Hogan v. Hogan
Decision Date | 16 April 1982 |
Docket Number | No. 81-330,81-330 |
Citation | 61 Ill.Dec. 929,106 Ill.App.3d 104,435 N.E.2d 770 |
Parties | , 61 Ill.Dec. 929 Sherry HOGAN, by her natural father and next best friend, Jerry Hogan, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Betty HOGAN, Defendant-Appellee. |
Court | United States Appellate Court of Illinois |
Law Offices of William W. Schooley by Kathryn P. Taylor, Granite City, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Burton C. Bernard, Don A. Shaffer, Bernard, Davidson & Kaseberg, Granite City, for defendant-appellee.
In Schenk v. Schenk (1968), 100 Ill.App.2d 199, 241 N.E.2d 12, a father brought suit against his seventeen-year-old unemancipated daughter for injuries he suffered as a pedestrian on the streets of Bloomington in consequence of her negligent operation of an automobile. Reciting the public policy that undergirds the doctrine of parental immunity, that is, the preservation of "the peace, harmony, tranquility, discipline, cooperation, love and respect essential to good family relationship" (100 Ill.App.2d 199, 203, 241 N.E.2d 12, 13), the court declared the determinative issue in Schenk "narrowed to the question as to whether or not in a parent-child relationship the immunity rule should bar recovery for (negligent) conduct wholly unrelated to the objectives or purposes of the family itself" (100 Ill.App.2d 199, 204, 241 N.E.2d 12, 14). Concluding that it should not, the court stated that "(t)he facts here charged occurred during the exercise by both the father and the child of his individual rights on the public streets and with no direct connection with the family relationship" (100 Ill.App.2d 199, 206, 241 N.E.2d 12, 15), and determined that the complaint stated a good cause of action for tortious conduct having no direct family relationship. Refusing to repudiate the doctrine of parental immunity in all situations, the court said:
100 Ill.App.2d 199, 206, 241 N.E.2d 12, 15.
In the subsequent case of Cummings v. Jackson (1978), 57 Ill.App.3d 68, 14 Ill.Dec. 848, 372 N.E.2d 1127, the guardian of a minor child brought suit on her behalf against her mother for negligence in failing to trim trees between the defendant's nearest property line and the edge of the street. The trees allegedly obstructed the view of the driver of an automobile that hit the child. The court found the mother's duty to trim the trees one owed primarily to the general public and only incidentally to the members of the family living in the house together. Relying upon Schenk, the court "conclude(d) that the injury to (the child) was not...
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