 988, as follows: . ...
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