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WOODS v. LANCET
- The four Appellate Division Justices who voted to affirm the dismissal below, wrote no opinion except that one of them stated that, were the question an open one and were he not bound by Drobner v. Peters ( supra), he would hold that "when a pregnant woman is injured through negligence and the child subsequently born suffers deformity or other injury as a result, recovery therefor may be allowed to the child, provided the causal relation between the negligence and the damage to the child be established by competent medical evidence." ( 278 App. Div. 913. ) It will hardly be disputed that justice (not emotionalism or sentimentality) dictates the enforcement of such a cause of action. The trend in decisions of other courts, and the writings of learned commentators, in the period since Drobner v. Peters was handed down in 1921, is strongly toward making such a recovery possible. The precise question for us on this appeal is: shall we follow Drobner v. Peters, or shall we bring the common law of this State, on this question, into accord with justice? I think, as New York State's court of last resort, we should make the law conform to right. Drobner v. Peters ( supra), like the present case, dealt with the sufficiency of a complaint alleging prenatal injuries, tortiously inflicted on a nine-month foetus, viable at the time and actually born later. There is, therefore, no material distinction between that case and the one we are passing on now. However, Drobner v. Peters must be examined against a background of history and of the legal thought of its time and of the thirty years that have passed since it was handed down. Early British and American common law gives no definite answer to our question, so it is not profitable to go back farther than Dietrich v. Northampton ( 138 Mass. 14), decided in 1884, with an opinion by Justice HOLMES, and, apparently, the first American case. Actually that was a death case, since the five-month infant, prematurely born, survived for a few minutes after birth. The principal ground asserted by the Massachusetts Supreme Court (138 Mass., at p. 17) for a denial of recovery was that "the unborn child was a part of the mother at the time of the injury" and that "any damage to it which was not too remote to be recovered for at all was recoverable by her" (the mother). A few years later (1890), in Ireland, the Queen's Bench Division, in a very famous holding, refused to allow a suit to be brought on behalf of a child born deformed as the result of an accident in defendant's railway coach, two of the Justices taking the ground that the infant plaintiff was not in esse at the time of the wrong, and the other two regarding the suit as one on the contract of carriage with no duty of care owing by the carrier to the unborn infant whose presence was unknown to defendant ( Walker v. Great Northern Ry. of Ireland, 28 L.R. Ir. 69). A similar complaint was dismissed for similar reasons, and the dismissal affirmed by the Appellate Division, Second Department, in Nugent v. Brooklyn Heights R.R. Co. ( 154 App. Div. 667, appeal dismissed 209 N.Y. 515). It is significant that the Appellate Division's opinion in the Nugent case ( supra) indicates that, had it not been for the contract-of-carriage theory and its supposed consequences, the writer of the opinion would have favored recovery. Other strong support for just treatment of prenatal wrongs (of another kind) is found also in the 1893 opinion of Justice HAIGHT (later of this court) in Quinlen v. Welch (69 Hun 584); however, on appeal, this court found it unnecessary to pass on the point ( 141 N.Y. 158). There were, in the early years of this century, rejections of such suits by other courts, with various fact situations involving before-birth traumas (see Allaire v. St. Luke's Hosp., 184 Ill. 359; Gorman v. Budlong, 23 R.I. 169; Stanford v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 214 Ala. 611; Newman v. City of Detroit, 281 Mich. 60; Magnolia Coca Cola Bottling Co. v. Jordan, 124 Tex. 347; Buel v. United Rys. Co., 248 Mo. 126; Lipps v. Milwaukee Elec. Ry. Light Co., 164 Wis. 272) and, quite recently, Massachusetts has reaffirmed the Dietrich rule ( Bliss v. Passanesi, 326 Mass. 461). The movement toward a more just treatment of such claims seems to have commenced with the able dissent in the Allaire case ( supra), which urged that a child viable but in utero, if injured by tort, should, when born, be allowed to sue; and the movement took impetus from the Wisconsin court's statement in the Lipps opinion ( supra), that it was restricting its holding (of nonrecovery) to a nonviable child. Thus, when Drobner v. Peters came to this court in 1921, there had been no decisions upholding such suits, although the two New York lower court rulings above cited ( Nugent and Quinlen cases, supra), were favorable to the position taken by plaintiff here.
- What, then, stands in the way of a reversal here? Surely, as an original proposition, we would, today, be hard put to it to find a sound reason for the old rule. Following Drobner v. Peters ( supra) would call for an affirmance but the chief basis for that holding (lack of precedent) no longer exists. And it is not a very strong reason, anyhow, in a case like this. Of course, rules of law on which men rely in their business dealings should not be changed in the middle of the game, but what has that to do with bringing to justice a tort-feasor who surely has no moral or other right to rely on a decision of the New York Court of Appeals? Negligence law is common law, and the common law has been molded and changed and brought up-to-date in many another case. Our court said, long ago, that it had not only the right, but the duty to re-examine a question where justice demands it ( Rumsey v. New York N.E.R.R. Co., 133 N.Y. 79, 85, 86, and see Klein v. Maravelas, 219 N.Y. 383). That opinion notes that Chancellor KENT, more than a century ago, had stated that upwards of a thousand cases could then be pointed out in the English and American reports "`which had been overruled, doubted or limited in their application'", and that the great Chancellor had declared that decisions which seem contrary to reason "`ought to be examined without fear, and revised without reluctance, rather than to have the character of our law impaired, and the beauty and harmony of the system destroyed by the perpetuity of error.'" And Justice SUTHERLAND, writing for the Supreme Court in Funk v. United States ( 290 U.S. 371, 382), said that while legislative bodies have the power to change old rules of law, nevertheless, when they fail to act, it is the duty of the court to bring the law into accordance with present day standards of wisdom and justice rather than "with some outworn and antiquated rule of the past". No reason appears why there should not be the same approach when traditional common-law rules of negligence result in injustice (see Hagopian v. Samuelson, 236 App. Div. 491, 492, and see Justice STONE'S article on "The Common Law in the United States", 50 Harv. L. Rev. [1936], pp. 4-7).
- The other objection to recovery here is the purely theoretical one that a foetus in utero has no existence of its own separate from that of its mother, that is, that it is not "a being in esse". We need not deal here with so large a subject. It is to be remembered that we are passing on the sufficiency of a complaint which alleges that this injury occurred during the ninth month of the mother's pregnancy, in other words, to a viable foetus, later born. Therefore, we confine our holding in this case to prepartum injuries to such viable children. Of course such a child, still in the womb is, in one sense, a part of its mother, but no one seems to claim that the mother, in her own name and for herself, could get damages for the injuries to her infant. To hold, as matter of law, that no viable foetus has any separate existence which the law will recognize is for the law to deny a simple and easily demonstrable fact. This child, when injured, was in fact, alive and capable of being delivered and of remaining alive, separate from its mother. We agree with the dissenting Justice below that "To deny the infant relief in this case is not only a harsh result, but its effect is to do reverence to an outmoded, timeworn fiction not founded on fact and within common knowledge untrue and unjustified." ( 278 App. Div. 913, 914.)
- In Drobner v. Peters ( supra), this court, finding no precedent for maintaining the suit, adopted the general theory of Dietrich v. Northampton ( supra), taking into account, besides the lack of authority to support the suit, the practical difficulties of proof in such cases, and the theoretical lack of separate human existence of an infant in utero. It is not unfair to say that the basic reason for Drobner v. Peters was absence of precedent. However, since 1921, numerous and impressive affirmative precedents have been developed. In California ( Scott v. McPheeters, 33 Cal.App.2d 629) the Court of Appeal allowed the suit — reliance was there put on a California statute but that statute was not directly in point, since it directed only that "a child conceived, but not yet born, is to be deemed an existing person, so far as may be necessary for its interests in the event of its subsequent birth." That California statute merely codified an accepted and ancient common-law rule (see Stedfast v. Nicoll, 3 Johns. Cas. 18, 23, 24) which, for some reason, has not, at least in our court, been applied to prepartum injuries tortiously inflicted. In 1949, the Ohio Supreme Court ( Williams v. Marion R.T., Inc., 152 Ohio St. 114, rule reaffirmed by the same court in Jasinsky v. Potts, 153 Ohio St. 529) and Minnesota's highest tribunal ( Verkennes v. Corniea, 229 Minn. 365), and in 1951, the Court of Appeals of Maryland ( Damasiewicz v. Gorsuch, ___ Md. ___, 79 A.2d 550) and the Supreme Court of Georgia ( Tucker v. Carmichael, 208 Ga. 201) upheld the right of an infant to bring an action like the one we are here examining, without statutory authorization. The Supreme Court of Canada had announced the same rule back in 1933 ( Montreal Tramways v. Leveille, 4 Dom. L. Rep. 337). In New Jersey a strong five-to-ten dissent (written by the Chief Justice) unsuccessfully urged the same view ( Stemmer v. Kline, 128 N.J.L. 455). In England there seems to be no controlling precedent (see Professor Winfield's comprehensive article in 4 U. of Toronto L.J. [1941-1942] 285 et seq.). Of law review articles on the precise question there is an ample supply (see 20 Minn. L. Rev. [Feb., 1936] 321-322; 34 Minn. L. Rev. [Dec., 1949] 65-66; 48 Mich. L. Rev. [Feb., 1950] 539-541; 35 Cornell L.Q. [Spring, 1950] 648-654; 1951 Wis. L. Rev. [May] 518-528; 50 Mich. L. Rev. [Nov., 1951] 166-167). They justify the statement in Prosser on Torts, at page 190, that: "All writers who have discussed the problem have joined in condemning the existing rule, in maintaining that the unborn child in the path of an automobile is as much a person in the street as the mother, and urging that recovery should be allowed upon proper proof."
- The complaint served on behalf of this infant plaintiff alleges that, while the infant was in his mother's womb during the ninth month of her pregnancy, he sustained, through the negligence of defendant, such serious injuries that he came into this world permanently maimed and disabled. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint as not stating a cause of action, thus taking the position that its allegations, though true, gave the infant no right to recover damages in the courts of New York. The Special Term granted the motion and dismissed the suit, citing Drobner v. Peters ( 232 N.Y. 220). In the Appellate Division one Justice voted for reversal with an opinion in which he described the obvious injustice of the rule, noted a decisional trend (in other States and Canada) toward giving relief in such cases, and suggested that since Drobner v. Peters ( supra) was decided thirty years ago by a divided vote, our court might well re-examine it.
- The same answer goes to the argument that the change we here propose should come from the Legislature, not the courts. Legislative action there could, of course, be, but we abdicate our own function, in a field peculiarly nonstatutory, when we refuse to reconsider an old and unsatisfactory court-made rule. Perhaps, some kinds of changes in the common law could not safely be made without the kind of factual investigation which the Legislature and not the courts, is equipped for. Other proposed changes require elaborate research and consideration of a variety of possible remedies — such questions are peculiarly appropriate for Law Revision Commission scrutiny, and, in fact, the Law Revision Commission has made an elaborate examination of this very problem (1935 Report of N.Y. Law Revision Commission, pp. 449-476). That study was made at the instance of the late Chief Judge POUND of this court and was transmitted to the Legislature by the commission. Although made before the strong trend in favor of recovery had clearly manifested itself, the Law Revision Commission's comments were strongly in favor of the position taken in this opinion. The report, itself, contained no recommendations for legislation on the subject but that apparently was because the commission felt that it was for the courts to deal with this common-law question. At page 465, for instance, the report said: "The common law does not go on the theory that a case of first impression presents a problem of legislative as opposed to judicial power."
- The sum of the argument against plaintiff here is that there is no New York decision in which such a claim has been enforced. Winfield's answer to that (see U. of Toronto L.J. article, supra, p. 29) will serve: "if that were a valid objection, the common law would now be what it was in the Plantagenet period." And we can borrow from our British friends another mot: "When these ghosts of the past stand in the path of justice clanking their mediaeval chains the proper course for the judge is to pass through them undeterred" (Lord ATKIN in United Australia, Ltd., v. Barclay's Bank, Ltd., A.C. 1, 29). We act in the finest common-law tradition when we adapt and alter decisional law to produce common-sense justice.
- I agree with the view of a majority of the court that prenatal injury to a child should not go unrequited by the one at fault. If, however, an unborn child is to be endowed with the right to enforce such requital by an action at law, I think that right should not be created by a judicial decision on the facts in a single case. Better, I believe, that the right should be the product of legislative action taken after hearings at which the Legislature can be advised, by the aid of medical science and research, not only as to the stage of gestation at which a foetus is considered viable, but also as to appropriate means — by time limitation for suit and otherwise — for avoiding abuses which might result from the difficulty of tracing causation from prenatal injury to postnatal deformity.
- Two other reasons for dismissal (besides lack of precedent) are given in Drobner v. Peters ( supra). The first of those, discussed in many of the other writings on the subject herein cited, has to do with the supposed difficulty of proving or disproving that certain injuries befell the unborn child, or that they produced the defects discovered at birth, or later. Such difficulties there are, of course, and, indeed, it seems to be commonly accepted that only a blow of tremendous force will ordinarily injure a foetus, so carefully does nature insulate it. But such difficulty of proof or finding is not special to this particular kind of lawsuit (and it is beside the point, anyhow, in determining sufficiency of a pleading). Every day in all our trial courts (and before administrative tribunals, particularly the Workmen's Compensation Board), such issues are disposed of, and it is an inadmissible concept that uncertainty of proof can ever destroy a legal right. The questions of causation, reasonable certainty, etc., which will arise in these cases are no different, in kind, from the ones which have arisen in thousands of other negligence cases decided in this State, in the past.
- When, in England, the right — unknown to the common law — was created which permitted suit to recover damages for negligently causing the death of a human being, it was accomplished by legislative action. In our own jurisdiction a similar right of action — carefully limited as to time and by other measures to prevent abuse — has long been the subject of statute law adopted by the process incident to statutory enactment. That same process, in my opinion, is peculiarly appropriate for the solution of the problem now before us where unknown factors abound.
- Decedent Estate Law, art. 5.
- The judgments should be reversed, and the motion denied, with costs in all courts.
- LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., DYE, FULD and FROESSEL, JJ., concur with DESMOND, J.; LEWIS, J., dissents in opinion in which CONWAY, J., concurs.
Factual and Procedural Background
The infant plaintiff, Robert C. Woods, by his guardian ad litem, alleged that he sustained serious injuries due to the defendant Joseph Lancet's negligence while still in utero during the ninth month of pregnancy, resulting in permanent maiming and disability at birth. The defendant moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that the allegations, even if true, did not state a cause of action under New York law. The Special Term granted the motion, dismissing the suit based on precedent from Drobner v. Peters. On appeal, the Appellate Division was divided; one Justice favored reversal citing injustice and a trend in other jurisdictions toward allowing recovery, while four Justices affirmed the dismissal but acknowledged the issue as open and deserving reconsideration. The Court of Appeals was tasked with deciding whether to uphold the old rule from Drobner or to align New York law with modern principles of justice.
Legal Issues Presented
- Whether an infant who sustained prenatal injuries due to negligence while viable in utero has a right to bring a tort action for damages after birth under New York law.
- Whether the precedent set by Drobner v. Peters, which denied such recovery, should be re-examined and potentially overruled.
- The applicability of common law principles regarding the separate legal existence of a viable fetus and the sufficiency of proof in prenatal injury cases.
- Whether changes in this area of law should be made by the courts or the legislature.
Arguments of the Parties
The opinion does not contain a detailed account of the parties' legal arguments.
Table of Precedents Cited
| Precedent | Rule or Principle Cited For | Application by the Court |
|---|---|---|
| Drobner v. Peters, 232 N.Y. 220 (1921) | Denied recovery for prenatal injuries to a viable fetus due to lack of precedent and theoretical issues regarding separate existence. | Initially followed by lower courts to dismiss plaintiff's claim; the Court of Appeals re-examined and decided to overrule it based on changed legal and social context. |
| Dietrich v. Northampton, 138 Mass. 14 (1884) | Denied recovery for prenatal injuries on the ground that the fetus was part of the mother and damages were recoverable only by her. | Used as a foundational precedent in Drobner and discussed as reflecting outdated legal thought that the Court now rejects. |
| Nugent v. Brooklyn Heights R.R. Co., 154 App. Div. 667 | Dismissed suit for prenatal injuries based on contract of carriage theory but indicated a favorable view toward recovery absent that theory. | Referenced to show historical judicial hesitation but also openness to recovery for prenatal injuries. |
| Quinlen v. Welch, 69 Hun 584; 141 N.Y. 158 | Supported just treatment of prenatal wrongs though the Court of Appeals did not rule on the point. | Noted as early favorable authority supporting recovery for prenatal injuries. |
| Scott v. McPheeters, 33 Cal.App.2d 629 | Allowed recovery for prenatal injuries based on California statute deeming unborn child a person for certain interests. | Illustrated a modern trend supporting recovery despite the statute not being directly on point. |
| Williams v. Marion R.T., Inc., 152 Ohio St. 114; Jasinsky v. Potts, 153 Ohio St. 529 | Recognized the right of an infant to sue for prenatal injuries without statutory authorization. | Used to demonstrate evolving judicial acceptance of such claims. |
| Verkennes v. Corniea, 229 Minn. 365 | Upheld infant's right to bring action for prenatal injuries. | Part of the growing body of affirmative precedents cited. |
| Damasiewicz v. Gorsuch, 79 A.2d 550 (Md.) | Affirmed infant's right to recover for prenatal injuries. | Further evidence of modern judicial trend supporting recovery. |
| Tucker v. Carmichael, 208 Ga. 201 | Recognized infant's right to sue for prenatal injuries. | Part of the cited trend toward justice in such cases. |
| Montreal Tramways v. Leveille, 4 Dom. L. Rep. 337 (Canada, 1933) | Allowed recovery for prenatal injuries. | International precedent supporting the right to recover. |
| Stemmer v. Kline, 128 N.J.L. 455 | Dissent urged recognition of infant's right to sue for prenatal injuries. | Not adopted but cited to show judicial debate and dissent in favor of change. |
| Rumsey v. New York N.E.R.R. Co., 133 N.Y. 79 | Established the court's duty to re-examine legal questions when justice demands. | Supported the Court's authority and obligation to overrule outdated precedent. |
| Klein v. Maravelas, 219 N.Y. 383 | Reaffirmed the court's duty to reconsider legal rules to promote justice. | Reinforced the Court's approach to revising common law rules. |
| Funk v. United States, 290 U.S. 371 | Recognized courts’ role to update common law in absence of legislative action. | Quoted to justify judicial modification of antiquated rules in negligence law. |
| Hagopian v. Samuelson, 236 App. Div. 491 | Supported judicial adaptation of common law to promote justice. | Referenced as an example of courts updating law for fairness. |
| United Australia, Ltd. v. Barclay's Bank, Ltd., A.C. 1 | Lord Atkin’s dictum encouraging courts to overcome outdated legal doctrines obstructing justice. | Used metaphorically to justify overruling old precedent. |
Court's Reasoning and Analysis
The Court began by acknowledging that the complaint alleged prenatal injuries to a viable fetus resulting in permanent disability, a claim previously barred by the Drobner precedent due to lack of precedent and theoretical concerns about the fetus's separate legal existence. The Court reviewed historical and contemporary authority, noting a significant shift in other jurisdictions toward allowing recovery for such injuries. It found that the original rationale for Drobner—absence of precedent and difficulties of proof—no longer applied in light of modern medical evidence and judicial decisions. The Court emphasized that difficulties in proving causation are common to many negligence cases and do not justify denying a legal right. It rejected the notion that a viable fetus lacks separate legal existence, confining its holding to such viable fetuses injured prepartum. The Court also addressed the argument that legislative action, rather than judicial decision, should create this right, concluding that courts have the duty to update common law rules when justice requires it, particularly in nonstatutory fields. The Law Revision Commission's prior study supporting judicial action was noted. Ultimately, the Court exercised its authority to adapt the common law to contemporary standards of justice by overruling Drobner and allowing recovery for prenatal injuries to viable fetuses.
Holding and Implications
The Court held that a viable fetus who sustains prenatal injuries due to another's negligence has a cause of action for damages after birth and that the prior precedent denying such recovery (Drobner v. Peters) is overruled.
The direct effect of this decision is to permit infants injured in utero during viability to bring tort claims for damages in New York courts. The Court confined the holding to viable fetuses injured prepartum, thereby establishing a new legal standard. No broader legislative or statutory changes were mandated, and no new precedent beyond this specific ruling was set. The decision reflects a judicial commitment to adapt common law principles to contemporary standards of justice and medical understanding.
DESMOND, J.
The complaint served on behalf of this infant plaintiff alleges that, while the infant was in his mother's womb during the ninth month of her pregnancy, he sustained, through the negligence of defendant, such serious injuries that he came into this world permanently maimed and disabled. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint as not stating a cause of action, thus taking the position that its allegations, though true, gave the infant no right to recover damages in the courts of New York. The Special Term granted the motion and dismissed the suit, citing Drobner v. Peters ( 232 N.Y. 220). In the Appellate Division one Justice voted for reversal with an opinion in which he described the obvious injustice of the rule, noted a decisional trend (in other States and Canada) toward giving relief in such cases, and suggested that since Drobner v. Peters ( supra) was decided thirty years ago by a divided vote, our court might well re-examine it.
The four Appellate Division Justices who voted to affirm the dismissal below, wrote no opinion except that one of them stated that, were the question an open one and were he not bound by Drobner v. Peters ( supra), he would hold that "when a pregnant woman is injured through negligence and the child subsequently born suffers deformity or other injury as a result, recovery therefor may be allowed to the child, provided the causal relation between the negligence and the damage to the child be established by competent medical evidence." ( 278 App. Div. 913. ) It will hardly be disputed that justice (not emotionalism or sentimentality) dictates the enforcement of such a cause of action. The trend in decisions of other courts, and the writings of learned commentators, in the period since Drobner v. Peters was handed down in 1921, is strongly toward making such a recovery possible. The precise question for us on this appeal is: shall we follow Drobner v. Peters, or shall we bring the common law of this State, on this question, into accord with justice? I think, as New York State's court of last resort, we should make the law conform to right. Drobner v. Peters ( supra), like the present case, dealt with the sufficiency of a complaint alleging prenatal injuries, tortiously inflicted on a nine-month foetus, viable at the time and actually born later. There is, therefore, no material distinction between that case and the one we are passing on now. However, Drobner v. Peters must be examined against a background of history and of the legal thought of its time and of the thirty years that have passed since it was handed down. Early British and American common law gives no definite answer to our question, so it is not profitable to go back farther than Dietrich v. Northampton ( 138 Mass. 14), decided in 1884, with an opinion by Justice HOLMES, and, apparently, the first American case. Actually that was a death case, since the five-month infant, prematurely born, survived for a few minutes after birth. The principal ground asserted by the Massachusetts Supreme Court (138 Mass., at p. 17) for a denial of recovery was that "the unborn child was a part of the mother at the time of the injury" and that "any damage to it which was not too remote to be recovered for at all was recoverable by her" (the mother). A few years later (1890), in Ireland, the Queen's Bench Division, in a very famous holding, refused to allow a suit to be brought on behalf of a child born deformed as the result of an accident in defendant's railway coach, two of the Justices taking the ground that the infant plaintiff was not in esse at the time of the wrong, and the other two regarding the suit as one on the contract of carriage with no duty of care owing by the carrier to the unborn infant whose presence was unknown to defendant ( Walker v. Great Northern Ry. of Ireland, 28 L.R. Ir. 69). A similar complaint was dismissed for similar reasons, and the dismissal affirmed by the Appellate Division, Second Department, in Nugent v. Brooklyn Heights R.R. Co. ( 154 App. Div. 667, appeal dismissed 209 N.Y. 515). It is significant that the Appellate Division's opinion in the Nugent case ( supra) indicates that, had it not been for the contract-of-carriage theory and its supposed consequences, the writer of the opinion would have favored recovery. Other strong support for just treatment of prenatal wrongs (of another kind) is found also in the 1893 opinion of Justice HAIGHT (later of this court) in Quinlen v. Welch (69 Hun 584); however, on appeal, this court found it unnecessary to pass on the point ( 141 N.Y. 158). There were, in the early years of this century, rejections of such suits by other courts, with various fact situations involving before-birth traumas (see Allaire v. St. Luke's Hosp., 184 Ill. 359; Gorman v. Budlong, 23 R.I. 169; Stanford v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 214 Ala. 611; Newman v. City of Detroit, 281 Mich. 60; Magnolia Coca Cola Bottling Co. v. Jordan, 124 Tex. 347; Buel v. United Rys. Co., 248 Mo. 126; Lipps v. Milwaukee Elec. Ry. Light Co., 164 Wis. 272) and, quite recently, Massachusetts has reaffirmed the Dietrich rule ( Bliss v. Passanesi, 326 Mass. 461). The movement toward a more just treatment of such claims seems to have commenced with the able dissent in the Allaire case ( supra), which urged that a child viable but in utero, if injured by tort, should, when born, be allowed to sue; and the movement took impetus from the Wisconsin court's statement in the Lipps opinion ( supra), that it was restricting its holding (of nonrecovery) to a nonviable child. Thus, when Drobner v. Peters came to this court in 1921, there had been no decisions upholding such suits, although the two New York lower court rulings above cited ( Nugent and Quinlen cases, supra), were favorable to the position taken by plaintiff here.
In Drobner v. Peters ( supra), this court, finding no precedent for maintaining the suit, adopted the general theory of Dietrich v. Northampton ( supra), taking into account, besides the lack of authority to support the suit, the practical difficulties of proof in such cases, and the theoretical lack of separate human existence of an infant in utero. It is not unfair to say that the basic reason for Drobner v. Peters was absence of precedent. However, since 1921, numerous and impressive affirmative precedents have been developed. In California ( Scott v. McPheeters, 33 Cal.App.2d 629) the Court of Appeal allowed the suit — reliance was there put on a California statute but that statute was not directly in point, since it directed only that "a child conceived, but not yet born, is to be deemed an existing person, so far as may be necessary for its interests in the event of its subsequent birth." That California statute merely codified an accepted and ancient common-law rule (see Stedfast v. Nicoll, 3 Johns. Cas. 18, 23, 24) which, for some reason, has not, at least in our court, been applied to prepartum injuries tortiously inflicted. In 1949, the Ohio Supreme Court ( Williams v. Marion R.T., Inc., 152 Ohio St. 114, rule reaffirmed by the same court in Jasinsky v. Potts, 153 Ohio St. 529) and Minnesota's highest tribunal ( Verkennes v. Corniea, 229 Minn. 365), and in 1951, the Court of Appeals of Maryland ( Damasiewicz v. Gorsuch, ___ Md. ___, 79 A.2d 550) and the Supreme Court of Georgia ( Tucker v. Carmichael, 208 Ga. 201) upheld the right of an infant to bring an action like the one we are here examining, without statutory authorization. The Supreme Court of Canada had announced the same rule back in 1933 ( Montreal Tramways v. Leveille, 4 Dom. L. Rep. 337). In New Jersey a strong five-to-ten dissent (written by the Chief Justice) unsuccessfully urged the same view ( Stemmer v. Kline, 128 N.J.L. 455). In England there seems to be no controlling precedent (see Professor Winfield's comprehensive article in 4 U. of Toronto L.J. [1941-1942] 285 et seq.). Of law review articles on the precise question there is an ample supply (see 20 Minn. L. Rev. [Feb., 1936] 321-322; 34 Minn. L. Rev. [Dec., 1949] 65-66; 48 Mich. L. Rev. [Feb., 1950] 539-541; 35 Cornell L.Q. [Spring, 1950] 648-654; 1951 Wis. L. Rev. [May] 518-528; 50 Mich. L. Rev. [Nov., 1951] 166-167). They justify the statement in Prosser on Torts, at page 190, that: "All writers who have discussed the problem have joined in condemning the existing rule, in maintaining that the unborn child in the path of an automobile is as much a person in the street as the mother, and urging that recovery should be allowed upon proper proof."
What, then, stands in the way of a reversal here? Surely, as an original proposition, we would, today, be hard put to it to find a sound reason for the old rule. Following Drobner v. Peters ( supra) would call for an affirmance but the chief basis for that holding (lack of precedent) no longer exists. And it is not a very strong reason, anyhow, in a case like this. Of course, rules of law on which men rely in their business dealings should not be changed in the middle of the game, but what has that to do with bringing to justice a tort-feasor who surely has no moral or other right to rely on a decision of the New York Court of Appeals? Negligence law is common law, and the common law has been molded and changed and brought up-to-date in many another case. Our court said, long ago, that it had not only the right, but the duty to re-examine a question where justice demands it ( Rumsey v. New York N.E.R.R. Co., 133 N.Y. 79, 85, 86, and see Klein v. Maravelas, 219 N.Y. 383). That opinion notes that Chancellor KENT, more than a century ago, had stated that upwards of a thousand cases could then be pointed out in the English and American reports "`which had been overruled, doubted or limited in their application'", and that the great Chancellor had declared that decisions which seem contrary to reason "`ought to be examined without fear, and revised without reluctance, rather than to have the character of our law impaired, and the beauty and harmony of the system destroyed by the perpetuity of error.'" And Justice SUTHERLAND, writing for the Supreme Court in Funk v. United States ( 290 U.S. 371, 382), said that while legislative bodies have the power to change old rules of law, nevertheless, when they fail to act, it is the duty of the court to bring the law into accordance with present day standards of wisdom and justice rather than "with some outworn and antiquated rule of the past". No reason appears why there should not be the same approach when traditional common-law rules of negligence result in injustice (see Hagopian v. Samuelson, 236 App. Div. 491, 492, and see Justice STONE'S article on "The Common Law in the United States", 50 Harv. L. Rev. [1936], pp. 4-7).
The sum of the argument against plaintiff here is that there is no New York decision in which such a claim has been enforced. Winfield's answer to that (see U. of Toronto L.J. article, supra, p. 29) will serve: "if that were a valid objection, the common law would now be what it was in the Plantagenet period." And we can borrow from our British friends another mot: "When these ghosts of the past stand in the path of justice clanking their mediaeval chains the proper course for the judge is to pass through them undeterred" (Lord ATKIN in United Australia, Ltd., v. Barclay's Bank, Ltd., A.C. 1, 29). We act in the finest common-law tradition when we adapt and alter decisional law to produce common-sense justice.
The same answer goes to the argument that the change we here propose should come from the Legislature, not the courts. Legislative action there could, of course, be, but we abdicate our own function, in a field peculiarly nonstatutory, when we refuse to reconsider an old and unsatisfactory court-made rule. Perhaps, some kinds of changes in the common law could not safely be made without the kind of factual investigation which the Legislature and not the courts, is equipped for. Other proposed changes require elaborate research and consideration of a variety of possible remedies — such questions are peculiarly appropriate for Law Revision Commission scrutiny, and, in fact, the Law Revision Commission has made an elaborate examination of this very problem (1935 Report of N.Y. Law Revision Commission, pp. 449-476). That study was made at the instance of the late Chief Judge POUND of this court and was transmitted to the Legislature by the commission. Although made before the strong trend in favor of recovery had clearly manifested itself, the Law Revision Commission's comments were strongly in favor of the position taken in this opinion. The report, itself, contained no recommendations for legislation on the subject but that apparently was because the commission felt that it was for the courts to deal with this common-law question. At page 465, for instance, the report said: "The common law does not go on the theory that a case of first impression presents a problem of legislative as opposed to judicial power."
Two other reasons for dismissal (besides lack of precedent) are given in Drobner v. Peters ( supra). The first of those, discussed in many of the other writings on the subject herein cited, has to do with the supposed difficulty of proving or disproving that certain injuries befell the unborn child, or that they produced the defects discovered at birth, or later. Such difficulties there are, of course, and, indeed, it seems to be commonly accepted that only a blow of tremendous force will ordinarily injure a foetus, so carefully does nature insulate it. But such difficulty of proof or finding is not special to this particular kind of lawsuit (and it is beside the point, anyhow, in determining sufficiency of a pleading). Every day in all our trial courts (and before administrative tribunals, particularly the Workmen's Compensation Board), such issues are disposed of, and it is an inadmissible concept that uncertainty of proof can ever destroy a legal right. The questions of causation, reasonable certainty, etc., which will arise in these cases are no different, in kind, from the ones which have arisen in thousands of other negligence cases decided in this State, in the past.
The other objection to recovery here is the purely theoretical one that a foetus in utero has no existence of its own separate from that of its mother, that is, that it is not "a being in esse". We need not deal here with so large a subject. It is to be remembered that we are passing on the sufficiency of a complaint which alleges that this injury occurred during the ninth month of the mother's pregnancy, in other words, to a viable foetus, later born. Therefore, we confine our holding in this case to prepartum injuries to such viable children. Of course such a child, still in the womb is, in one sense, a part of its mother, but no one seems to claim that the mother, in her own name and for herself, could get damages for the injuries to her infant. To hold, as matter of law, that no viable foetus has any separate existence which the law will recognize is for the law to deny a simple and easily demonstrable fact. This child, when injured, was in fact, alive and capable of being delivered and of remaining alive, separate from its mother. We agree with the dissenting Justice below that "To deny the infant relief in this case is not only a harsh result, but its effect is to do reverence to an outmoded, timeworn fiction not founded on fact and within common knowledge untrue and unjustified." ( 278 App. Div. 913, 914.)
The judgments should be reversed, and the motion denied, with costs in all courts.
LEWIS, J. (dissenting).
I agree with the view of a majority of the court that prenatal injury to a child should not go unrequited by the one at fault. If, however, an unborn child is to be endowed with the right to enforce such requital by an action at law, I think that right should not be created by a judicial decision on the facts in a single case. Better, I believe, that the right should be the product of legislative action taken after hearings at which the Legislature can be advised, by the aid of medical science and research, not only as to the stage of gestation at which a foetus is considered viable, but also as to appropriate means — by time limitation for suit and otherwise — for avoiding abuses which might result from the difficulty of tracing causation from prenatal injury to postnatal deformity.
When, in England, the right — unknown to the common law — was created which permitted suit to recover damages for negligently causing the death of a human being, it was accomplished by legislative action. In our own jurisdiction a similar right of action — carefully limited as to time and by other measures to prevent abuse — has long been the subject of statute law adopted by the process incident to statutory enactment. That same process, in my opinion, is peculiarly appropriate for the solution of the problem now before us where unknown factors abound.
Lord Campbell's Act, 9 10 Vict., ch. 93.
Decedent Estate Law, art. 5.
Accordingly, I dissent and vote for affirmance.
LOUGHRAN, Ch. J., DYE, FULD and FROESSEL, JJ., concur with DESMOND, J.; LEWIS, J., dissents in opinion in which CONWAY, J., concurs.
Judgments reversed, etc.
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