Opinion
Docket No. 56037.
Decided April 22, 1982. Leave to appeal applied for.
Daniel Loznak, for plaintiff.
Ulanoff, Ross, Summer, LaKritz, Wesley Bloom, P.C., for defendant Cole.
On July 26, 1978, plaintiff, as guardian for her two minor children, sued defendants, claiming the children had been deprived of the society and companionship of their father due to defendants' wrongful acts, which culminated in the fatal shooting of their father on May 14, 1972. One of the defendants, Charles Cole, sought summary and accelerated judgment. The trial court denied the motion in an order dated December 9, 1980, and we granted leave to appeal.
On May 14, 1972, plaintiff's decedent became involved in a dispute about a $5 bet on a pool game in Harold's Bar. Defendants Dean Alton Culver and David Young fought with the decedent and Culver fatally shot him. Harold's Bar was owned by Harold J. Crystal, defendant Cole's decedent.
Plaintiff filed this suit on behalf of her children more than six years later. The complaint alleged in count I that Culver and Young assaulted plaintiff's decedent and that Culver killed him. In count II, plaintiff alleged that Crystal knowingly permitted a nuisance, i.e., illegal gambling, in his establishment. In count III, plaintiff claimed liability under the dramshop act.
Defendant Cole, as administrator of the estate of Crystal, moved for summary and accelerated judgment on count II alone, claiming that the complaint alleged a wrongful death action which had not been brought by a personal representative of the deceased, MCL 600.2922; MSA 27A.2922, nor had it been brought within three years, MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7). The court denied the motion, finding that under Berger v Weber, 82 Mich. App. 199; 267 N.W.2d 124 (1978), the minor children had a right to pursue an independent cause of action for the loss of society and companionship of their father.
On appeal, we must determine (1) whether the children's claim for loss of society and companionship of their father must be brought under the wrongful death act, or whether they may maintain an independent cause of action, and (2) whether their claim is barred by the statute of limitations.
Our consideration of both issues requires an examination of the nature of an action for loss of society and companionship. The common law recognized a husband's right to sue for loss of consortium resulting from an injury to his wife. Berger v Weber, 411 Mich. 1, 20; 303 N.W.2d 424 (1981) [affirming with modifications 82 Mich. App. 199; 267 N.W.2d 124 (1978), the Supreme Court opinion being released after the trial court's final order in this case]. A father also could sue for the loss of services of an injured child. Id., 21. A wife or child, however, had no common-law right to recover for the loss of companionship or services of an injured husband or father.
The Supreme Court broadened the common-law right in Montgomery v Stephan, 359 Mich. 33; 101 N.W.2d 227 (1960), when it permitted a wife to maintain an action for loss of consortium when her husband had been negligently injured. Similarly, a child's cause of action for negligently caused injuries to his parent resulting in loss of parental consortium was recognized by the Supreme Court in Berger v Weber, supra. Mortgomery and Berger each involved actions for the negligently caused injury, but not death, of a loved one.
When death results from a negligent act, a remedy outside the common law exists in an action for wrongful death. Before 1971, it was unclear whether a wrongful death action could include as an element of damages the loss of companionship and services of the deceased. Compare the majority and dissent in Breckon v Franklin Fuel Co, 383 Mich. 251; 174 N.W.2d 836 (1970), with the majority holding that there can be no recovery under the wrongful death act for loss of consortium, and that decision being overruled, in Smith v Detroit, 388 Mich. 637; 202 N.W.2d 300 (1972). In 1971, the Legislature, apparently responding to Breckon, amended the wrongful death act to expressly permit recovery for loss of society and companionship of the deceased. 1971 PA 65, § 1, effective March 30, 1972, Smith v Detroit, supra, adopting the dissent of Justice ADAMS in Breckon. After the 1971 amendment and Smith, it has been unquestioned that the wrongful death act permits recovery for the loss of services and companionship.
We have consistently recognized that the wrongful death statute extended the right to recover for real injuries that were not actionable at common law. Crystal v Hubbard, 92 Mich. App. 240, 243; 285 N.W.2d 66 (1979), lv gtd 408 Mich. 895 (1980). The broadened right of recovery for the loss of consortium of parents or husbands reflects the legislative intent to go beyond the common law and to provide remedies for these very real losses.
The expanded class of persons entitled to seek damages for the loss of the society and companionship of a loved one is compelled, however, to follow the strict limitations contained within the wrongful death act. These legislative limitations reflect a compromise. A broader remedy does indeed exist, but the remedies must be sought through a single action brought by the personal representative of the deceased within three years of the deceased's death. MCL 600.2922; MSA 27A.2922. The goals of avoiding a multiplicity of suits, MacDonald v Quimby, 350 Mich. 21, 29; 85 N.W.2d 157 (1957), and preventing the prosecution of stale claims are manifested in the following limitations.
MCL 600.2922(1); MSA 27A.2922(1) provides that all actions for a wrongful death "shall be brought only under this section". The use of the word "shall" suggests that the language is mandatory. While arguably an action for a loss of services is not an action for death but rather an action for injuries to others as a result of the death, the Supreme Court has interpreted this section as barring a separate action for loss of services. Burns v Van Laan, 367 Mich. 485, 488; 116 N.W.2d 873 (1962). This is consistent with the legislative goal of avoiding a multiplicity of suits.
MCL 600.2922(2); MSA 27A.2922(2) requires that all actions shall be brought by and in the names of the personal representatives of the deceased. This language, too, has been recognized as mandatory. Maiuri v Sinacola Construction Co, 382 Mich. 391, 393; 170 N.W.2d 27 (1969). This provision has been held to bar a widow from suing in her own right, as the action must be brought by the personal representative of the deceased. MacDonald, supra, Burns, supra.
These limitations on the statutory cause of action may at times create a seeming injustice, as Justice ADAMS recognized in his dissent in Breckon, supra, adopted in Smith v Detroit, supra:
"[I]n the case of death rather than injury, the wrongful death act was held to encompass the damages a wife might recover. She does not have a separate cause of action against a tortfeasor who kills her husband as she does against the one who injured him." Breckon, 289.
We believe that the same reasoning must apply to a child as well as a wife.
This conclusion is entirely consistent with the Supreme Court's decision in Berger, supra. There, the Court fashioned a common-law remedy for a child who suffers the loss of parental society and companionship due to a negligently inflicted injury on the parent. The majority reasoned that this remedy was necessary to fill a gap in the common law, since the child who suffers the same loss due to the death of a parent has a right to recover under the wrongful death act. Berger, supra, 13. We therefore cannot, as plaintiff requests, extend the wrongful death act by applying Berger, which merely sought to create a common-law right coextensive with the statutory right.
We conclude that the trial court improperly found that a child may maintain an independent cause of action for the loss of services due to the wrongful death of his parent. Such an action may be brought only by a personal representative acting under the wrongful death act.
Wrongful death actions must be brought within three years of the death of the deceased. Rieterman v Westinghouse, Inc, 106 Mich. App. 698, 701-702; 308 N.W.2d 612 (1981). Plaintiff argues that this period of limitation should be tolled during the children's minority, as the children cannot appoint a personal representative or take any action to force a personal representative to pursue an action. We are unpersuaded by plaintiff's argument.
At the deceased's death, the three-year limit was expressed in the general statute, MCL 600.5805(7); MSA 27A.5805(7). Effective September 13, 1978, a specific statute of limitations for wrongful death actions sets the same three-year limit. MCL 600.5805(8); MSA 27A.5805(8).
We do not believe that the words of the general tolling statute permit us to apply it here. MCL 600.5851(1); MSA 27A.5851(1) provides:
"If the person first entitled to make an entry or bring an action is under 18 years of age, insane or imprisoned at the time his claim accrues, he or those claiming under him shall have 1 year after his disability is removed through death or otherwise, to make the entry or bring the action although the period of limitations has run." (Emphasis supplied.)
As a child is not a party "first entitled" to bring an action for wrongful death, we believe that the child's disability is irrelevant.
Plaintiff relies on Gaudette v Webb, 362 Mass. 60; 284 N.E.2d 222; 61 ALR3d 893 (1972), to support her argument. In that case, the Massachusetts Supreme Court held that the period of limitation for a wrongful death action was tolled during a child's minority. That case, however, is distinguishable, as the court relied primarily on the Massachusetts common-law wrongful death action, and Michigan has not recognized a common-law action for wrongful death. Crystal v Hubbard, supra.
We believe that the New York Court of Appeals, faced with the same issue, properly refused to follow the lead of Massachusetts. In Ratka v St Francis Hospital, 44 N.Y.2d 604; 407 N.Y.S.2d 458; 378 N.E.2d 1027 (1978), the court refused to recognize a common-law action for wrongful death and declined to hold that the period of limitation for the statutory wrongful death action should be tolled when the action involved a minor's suit for loss of services. The court held that, so long as there were next of kin who were under no disability from being appointed to represent the estate, there was a remedy and the period of limitation should not be tolled.
In the case before us, the minor children are represented by their mother, who has not alleged that she was under a disability at the time of the father's death or thereafter. We believe that the children had an adequate remedy under the wrongful death statute. Were we to hold otherwise, we would upset the legislative determinations that avoidance of a multiplicity of suits and the barring of stale actions are important considerations. Here, as the action was not instituted within the three-year period of limitation, it is barred.
We observe that our holding leads to an apparently inequitable result. Here, where the children's father was killed through the alleged wrongful acts of the defendants, the statute of limitations bars them from any remedy at this point. Had the father been injured, however, the children could proceed under their common-law cause of action after they reach majority. This seeming inequity results from the judicial creation of a cause of action to protect the rights of the child whose parents are injured. Although the courts intended only to create a right that was coextensive with the rights of a child whose parents are killed, the court did not provide the same period of limitation as is provided in the statutory action. We do not believe that we should remedy this apparent inequity by broadening the scope of the statutory action, and we leave it to the Legislature to fashion any new limitation period for the new action that was recognized in Berger, supra.
Reversed and remanded. No costs, a question of statutory interpretation being before the Court.