Hailey Marie-Joe Force v. American Family Mutual Insurance Company ( 2014 )


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    2014 WI 82
    SUPREME COURT           OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:              2012AP2402
    COMPLETE TITLE:        Hailey Marie-Joe Force, a/k/a Hailey Marie-Joe
    Dziewa, a
    minor, by her Guardian Ad Litem, Joseph J.
    Welcenbach,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    The Estate of Billy Joe Force, by its Special
    Administrator,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company,
    Jeffrey A. Brown
    and Regent Insurance Company,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    ------------------------------------------------
    Mehgan Force, a minor, by her Guardian ad Litem,
    Jason
    Oldenburg, and Lauren Force, a minor, by her
    Guardian ad
    Litem, Jason Oldenburg,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company and
    Jeffrey A.
    Brown,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    Regent Insurance Company,
    Defendant.
    ON CERTIFICATION FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS
    OPINION FILED:         July 18, 2014
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:         January 15, 2014
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:              Circuit
    COUNTY:             Waukesha
    JUDGE:              J. Mac Davis
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:          PROSSER, J., concurs. (Opinion filed.)
    DISSENTED:          ROGGENSACK, ZIEGLER, GABLEMAN, JJJ., dissent.
    (Opinion filed.)
    ZIEGLER, J., dissent. (Opinion filed.)
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For the plaintiffs-appellants, there were briefs by Joseph
    J. Welcenbach and Welcenbach Law Offices, S.C., Milwaukee, and
    Jason R. Oldenburg and The Previant Law Firm, S.C., Milwaukee,
    and oral argument by Joseph J. Welcenbach.
    For    the      defendant-respondent   American   Family   Mutual
    Insurance Company and Jeffrey A. Brown, there was a brief by
    James C. Ratzel, Leslie A. Schunk, and Ratzel & Associates, LLC,
    Brookfield, and oral argument by Leslie A. Schunk.
    For the defendant-respondent Regent Insurance Company there
    was a brief by Donald H. Piper, Jon D. Monson, and Piper &
    Schmidt, Milwaukee, and oral argument by Donald H. Piper.
    An amicus curiae brief was filed by Susan R. Tyndell, Peter
    M. Young, D. James Weis, and Habush Habush & Rottier, S.C.,
    Rhinelander, on behalf of the Wisconsin Association for Justice.
    2
    
    2014 WI 82
                                                            NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.    2012AP2402
    (L.C. No.   2011CV3151 & 2012CV417)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                    :            IN SUPREME COURT
    Hailey Marie-Joe Force, a/k/a Hailey Marie-Joe
    Dziewa, a minor, by her Guardian Ad Litem,
    Joseph J. Welcenbach,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    The Estate of Billy Joe Force, by its Special
    Administrator,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company,
    Jeffrey A. Brown and Regent Insurance Company,
    FILED
    Defendants-Respondents.
    JUL 22, 2014
    Diane M. Fremgen
    -----------------------------------------------         Clerk of Supreme Court
    Mehgan Force, a minor, by her Guardian ad
    Litem, Jason Oldenburg, and Lauren Force, a
    minor, by her Guardian ad Litem, Jason
    Oldenburg,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company and
    Jeffrey A. Brown,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    Regent Insurance Company,
    Defendant.
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Waukesha
    County, J. Mac Davis, Judge.         Reversed and remanded.
    ¶1     SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, C.J.            This is an appeal of a
    judgment of the circuit court for Waukesha County, J. Mac Davis,
    Judge,     granting   summary     judgment    in   favor   of   Jeffrey    Brown,
    American Family Mutual Insurance Company, and Regent Insurance
    Company (collectively the defendants).             The part of the judgment
    at   issue   here     dismissed    the     consolidated    actions   of    Hailey
    Marie-Joe Force, Mehgan Force, and Lauren Force, collectively
    the minor children of Billy Joe Force, the deceased, against the
    defendants.
    ¶2     The    court   of   appeals    certified     the   action    to   this
    court pursuant to Wis. Stat. § (Rule) 809.61.
    ¶3     The issue before the court is:                Can minor children
    recover for the wrongful death of their father under Wis. Stat.
    § 895.04(2) (2011-12),1 when the deceased leaves behind a spouse
    who was estranged from the deceased and who is precluded from
    recovering for the wrongful death?
    1
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2011-12 version unless otherwise indicated.
    No.    2012AP2402
    ¶4       Linda       Force,   the       deceased's      spouse      in    the     instant
    case,   is   precluded         from    recovery      for    her   husband's          wrongful
    death because the circuit court dismissed her claim, concluding
    that she has no compensable damages under the wrongful death
    statute; this dismissal of Linda Force's wrongful death claim
    was not appealed.
    ¶5       In the instant case, Linda Force did not receive any
    financial      support     from       the    deceased      from   the    time       of   their
    separation in 1997 to the deceased's death in 2008.                                Their long
    separation with no communication for many years was evidence
    that there was no interaction or affection between the spouses.
    The circuit court concluded that the unique facts of the instant
    case demonstrate that the deceased's spouse had no claim for
    damages   for      her    husband's         wrongful      death   under      the     wrongful
    death statutes.           The dismissal of Linda Force's wrongful death
    claim is not before us.
    ¶6       The      defendants       argue       that    because      the        deceased's
    spouse is still living, she is a "surviving spouse" under the
    statutes;      that      her   recovery       for   the     wrongful      death       of   her
    husband   is    zero;      and    that      consequently      the    deceased's          minor
    children do not have any set-aside from the surviving spouse's
    recovery.
    3
    No.    2012AP2402
    ¶7      The    defendants    rely    on        the   statutory      hierarchy    of
    beneficiaries created by Wis. Stat.                    § 895.04(2).2           The first
    class of beneficiaries is the surviving spouse, with a set-aside
    from his or her recovery for minor children "in recognition of
    the   duty    and     responsibility       of    a     parent     to    support     minor
    children."           If   there     is     a         "surviving        spouse,"     other
    beneficiaries do not have a cause of action for wrongful death.
    If there is no "surviving spouse," the cause of action passes to
    the next beneficiary in the statutory hierarchy.
    ¶8      We disagree with the defendants' interpretation of the
    statutes.      We    conclude     that    in     order      to    avoid    an     absurd,
    unreasonable result contrary to the legislative purposes of the
    wrongful death statutes, Wis. Stat. §§ 895.03 and 895.04(2), we
    construe the statutes under the unique facts of the instant case
    to    allow    the    minor     children        to    recover     even     though     the
    deceased's spouse in the instant case is alive and does not
    2
    Steinbarth   v.   Johannes,  
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    ,   164, 
    423 N.W.2d 540
           (1988)        ("[Wisconsin        Stat.      §]
    895.04(2) . . . establishes          a        hierarchy        of
    beneficiaries . . . ."); Cincoski v. Rogers, 
    4 Wis. 2d 423
    , 425,
    
    90 N.W.2d 784
    (1958) ("The statutes . . . designate preferences
    according to the relationship to the deceased. . . . [T]he
    nonexistence of the preferred beneficiary or beneficiaries is
    essential to a right of action by or in behalf of other
    beneficiaries.    The action must be brought by or for the
    wrongful death in the order of preference fixed by the
    statute."); Anderson v. Westfield Ins. Co., 
    300 F. Supp. 2d 726
    (W.D. Wis. 2002) ("[T]he ability to recover under Wisconsin's
    wrongful death statute is similar to intestate succession,
    namely, a claimant has standing only if no other beneficiary
    higher in the hierarchy has standing.").
    4
    No.    2012AP2402
    (according to the circuit court) recover any damages for the
    deceased husband's wrongful death.
    ¶9      Our result comports with the dual legislative purposes
    of the wrongful death statutes: (1) to impose liability on the
    wrongdoer; and (2) to protect relational interests, especially
    the interests of the deceased's minor dependent children.
    ¶10     The      statutory         interpretation              advocated      by     the
    defendants would contravene these fundamental purposes of the
    wrongful death statutes by barring any wrongful death claim by
    Linda Force and the minor children, along with all lower-tier
    beneficiaries.
    ¶11     The      defendants      call       for    the     unfair,       unreasonable
    outcome    that     the     Wisconsin    legislature           sought      to    avoid    by
    enacting     the     first    wrongful      death       statute       in    1857:        the
    wrongdoer would be immune from liability and no compensation
    would be recovered by the deceased's relatives who would have
    recovered     had     the     deceased      lived.           The    interpretation       of
    "surviving       spouse"      should     avoid        such    unreasonable,         absurd
    results.
    ¶12     We      examine    the     meaning        of     the    phrase       "surviving
    spouse" in Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2), in the unique fact scenario
    presented in this case.3             The words "surviving" and "spouse" are
    3
    Wisconsin Stat. § 895.04 uses various phrases to refer to
    the primary beneficiary of a wrongful death recovery: "[i]f the
    deceased leaves surviving a spouse," "if no spouse or domestic
    partner survives," and "surviving spouse."     All refer to the
    same person.   We use the phrase "surviving spouse" to refer to
    each of these statutory phrases.        The case law has done
    similarly.
    5
    No.     2012AP2402
    commonly used words.            The text of the wrongful death statute
    does not define who is or is not a "surviving spouse."
    ¶13    To interpret and apply the phrase "surviving spouse"
    in   the    wrongful    death     statutes,      we   examine    the       text    of   the
    wrongful     death     statutes    using       various   interpretive           aids.    In
    interpreting words in a statutory text, we do more than focus on
    the dictionary definition of each word.                  Interpretive aids such
    as the legislative purpose, prior Wisconsin case law and case
    law from other jurisdictions, and statutory history help guide
    our interpretation of the phrase "surviving spouse."
    ¶14    The legislative purposes are clear: impose liability
    on the tortfeasor and allow recovery by the deceased's relatives
    who would have recovered had the deceased lived.                          Our case law
    demonstrates that courts interpret the wrongful death statutes
    to apply to the unique fact situation presented by a case in
    order to meet the legislative purposes, rather than apply a
    strict literal interpretation of the phrase "surviving spouse."
    Sister state case law similarly recognizes that a lower-tier
    beneficiary     can      maintain      a   claim      even      if    a     higher-tier
    beneficiary     is     alive,   when   the      unique   facts       would      otherwise
    contravene the purposes of the wrongful death statutes.
    ¶15    The statutory history of the wrongful death statutes
    demonstrates that the legislature has explicitly protected the
    rights of minor children to recover for wrongful death and left
    interpretation of the term "surviving spouse" to the courts in
    unique and specific fact situations.
    6
    No.    2012AP2402
    ¶16     Upon      examining        the       statutory       text      with      these
    interpretive         aids,   we    conclude         that    the     phrase       "surviving
    spouse" in Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) does not always simply mean
    any living spouse of the deceased.                     The meaning of the phrase
    "surviving spouse" has been elucidated by scrutinizing unique
    fact situations to define "surviving spouse" in accord with the
    legislative purposes of the wrongful death statutes, rather than
    considering only the literal meaning of the phrase "surviving
    spouse."
    ¶17     For the reasons set forth, we interpret the phrase
    "surviving spouse" in the present case as not including Linda
    Force, the deceased's estranged spouse who, as a result of the
    circuit court's dismissal of her wrongful death claim (which was
    not     appealed),      is   barred       from       recovery      under     Wis.      Stat.
    §§ 895.03 and 895.04(2).              If Linda Force is not a "surviving
    spouse" under the statute, the parties do not dispute that the
    minor children have a cognizable claim as lineal heirs.                                   As
    lineal heirs of the deceased, the children would be first in
    line for any recovery for the wrongful death of their father.
    ¶18     We conclude that the circuit court erred in granting
    the defendants summary judgment against the minor children and
    erred    in    dismissing       the   minor         children's      causes       of   action
    against the defendants for wrongful death.                         The minor children
    in    the     present    case     have    a        cause   of     action     against     the
    7
    No.     2012AP2402
    defendants for wrongful death as if Linda Force were not alive
    at the death of the deceased.4
    ¶19   Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the circuit
    court against the children and in favor of the defendants and
    remand the matter to the circuit court for further proceedings
    not inconsistent with this opinion.
    ¶20   To assist the reader, here is a table of contents to
    this opinion:
    Introduction:      ¶¶1-20.
    I.    The facts and procedural history are not in dispute:
    ¶¶21-26.
    II.   We review a grant of summary judgment independently of
    the circuit court, using the same methodology as the
    circuit court:         ¶¶27-31.
    III. The    statutory        text    provides   some     support      for    the
    defendant's       interpretation,         but     in     unique       fact
    situations, the defendant's interpretation may not be
    a reasonable one:         ¶¶32-55.
    IV.   The   interpretation          and   application    of    the    wrongful
    death statutes should be in accord with the explicit
    legislative purposes: (1) to render a wrongdoer liable
    when an injured party dies and (2) to compensate for
    the   loss   of    a    relational      interest       caused    by   the
    4
    In light of our holding, we need not and do not address
    the children's equal protection constitutional claim that if
    Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) bars their claim absent recovery by the
    surviving spouse, the statute is unconstitutional.
    8
    No.    2012AP2402
    wrongful death, especially the interests of the minor
    children of the deceased:            ¶¶56-68.
    V.      The Wisconsin case law and case law from other states
    reveal that "surviving spouse" does not always simply
    mean any spouse who survives the deceased:                    ¶¶69-110.
    VI.     The statutory history of the wrongful death statutes
    demonstrates     that     the       legislature        has        explicitly
    protected the rights of minor children to recover for
    wrongful death and left interpretation of the phrase
    "surviving     spouse"       to     the     courts     in     unique      and
    specific fact situations:            ¶¶111-125.
    Conclusion:       ¶¶126-129.
    I
    ¶21     The    facts   and   procedural       history     of    this       case   are
    undisputed for purposes of this appeal.                      Billy Joe Force, the
    deceased, was driving a motor vehicle for his employer.                            He died
    when his vehicle collided with a motor vehicle driven by Jeffrey
    Brown, the individual defendant.
    ¶22     The deceased's estranged spouse, Linda Force, and his
    three nonmarital minor children, Hailey, Mehgan, and Lauren,5
    each       sought    compensation    from        Jeffrey    Brown,    the        individual
    defendant; American Family, the insurer of Brown's vehicle; and
    Regent       Insurance    Company,     the       insurer    of   Billy      Joe    Force's
    5
    The complaint refers to Lauren Force as both "Lauryn" and
    "Lauren."    We use "Lauren," as the circuit court, court of
    appeals, and briefs do.
    9
    No.    2012AP2402
    employer.           The   allegation    is    that    Brown's      negligence      caused
    Billy Joe Force's death.6
    ¶23        Billy Joe Force and Linda Force were married in 1995
    or 1996 and separated after six months of marriage.                          They never
    were       legally    separated   or    divorced.        They   did    not    have    any
    children together.           Billy Joe Force had three children with two
    women       who    were   not   his    wife.         Linda   Force    has     no   legal
    obligation to support these three minor children.
    ¶24        At the time of the motor vehicle accident in 2006,
    Linda       Force    lived   in   New    York;       Billy   Joe    Force     lived   in
    Wisconsin.           During the five years before his death in 2006,
    Linda Force had no contact with Billy Joe Force.                             Billy Joe
    6
    Linda Force, the estranged spouse of the deceased, and
    Hailey Marie-Joe Force, Billy's youngest daughter, initiated one
    action seeking wrongful death damages.
    Linda Force raised claims for wrongful death both as a
    surviving spouse and as special administrator for the estate of
    the deceased.
    Hailey made two claims:    first, that she was entitled to
    "an independent, cognizable claim for relief of her own" for
    damages arising out of the death of her father; and second, that
    in the absence of an independent claim, she was entitled to a
    "statutorily protected interest under [Wis. Stat.] Sec. 895.04
    as a child of the deceased with whose support the deceased was
    legally charged."
    Mehgan and Lauren initiated their own action, seeking
    wrongful death damages.      They claimed that the defendant
    driver's negligence deprived them of their father's "aid, wages,
    economic    benefits,   assistance,    society,   comfort    and
    companionship." They did not claim an offset from the recovery
    of Linda Force.
    The cases were consolidated by the circuit court, pursuant
    to Wis. Stat. § 895.04(3), on March 30, 2012.
    10
    No.    2012AP2402
    Force never provided any pecuniary support to Linda Force from
    1997 until his death in 2008.
    ¶25    The       circuit     court      granted     summary       judgment        to   the
    defendants,       concluding,        inter       alia,    that      Linda      Force,     as   a
    surviving, estranged spouse, had no compensable damages under
    the wrongful death statute and that none of the three children
    had a cause of action for wrongful death.7
    ¶26    The    three     minor      children        appealed       the    dismissal       of
    their actions.           Linda Force has not appealed the dismissal of
    her personal claim for damages for wrongful death.
    II
    ¶27    We review a grant of summary judgment independently of
    the circuit court, using the same methodology as the circuit
    court.8     Summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine issue of
    material     fact       exists     and     the      moving    party       is    entitled       to
    judgment as a matter of law.9
    ¶28    The material facts are undisputed in the present case
    and   the    resolution       of    the       dispute     between       the     three     minor
    children and the defendants turns on a question of law, that is,
    the   interpretation          and     application            of   the     wrongful       death
    statutes     to    these    undisputed           facts.       The   interpretation           and
    application       of    a   statute      to    undisputed         facts    are       ordinarily
    7
    A survival claim by the estate of the deceased is not
    before us.
    8
    Park Bank v. Westburg, 
    2013 WI 57
    , ¶36, 
    348 Wis. 2d 409
    ,
    
    832 N.W.2d 539
    .
    9
    Wis. Stat. § 802.08(2).
    11
    No.    2012AP2402
    questions of law that this court determines independently of the
    circuit court, although it benefits from the circuit court's
    analysis.10       We also benefit from the analysis of the court of
    appeals in its certification memorandum in the present case.11
    ¶29     To interpret and apply the phrase "surviving spouse"
    used in the wrongful death statute, we examine the text of the
    statute.
    ¶30     In examining the statutory text, however, we do more
    than focus on a dictionary definition of each word.                 Words are
    given     meaning    to   avoid   absurd,   unreasonable,   or     implausible
    results     and     results   that    are   clearly   at    odds    with   the
    legislature's purpose.12          We scrutinize the words in view of the
    10
    Showers Appraisals, LLC v. Musson Bros., 
    2013 WI 79
    , ¶21,
    
    350 Wis. 2d 509
    , 
    835 N.W.2d 226
    .
    11
    Lornson v. Siddiqui, 
    2007 WI 92
    , ¶13, 
    302 Wis. 2d 519
    ,
    
    735 N.W.2d 55
    .
    12
    Alberte v. Anew Health Care Servs., Inc., 
    2000 WI 7
    , ¶10,
    
    232 Wis. 2d 587
    , 592, 
    605 N.W.2d 515
    ; Seider v. O'Connell, 
    2000 WI 7
    6, ¶32, 
    236 Wis. 2d 211
    , 
    612 N.W.2d 659
    ; Teschendorf v.
    State Farm Ins. Cos., 
    2006 WI 89
    , ¶¶15, 18, 32, 
    293 Wis. 2d 123
    ,
    
    717 N.W.2d 258
    .
    12
    No.    2012AP2402
    purpose of the statute.13        We consider the meaning of words in
    the context in which they appear.14          The definition of a word or
    phrase can vary in different circumstances.15                Different fact
    scenarios   may   require   different      interpretations    of    the   text,
    because words cannot anticipate every possible fact situation.16
    "[R]easonable     minds   can   differ    about   a   statute's    application
    13
    State v. Hanson, 
    2012 WI 4
    , ¶17, 
    338 Wis. 2d 243
    , 255,
    
    808 N.W.2d 390
    , 396 ("Context and [statutory] purpose are
    important in discerning the plain meaning of a statute.       We
    favor an interpretation that fulfills the statute's purpose.")
    (citations omitted); Klemm v. Am. Transmission Co., LLC, 
    2011 WI 37
    , ¶18, 
    333 Wis. 2d 580
    , 
    798 N.W.2d 223
    ("An interpretation
    that fulfills the purpose of the statute is favored over one
    that undermines the purpose."); Lagerstrom v. Myrtle Werth
    Hosp.-Mayo Health System, 
    2005 WI 124
    , ¶51, 
    285 Wis. 2d 1
    , 
    700 N.W.2d 201
    (examining    "legislative  goals" to interpret a
    statute); Alberte, 
    232 Wis. 2d 587
    , ¶10 (courts need not adopt a
    literal or usual meaning of a word when acceptance of that
    meaning would thwart the obvious purpose of the statute); United
    Wis. Ins. Co. v. LIRC, 
    229 Wis. 2d 416
    , 425-26, 
    600 N.W.2d 186
    (Ct. App. 1999) ("Fundamental to an analysis of any statutory
    interpretation is the ascertainment and advancement of the
    legislative purpose.").
    14
    Alberte, 
    232 Wis. 2d 587
    , ¶10 ("While it is true that
    statutory interpretation begins with the language of the
    statute, it is also well established that courts must not look
    at a single, isolated sentence or portion of a sentence, but at
    the role of the relevant language in the entire statute.");
    Seider, 
    236 Wis. 2d 211
    , ¶43 (contextual approach is not new);
    Klemm, 
    333 Wis. 2d 580
    , ¶18 ("The statutory language is examined
    within the context in which it is used.").
    15
    Sauer v. Reliance Ins. Co., 
    152 Wis. 2d 234
    , 241, 
    448 N.W.2d 256
    (Ct. App. 1989).
    16
    Northrop   v.  Opperman,   
    2011 WI 5
    ,   ¶22  n.8,   
    331 Wis. 2d 287
    , 
    795 N.W.2d 719
    ; Teschendorf, 
    293 Wis. 2d 123
    , ¶20.
    13
    No.   2012AP2402
    when the text is constant but the circumstances to which the
    text may apply are kaleidoscopic."17
    ¶31    We also examine our case law interpreting the statute18
    and   the    statutory   history   of   the   statute   to   determine   the
    meaning of words.19
    III
    ¶32    This court has declared that there is no common-law
    action for wrongful death; the right to bring suit is purely
    statutory.20
    17
    Seider, 
    236 Wis. 2d 211
    , ¶43.
    18
    Nowell v. City of Wausau, 
    2013 WI 88
    , ¶21, 
    351 Wis. 2d 1
    ,
    
    838 N.W.2d 852
    ; Juneau County Star-Times v. Juneau County, 
    2013 WI 4
    , ¶66, 
    345 Wis. 2d 122
    , 
    824 N.W.2d 457
    ; State v. Davison,
    
    2003 WI 89
    , ¶61, 
    263 Wis. 2d 145
    , 
    666 N.W.2d 1
    .
    19
    "Statutory history encompasses the previously enacted and
    repealed provisions of a statute. By analyzing the changes the
    legislature has made over the course of several years, we may be
    assisted in arriving at the meaning of a statute. Therefore,
    statutory history is part of the context in which we interpret
    the words used in a statute." Richards v. Badger Mut. Ins. Co.,
    
    2008 WI 52
    , ¶22, 
    309 Wis. 2d 541
    , 
    749 N.W.2d 581
    (citations
    omitted).   See, e.g., LaCount v. General Cas. Co., 
    2006 WI 14
    ,
    ¶31, 
    288 Wis. 2d 358
    , 
    709 N.W.2d 418
    ; VanCleve v. City of
    Marinette, 
    2003 WI 2
    , ¶6, 
    258 Wis. 2d 80
    , 
    655 N.W.2d 113
    ; State
    v. Byers, 
    2003 WI 86
    , ¶¶22-27, 
    263 Wis. 2d 113
    , 
    665 N.W.2d 729
    ;
    Hughes v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    197 Wis. 2d 973
    , 980-84, 
    542 N.W.2d 148
    (1996).
    20
    Cogger v. Trudell, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    , 353, 
    151 N.W.2d 146
    (1967).      We need not re-examine this issue in the instant case.
    For a discussion of a common-law action for wrongful death,
    see, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 925 cmt. k;     John
    Fabian Witt, From Loss of Services to Loss of Support:       The
    Wrongful Death Statutes, the Origins of Modern Tort Law, and the
    Making of the Nineteenth-Century Family, 25 Law & Soc. Inquiry
    717 (2000); Wex S. Malone, The Genesis of Wrongful Death, 17
    Stan. L. Rev. 1043 (1965).
    14
    No.   2012AP2402
    ¶33   We   turn    first    to   the   text   of   the   wrongful   death
    statutes, Wis. Stat. §§ 895.03 and 895.04(2).
    ¶34   Wisconsin's wrongful death statute was first enacted
    in   1857.21     The    present   statute     retains    the   1857   statutory
    framework:
    21
    The 1857 statute, ch. 71, Laws of 1857, had two sections,
    the first explaining the prerequisites for a claim, and the
    second explaining who may bring the action and who may recover
    damages:
    § 1.   That whenever the death of a person shall be
    caused by a wrongful act, neglect or default, and the
    act, neglect or default is such as would (if death had
    not ensued) have entitled the party injured to
    maintain an action and recover damage in respect
    thereof; then and in every such case, the person who,
    or the corporation which would have been liable, if
    death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action for
    damages, notwithstanding the death of the person
    injured, and although the death may have been
    occasioned under such circumstances as constitute an
    indictable offence; Provided, That such action shall
    be brought for a death caused in this State, and in
    some court established by the constitution and laws of
    the same.
    § 2. Every such action shall be brought by and in the
    name of the personal representative of such deceased
    person; and the amount recovered shall belong and be
    paid over to the husband or widow of such deceased
    person, if such relative survive him or her; but if no
    husband or widow survive the deceased, the amount
    recovered shall be paid over to his or her lineal
    descendants, and to his or her lineal ancestors in
    default of such descendants; and in every such action
    the jury may give such damages, not exceeding $5,000,
    as they shall deem fair and just in reference to the
    pecuniary injury resulting from such death to the
    relatives of the deceased specified in this section;
    Provided, Every such action shall be commenced within
    two years after the death of such deceased person.
    15
    No.      2012AP2402
    • The       statute      states     the    conditions          under     which     a
    wrongdoer is liable for wrongful death.                          Wis. Stat.
    § 895.03.
    • The statute lists the persons who may bring a wrongful
    death action.        Wis. Stat. § 895.04(1).
    • The statute enumerates the persons to whom the amount
    recovered belongs.         Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2).
    ¶35       Sections 895.03 and 895.04 are viewed in pari materia,
    having been created together and relating to the same topic.22
    ¶36       Wisconsin Stat. § 895.03 states the conditions under
    which     a     wrongdoer    is     liable     for    wrongful       death.          It     is
    straightforward,          clear,    and     easy     to   read.          It   is     largely
    unchanged since the creation of the wrongful death cause of
    action in 1857.
    ¶37       The legislature has declared in every iteration of the
    wrongful        death     statute     since       1857,      including        Wis.    Stat.
    § 895.03, that "in every such case" in which a wrongdoer has
    caused death, the wrongdoer is "liable to an action for damages"
    as   if       death   had   not     ensued.          Thus,     the   legislature           has
    proclaimed that a wrongdoer should be liable for a wrongful
    death when the injured party could have maintained an action and
    recovered       damages     from    the   defendant,         had   the    injured     party
    survived.
    ¶38       Wisconsin Stat. § 895.03 states in full:
    22
    See Waranka v. Wadena, 
    2014 WI 28
    , ¶3, 
    353 Wis. 2d 619
    ,
    
    847 N.W.2d 324
    .
    16
    No.   2012AP2402
    Whenever the death of a person shall be caused by a
    wrongful act, neglect or default and the act, neglect
    or default is such as would, if death had not ensued,
    have entitled the party injured to maintain an action
    and recover damages in respect thereof, then and in
    every such case the person who would have been liable,
    if death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action
    for damages notwithstanding the death of the person
    injured; provided, that such action shall be brought
    for a death caused in this state (emphasis added).
    ¶39   No one disputes that the conditions set forth in Wis.
    Stat. § 895.03 that make a wrongdoer liable for wrongful death
    are met in the instant case.
    ¶40   Wisconsin Stat. 895.04(1) lists the persons who may
    bring a wrongful death action:
    (1) An action for wrongful death may be brought by the
    personal representative of the deceased person or by
    the person to whom the amount recovered belongs.23
    ¶41   In the present case, the wrongful death actions were
    brought by the personal representative and by persons claiming
    to be the persons to whom the amount recovered for wrongful
    death belongs.   No one disputes that the proper persons have
    brought the instant actions.
    ¶42   Wisconsin Stat. § 895.04(2) enumerates the persons to
    whom the amount recovered for wrongful death belongs.      Unlike
    Wis. Stat. §§ 895.03 and 895.04(1), § 895.04(2) is a dense and
    23
    Allowing someone other than the personal representative
    to assert a claim was added to the statute in 1913.      Ch. 186,
    Laws of 1913.   See also § 1, ch. 548, Laws of 1949 (permitting
    an individual to bring a wrongful death action even if the
    individual would also have a survival claim as administrator of
    the estate; amendment supersedes Schilling v. Chicago, N. Shore
    & Milwaukee R. Co., 
    245 Wis. 2
    173, 
    13 N.W.2d 594
    (1944)).
    17
    No.   2012AP2402
    difficult statute to read and understand.      It has evolved to its
    present language by repeated legislative amendments.
    ¶43   Wisconsin   Stat.   § 895.04(2)   creates   a   hierarchy    of
    persons to whom the amount recovered belongs.24       The first class
    of beneficiaries is the "surviving spouse," with a set-aside for
    minor children "in recognition of the duty and responsibility of
    a parent to support minor children."    The second class is lineal
    heirs.
    ¶44   Wisconsin Stat. § 895.04(2) reads as follows:
    (2) If the deceased leaves surviving a spouse or
    domestic partner under ch. 770 and minor children
    under 18 years of age with whose support the deceased
    was legally charged, the court before whom the action
    is pending, or if no action is pending, any court of
    record, in recognition of the duty and responsibility
    of a parent to support minor children, shall determine
    the amount, if any, to be set aside for the protection
    of such children after considering the age of such
    children, the amount involved, the capacity and
    integrity of the surviving spouse or surviving
    domestic partner, and any other facts or information
    it may have or receive, and such amount may be
    impressed by creation of an appropriate lien in favor
    of   such   children   or   otherwise   protected   as
    24
    
    Steinbarth, 144 Wis. 2d at 164
    ("[Wisconsin Stat. §]
    895.04(2) . . . establishes         a        hierarchy         of
    beneficiaries . . . ."); 
    Cincoski, 4 Wis. 2d at 425
    ("The
    statutes . . . designate    preferences   according     to    the
    relationship to the deceased. . . . [T]he nonexistence of the
    preferred beneficiary or beneficiaries is essential to a right
    of action by or in behalf of other beneficiaries.      The action
    must be brought by or for the wrongful death in the order of
    preference fixed by the statute."); 
    Anderson, 300 F. Supp. 2d at 729
    ("[T]he ability to recover under Wisconsin's wrongful death
    statute is similar to intestate succession, namely, a claimant
    has standing only if no other beneficiary higher in the
    hierarchy has standing.").
    18
    No.   2012AP2402
    circumstances may warrant, but such amount shall not
    be in excess of 50% of the net amount received after
    deduction of costs of collection.25   If there are no
    such surviving minor children, the amount recovered
    shall belong and be paid to the spouse or domestic
    partner of the deceased; if no spouse or domestic
    partner survives, to the deceased's lineal heirs as
    determined by s. 852.01; if no lineal heirs survive,
    to the deceased's brothers and sisters.26 If any such
    relative dies before judgment in the action, the
    relative next in order shall be entitled to recover
    for the wrongful death.27     A surviving nonresident
    alien spouse or a nonresident alien domestic partner
    25
    This provision was adopted in substantially this form in
    1962, making the surviving spouse the primary beneficiary and
    granting the minor children a set-aside.   See ch. 649, Laws of
    1961. See ¶¶111-125, infra, which discuss the statutory history
    of this section.
    Changes subsequent to the 1962 amendment added additional
    beneficiaries   to   Wis.   Stat.  § 895.04(2)   but   did   not
    substantially change the structure of the provision.         For
    example, the legislature added the words "and domestic partners"
    alongside the word "spouse." 2009 Wis. Act 28, § 3269.
    26
    See chs. 164, 581, Laws of 1907 (adding "but if no
    husband or widow or lineal descendant or ancestor survive the
    deceased, the amount recovered shall be paid over to the
    brothers and sisters").      Brothers and sisters were added
    apparently in response to Brown v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., 
    102 Wis. 137
    , 
    77 N.W. 748
    (1898) (because the statute, Wis. Stat.
    § 4256 (1898), permitted recovery only for the spouse or lineal
    descendants and ancestors of the deceased, brothers and sisters
    could not recover).
    27
    See § 1, ch. 263, Laws of 1931.
    The provision relating to the death of a relative before
    judgment in a wrongful death action was added, apparently in
    response to Woodward v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., 
    23 Wis. 400
    (1868) (holding that the wrongful death action terminated when
    deceased's surviving spouse died before judgment).   See Eleason
    v. Western Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    254 Wis. 134
    , 140, 
    35 N.W.2d 301
    (1948) (holding that the 1931 amendment controlled over previous
    cases holding that wrongful death actions terminated with the
    death of the holder of the claim).
    19
    No.    2012AP2402
    under ch. 770 and minor children shall be entitled to
    the benefits of this section.28 In cases subject to s.
    102.29 this subsection shall apply only to the
    surviving spouse's or surviving domestic partner's
    interest in the amount recovered.      If the amount
    allocated to any child under this subsection is less
    than $10,000, s. 807.10 may be applied.          Every
    settlement in wrongful death cases in which the
    deceased leaves minor children under 18 years of age
    shall be void unless approved by a court of record
    authorized to act hereunder (emphasis and footnotes
    added).
    ¶45    There is a difference between a wrongful death claim
    and a survival claim.     A wrongful death claim, as we explain
    above, compensates the deceased's relatives for the damages they
    suffer as a result of the deceased's death.29     A survival claim
    28
    See § 1, ch. 226, Laws of 1911 (amending the statute to
    state explicitly that "non-resident alien surviving relatives
    shall be entitled to the benefits of this section").    The 1911
    provision relating to aliens was apparently inserted in response
    to McMillan v. Spider Lake Sawmill & Lumber Co., 
    115 Wis. 332
    ,
    
    91 N.W. 979
    , 980-81 (1902), in which the court held that
    nonresident alien citizens of foreign countries were not
    entitled to recover under the wrongful death statute.        The
    spouse in McMillan was a Canadian citizen and did not reside in
    the United States.      The McMillan court asserted that the
    legislature did not intend this cause of action to convey
    benefits and recovery to nonresidents.
    Three years later, the legislature again amended the
    statute to limit nonresident alien relatives to a surviving
    spouse and minor children, stating that only "a nonresident
    alien surviving wife and minor children shall be entitled to the
    benefits of this section." § 1, ch. 35, Laws of 1915.
    29
    Wisconsin Stat. § 895.04(4) provides as follows:
    (4) Judgment for damages for pecuniary injury from
    wrongful death may be awarded to any person entitled
    to bring a wrongful death action. Additional damages
    not to exceed $500,000 per occurrence in the case of a
    deceased minor, or $350,000 per occurrence in the case
    of a deceased adult, for loss of society and
    20
    No.   2012AP2402
    compensates the estate of the deceased (or persons who paid
    expenses on behalf of the estate) for damages suffered by the
    deceased between the time of the injury and the time of death.30
    ¶46    The personal representative may bring both a wrongful
    death     claim    and   a   survival     claim,      but    the    beneficiaries
    receiving the damages recovered under the two claims may be
    different.31       "[T]he    right   to      sue   under    the    wrongful     death
    statute     must    be   distinguished        from   the     ownership     of     the
    recovery.      Because the [wrongful death] action is granted by
    companionship may be awarded to the spouse, children
    or parents of the deceased, or to the siblings of the
    deceased, if the siblings were minors at the time of
    the death.
    30
    "The survival action is brought by the representative of
    the deceased for personal injury damages suffered by the
    deceased prior to his death.   The damages accrue to the estate
    of the deceased." Prunty v. Schwantes, 
    40 Wis. 2d 418
    , 422, 
    162 N.W.2d 34
    (1968).
    See also Wangen v. Ford Motor Co., 
    97 Wis. 2d 260
    , 312, 
    294 N.W.2d 437
    , 463 (1980) (quoting Koehler v. Waukesha Milk Co.,
    
    190 Wis. 52
    , 56, 
    208 N.W. 901
    (1926)):
    The cause of action for the [deceased]'s pain and
    suffering which . . . passes to a decedent's estate[ ]
    is separate and distinct from this wrongful death
    action.   The estate's action is for the wrong to the
    injured person; the wrongful death action belongs to
    named beneficiaries for their pecuniary loss; the
    latter action begins where the former ends.     "It is
    not a double recovery, but a recovery for a double
    wrong."
    31
    
    Wangen, 97 Wis. 2d at 310
    .
    21
    No.     2012AP2402
    statute,       ownership    of     the      recovery    is      limited     to    the
    beneficiaries designated under the statute."32
    ¶47     In order to determine whether a beneficiary exists who
    may   recover     under    a     wrongful     death    claim,     the     court   has
    frequently grappled with disputes regarding the interpretation
    of    the     wrongful     death    statute's     hierarchical          beneficiary
    structure.33      The legislature did not anticipate numerous fact
    Wisconsin Stat. 895.04(5) provides:
    (5) If the personal representative brings the action,
    the personal representative may also recover the
    reasonable cost of medical expenses, funeral expenses,
    including the reasonable cost of a cemetery lot, grave
    marker and care of the lot. If a relative brings the
    action,   the  relative   may   recover  such  medical
    expenses, funeral expenses, including the cost of a
    cemetery lot, grave marker and care of the lot, on
    behalf of himself or herself or of any person who has
    paid or assumed liability for such expenses.
    32
    Weiss v. Regent Props., Ltd., 
    118 Wis. 2d 225
    , 230, 
    346 N.W.2d 766
    (1984) (citations omitted) (citing Nichols v. U.S.
    Fid. & Guar. Co., 
    13 Wis. 2d 491
    , 497, 
    109 N.W.2d 131
    (1961)).
    See also 2 The Law of Damages in Wisconsin § 16.15 at 16-18
    (Russell M. Ware et al. eds. 2014) ("Because the purpose of
    allowing damages for wrongful death is to compensate the
    deceased's relatives for their loss, wrongful death damages do
    not become a part of the deceased's estate.").
    33
    The courts have reached various outcomes based on the
    facts of each case.
    Cases holding for the lower-tier beneficiary to recover:
    • Steinbarth v. Johannes, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    , 
    423 N.W.2d 540
    (1988) (holding that a spouse who
    intentionally killed the deceased is not a
    "surviving spouse" and that the children hold the
    claim as lineal heirs);
    22
    No.   2012AP2402
    • Krause v. Home Mut. Ins. Co., 
    14 Wis. 2d 666
    , 
    112 N.W.2d 134
    (1961) (holding that although the
    spouse died shortly after the deceased, the
    children held the claim, because satisfying the
    purposes of the statute required that the phrase
    "surviving spouse" not mean the spouse of the
    deceased who is living at the time of the death
    of the deceased, but rather the "spouse of the
    deceased living when the action was commenced");
    • Lasecki v. Kabara, 
    235 Wis. 645
    , 
    294 N.W. 33
        (1940) (holding that although the children did
    not have an independent claim of action against
    their father for the wrongful death of their
    mother, when the mother herself died, the
    wrongful death that claim she held went to her
    children).
    Cases holding against the lower-tier beneficiary:
    • Cogger v. Trudell, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    , 359, 
    151 N.W.2d 146
    (1967) (holding that the deceased's
    spouse who negligently killed the spouse is a
    surviving spouse, and that their children have no
    claim);
    • Hanson v. Valdivia, 
    51 Wis. 2d 466
    , 475, 
    187 N.W.2d 151
      (1971)   (holding  that   when   the
    deceased's spouse alleged to be responsible for
    the death survived, the minor surviving children
    "do not have a cause of action for the wrongful
    death of one of their parents when the [deceased]
    is survived by his or her spouse, and the fact
    that the surviving spouse was responsible for the
    death does not create a new cause of action in
    the children");
    • Woodward v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., 
    23 Wis. 400
        (1868) (holding that when the deceased's husband
    died while pursuing a wrongful death claim
    against the defendant, the husband's wrongful
    death claim cannot survive his death), superseded
    by statute as stated in Eleason v. Western Cas. &
    Sur. Co., 
    254 Wis. 134
    , 139, 
    35 N.W.2d 301
        (1948).
    23
    No.    2012AP2402
    scenarios in its enactment of the wrongful death statute, and
    the courts have had to fill the gaps in the statute.
    ¶48    To    determine       the   meaning   of    the   phrase      "surviving
    spouse" in the unique fact scenario of the instant case, we must
    fill    the     gap     in    the    statute.        In    enacting      Wis.     Stat.
    § 895.04(2),        the      legislature     did    not    anticipate       the   fact
    scenario presented in the instant case in which a long-time
    estranged spouse does not obtain a divorce, has no recoverable
    damages on the death of the deceased husband, and has no legal
    obligation to support nonmarital minor children of the deceased.
    ¶49    In referring to a "surviving spouse" and creating a
    hierarchical structure of beneficiaries in the wrongful death
    statute,      the     legislature     envisioned     an    intact   marriage      with
    minor marital children whom both the deceased and the deceased's
    spouse were obliged to support.                 Indeed, "[a] careful reading of
    the entire section [895.04(2)] makes it clear that the trial
    court in an attempt to protect the children must work from the
    amount recovered by the spouse who is charged with the support
    of the minor children."34
    ¶50    The defendants argue that the statutory hierarchy of
    beneficiaries bars the minor children in the present case from
    asserting a claim for wrongful death because the deceased left a
    • Bowen     v. Am. Family Ins. Co., 2012 WI                App 29,
    ¶19,     
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 887
                   (holding
    that     a primary beneficiary under the                wrongful
    death    statutes could not waive his claim             and pass
    it on    to a secondary beneficiary).
    34
    
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 358
    .
    24
    No.       2012AP2402
    living spouse, and the surviving spouse, Linda Force, cannot
    claim any damages for wrongful death according to the circuit
    court.
    ¶51    The       defendants    rest     their      position      on     a    literal
    interpretation of the phrase "surviving spouse":
    • Linda Force is the spouse of the deceased;
    • she is still living;
    • as an estranged spouse she cannot, according to the
    circuit       court's    dismissal          of    her    claim,       recover
    damages any for pecuniary loss and loss of society and
    companionship;
    • the       minor   children's        share    is    limited       under     the
    statute      to   a   set-aside      from    the   surviving         spouse's
    recovery; and
    • because      Linda     Force's      recovery      is    zero,    the     minor
    children's set-aside is also zero.
    ¶52    The defendants' reading of the statute is not without
    support in the text, but the defendants' interpretation is not
    necessarily       a    reasonable    reading       of    the       phrase    "surviving
    spouse" in unique fact situations.
    ¶53    First, the statute does not define who is or is not a
    surviving spouse.35
    ¶54    Second, the text of Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) does not
    expressly state that minor children are barred from recovery
    when a surviving spouse fails to recover any damages.                             Rather,
    35
    Steinbarth, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    .
    25
    No.   2012AP2402
    § 895.04(2) provides that minor children get a set-aside from
    the surviving spouse's recovery and recover as lineal heirs if
    no surviving spouse exists.
    ¶55     A study of the text demonstrates that we are unable to
    discern the answer to our inquiry in the present case by a mere
    examination of the words of Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) isolated from
    interpretive      aids.      We    next      look     for    assistance    from   the
    legislative pronouncement of the purposes of the wrongful death
    statutes.
    IV
    ¶56     The minor children's position that they should recover
    under   the    wrongful      death        statutes      is     supported    by     the
    legislative       purposes        advanced       by     Wis.     Stat.     §§ 895.03
    and 895.04(2).
    ¶57     The legislature has declared in Wis. Stat. §§ 895.03
    and 895.04(2) that the purposes of the wrongful death statutes
    are (1) to hold wrongdoers liable for damages upon death of an
    injured person, and (2) to compensate relatives of the injured
    party for the losses caused by the wrongful act.                     A holding that
    the minor children cannot maintain a wrongful death claim in the
    instant case would contravene those fundamental purposes.                         The
    wrongdoers would escape liability and the minor children would
    not be compensated for their losses.
    ¶58     The   purposes        of   the     wrongful      death   statutes     have
    existed since the law's enactment in 1857.                     The wrongful death
    26
    No.   2012AP2402
    statute was enacted to correct a perceived injustice at common
    law providing no cause of action for wrongful death.36
    ¶59    As the Prosser & Keeton treatise explains, the common-
    law rule had perverse "intolerable" consequences: "The result
    was that it was cheaper for the defendant to kill the plaintiff
    than to injure him, and that the most grievous of all injuries
    left the bereaved family of the victim, who frequently were
    destitute, without a remedy."37
    36
    See Rudiger v. Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Ry.
    Co., 
    94 Wis. 191
    , 
    68 N.W. 661
    (1896):
    It was the obvious purpose of this statute to reverse
    this rule of law, and to provide that the right of
    action should survive, as in case of damages to
    property, and, of course, be liable to be prosecuted
    by or against an executor. . . . The statute under
    consideration was enacted to supply the manifest
    defect in the law as it thus existed, and to provide a
    remedy against the wrongdoer, if death ensued in
    consequence of his negligent or wrongful act (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    According to Blackstone, when a husband or father was
    injured or killed, the wife or child could not recover.       3
    William Blackstone, Commentaries *142-43.        As the seminal
    English case Baker v. Bolton, Eng. Rep. (1808) 1 Camp. 493; 10
    R.R. 734, noted, "in a civil court the death of a human being
    could not be complained of as an injury . . . ."
    The common-law rule barring claims for wrongful death was
    criticized by the second Justice Harlan in Moragne v. States
    Marine Lines, Inc., 
    398 U.S. 375
    (1970).      The Moragne Court
    observed that the common-law rule against wrongful death claims
    was criticized as "barbarous" and set forth no "persuasive,
    independent justification" for distinguishing between two claims
    claiming a breach of the same primary duty to the injured party
    simply because the injured party happened to die in one instance
    and not the other. 
    Moragne, 398 U.S. at 381-82
    .
    37
    Prosser & Keeton on Torts § 127, at 945 (5th ed. 1984).
    27
    No.   2012AP2402
    ¶60    In 1846, Parliament passed Lord Campbell's Act, which
    sidestepped the common law and created a statutory right of
    action for surviving spouses, children, and parents, as well as
    other lineal descendants.38
    ¶61    States too adopted laws recognizing a statutory right
    of action for wrongful death.
    ¶62    In Wisconsin, the wrongful death statute enacted in
    1857 was an almost verbatim copy of the New York wrongful death
    statute,39 which itself was copied nearly word for word from Lord
    Campbell's Act.40
    ¶63    A New York court explained that the New York statute
    extended the principle of liability to a wrongdoer who causes
    the    death    of     another    and   gave   the   right    to     damages    to
    representatives of the deceased.41
    ¶64    Wisconsin courts have echoed these general principles
    as    the    driving   purposes    behind    the   wrongful   death      statutes.
    38
    For a discussion of the evolution of the rules governing
    wrongful death suits in England and the United States, see Wex
    S. Malone, The Genesis of Wrongful Death, 17 Stan. L. Rev. 1043
    (1965).
    39
    Compare ch. 71, Laws of 1857, with N.Y. Laws of 1847, ch.
    450.   See also Whiton v. Chicago & N.W. Ry. Co., 
    21 Wis. 305
    ,
    308 (1867) (noting that New York and Wisconsin employ "the same
    statute").
    40
    See John Fabian Witt, From Loss of Services to Loss of
    Support: The Wrongful Death Statutes, the Origins of Modern Tort
    Law, and the Making of the Nineteenth-Century Family, 25 Law &
    Soc. Inquiry 717, 734 (2000).
    41
    Baker v. Bailey, 
    16 Barb. 54
    , 60, 
    1852 WL 5345
    (N.Y. Gen.
    Term. 1852).
    28
    No.    2012AP2402
    First, "[t]he injustices and hardships resulting from the common
    law principles in wrongful death cases caused the legislature to
    create statutory remedies and liability."42
    ¶65    Second, "[t]he purpose of the wrongful death statute
    is    to    compensate      for   the    loss       of     the   relational       interest
    existing between the beneficiaries and the deceased."43
    ¶66    In     1961   the   legislature            explicitly      protected       the
    interests of minor children of the deceased "in recognition of
    the    duty    and    responsibility          of    a    parent     to   support       minor
    children."44
    ¶67    In     contrast     to     these          purposes,    the     defendants'
    interpretation        of    the   wrongful         death    statutes     liberates       the
    alleged wrongdoer from all liability for the wrongful death in
    the instant case.           According to the defendants, the liability of
    the wrongdoer for the deceased's death in the present case is
    zero    and    no    relative     of    the    deceased,         including       his   minor
    children, recovers any amount.                     If we accept the defendants'
    reasoning, the wrongdoer in the instant case gets a windfall at
    42
    
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 353
    .
    43
    Chang v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    182 Wis. 2d 549
    ,
    560-61, 
    514 N.W.2d 399
    (1994) (internal quotation marks and
    quoted source omitted).
    44
    See ¶¶42-49 and accompanying 
    notes, supra
    .
    29
    No.   2012AP2402
    the   expense     of   the   deceased's   surviving   dependent     minor
    children.45
    ¶68   The    defendants'    interpretation      contravenes     the
    legislative purposes and produces an unfair, unreasonable, or
    absurd result that the legislature could not have intended.
    V
    ¶69   We turn to case law to assist us in interpreting the
    phrase "surviving spouse" within the context of the wrongful
    death statutes.
    ¶70   In several cases, the court has employed a literal
    interpretation of the phrase "surviving spouse," holding that a
    spouse living at the time of the wrongful death is a "surviving
    spouse" under the wrongful death statutes.46            In other cases
    courts have not read the phrase literally.47          No prior case is
    directly on point, but we can derive principles from the case
    law that inform our resolution of the instant case.
    ¶71   We begin with Cogger v. Trudell, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    , 353,
    
    151 N.W.2d 146
    (1967), a lead case governing to whom a recovered
    45
    This case does not address the survival action of the
    deceased's estate.  See Wis. Stat. § 895.01(1)(am)7.  Survival
    actions are different from wrongful death actions.   See supra
    ¶¶45-46.
    46
    See, e.g., Hanson, 
    51 Wis. 2d 466
    ; 
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 354-55
    ; Bowen, 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    .
    47
    See, e.g., 
    Steinbarth, 144 Wis. 2d at 165
    ; Xiong ex rel.
    Edmondson v. Xiong, 
    2002 WI App 110
    , 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , 
    648 N.W.2d 900
    .
    30
    No.     2012AP2402
    wrongful death award belongs when a living spouse may not be
    able to recover damages and children seek to recover.
    ¶72    In Cogger, Darla Trudell was killed in a car accident.
    She was the passenger; her husband, Joseph Trudell,                           was the
    driver.       The two minor Trudell children sued their father, as
    well as the driver of the other car.
    ¶73    The    father,      being    one    of     the    defendants    in    the
    wrongful death suit, could not bring a claim for wrongful death
    on his own behalf against himself.                      The children argued that
    Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2), as amended in 1962,48 gave the children
    equal status with the surviving spouse, and thus, the fact that
    the father was alive did not bar their claim.
    ¶74    The    Cogger      court    held   that    Wis.    Stat.    § 895.04(2)
    created a "series of priorities with regard to the ownership of
    a cause of action for wrongful death" and that these priorities
    were    not       changed   by    the     1962    amendment,      which     added   the
    provision allowing a court to determine an amount to be set
    aside       for    the   minor    children       from    the    surviving     spouse's
    recovery.49
    ¶75    The Cogger court rejected the children's argument that
    the 1962 amendment creating a set-aside for minor children had
    put both the surviving spouse and the surviving children in the
    first priority class.50             Rather, the court stated:              "A careful
    48
    Ch. 649, Laws of 1961 (enacted Jan. 30, 1962).
    49
    
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 354-55
    .
    50
    The Cogger court explained:
    31
    No.   2012AP2402
    reading of the entire section makes it clear that the trial
    court . . . must work from the amount recovered by the spouse
    who is charged with the support of the minor children."51
    ¶76    Looking to case law construing the pre-1962 wrongful
    death statutes, the court concluded that both before and after
    the   1962    amendment,      "[t]he    beneficiaries   and   their    preferred
    status are as follows:           First, the spouse; second, a child or
    children; third,         the parents.         Thus the nonexistence of the
    preferred beneficiary or beneficiaries is essential to a right
    of action by or in behalf of other beneficiaries."52
    ¶77    Even though one of the two children in Cogger was not
    the child of the surviving spouse, the Cogger court assumed that
    the surviving spouse had an obligation to support both children
    and   interpreted       the   statute   as    specifically    addressing   minor
    children supported by the surviving spouse.53
    The general plan of the statute was not changed.   It
    was only amended to allow the courts to deal with the
    proceeds which would otherwise go to the surviving
    spouse in such a way as to protect the dependent
    children.
    We believe that if the legislature had intended to
    create a cause of action in the surviving children in
    situations where previously none had existed, it would
    have done so in a more direct and clear manner.
    
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 356-57
    .
    51
    
    Id. at 358
          52
    
    Id. at 355
    (quoting 
    Cincoski, 4 Wis. 2d at 425
    ).
    53
    
    Id. at 357.
    32
    No.     2012AP2402
    ¶78     Cogger    has been           invoked in          several        cases     to bar a
    minor child's recovery when the surviving spouse who had the
    obligation to support the children was allegedly responsible in
    some way for the wrongful death.                        Perhaps the result of these
    cases may be explained by the fact that holding for the children
    who   were    supported        by    the    surviving          spouse         could    indirectly
    inure to the benefit of the surviving spouse who caused the
    death.
    ¶79     In Hanson v. Valdivia, 
    51 Wis. 2d 466
    , 
    187 N.W.2d 151
    (1971),      the    minor     children       of    the       surviving         spouse    and    the
    deceased      were     barred        from    bringing             suit    for    the     deceased
    parent's      wrongful      death      when       the       surviving         parent    allegedly
    caused the wrongful death.
    ¶80     The     Hanson        court    relied          on     Cogger,      stating       that
    "surviving         children    do     not    have       a    cause       of    action    for    the
    wrongful death of one of their parents when the [deceased] is
    survived by his or her spouse, and the fact that the surviving
    spouse was responsible for the death does not create a new cause
    of action in the children."                 
    Hanson, 51 Wis. 2d at 475
    .
    ¶81     A second case, Bowen v. American Family Insurance Co.,
    
    2012 WI App 29
    , 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 887
    , held that even
    when the surviving spouse expressly waives the wrongful death
    claim,    the      Cogger     rule    still       applies          and    the    child    has    no
    recovery.
    ¶82     In Bowen, the deceased died while a passenger in a car
    driven by her spouse when the car collided with another car.                                     An
    adult child of the deceased and the spouse argued that even if
    33
    No.     2012AP2402
    the Cogger rule applied, the court should look to the spouse's
    express disclaimer of his wrongful death claim to pass the claim
    on to the adult child.
    ¶83        The court of appeals declared that the living spouse
    was a "surviving spouse," even though the spouse did not wish to
    pursue a claim and did not want to be a "surviving spouse."54
    ¶84        The Cogger decision and its progeny are informative,
    but Cogger is not dispositive in the present case.                                The Cogger
    court      did    not    consider    the    fact       situation      presented      in   the
    instant case, in which the deceased's spouse is not negligent in
    causing the death, has no obligation to support the deceased's
    minor      children,      and    (according       to    the     circuit     court)    cannot
    recover damages for wrongful death                  under any circumstances.55
    ¶85        A third case that adheres to Cogger and informs our
    decision     in     the   present    case     is       Xiong    ex   rel.     Edmondson    v.
    Xiong, 
    2002 WI App 110
    , 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , 
    648 N.W.2d 900
    .
    ¶86        Mai Xiong died as a passenger in a car driven by Nhia
    Xiong.      Mai Xiong and Nhia Xiong were the parents of minor and
    adult children.               The Xiong children brought a wrongful death
    action against their father, Nhia Xiong.                              The circuit court
    dismissed         the     children's       action        because       Nhia       Xiong   was
    responsible for Mai Xiong's death and, pursuant to Cogger, could
    not   recover       in    a    wrongful    death       claim.        The   Xiong    children
    54
    Bowen, 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , ¶¶13-14.
    55
    In Cogger, the living spouse apparently may have pursued
    his own independent claim against the other driver. 
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 358
    .
    34
    No.   2012AP2402
    argued that the parents were not married, and thus, that their
    father was not a "surviving spouse."
    ¶87     On appeal, the court of appeals observed that there
    was no evidence of any official marriage of the parents, in
    Laos, Thailand, or Wisconsin.56          Nonetheless, the court valued
    the unique facts over the literal interpretation of "surviving
    spouse" and determined that the word "spouse" in the wrongful
    death statute could include a "putative spouse."            The court of
    appeals assessed the unique facts surrounding the relationship
    between the parents and used its "equity powers" to recognize
    the relationship as sufficient to establish Nhia Xiong as the
    "surviving    spouse"   for   the   purposes   of   the   wrongful   death
    statute.57
    ¶88     The court of appeals in the Xiong case then applied
    Cogger and concluded that a surviving spouse existed and the
    children could not recover.58
    ¶89     Cogger and its progeny at first blush seem to preclude
    the children's recovery in the instant case.
    ¶90     On closer examination, however, Cogger and its progeny
    are, as we explained previously, factually distinguishable from
    the present case.       They therefore are not dispositive.          Linda
    Force did not contribute in any manner to the injury and death
    56
    Xiong, 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , ¶¶14-16.      The father did not
    submit any evidence contradicting the children's assertion that
    the marriage was not valid or recognized at law. 
    Id., ¶18. 57
              Xiong, 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , ¶¶20-21.
    58
    
    Id., ¶25. 35
                                                                                No.    2012AP2402
    of the deceased.              Rather, the circuit court concluded that she
    cannot recover because of her estrangement from the deceased.
    Because Linda Force has no support obligations to the deceased's
    minor children, she will not benefit if the children recover
    damages for wrongful death.
    ¶91     Furthermore,          Xiong     buttresses       the   minor       children's
    position       in     the     instant      case.        Xiong    teaches      that    courts
    interpret Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) in line with the unique fact
    situation       and     the       purposes     of    the   wrongful    death      statutes,
    rather than in line with formal compliance with laws governing
    the formation of a marriage.
    ¶92     In Xiong, the parties treated each other as husband
    and wife, and the court concluded that they should be treated as
    married under the wrongful death statutes even though no proof
    of a formal marriage at law existed.
    ¶93     In the instant case, the parties were estranged for
    over a decade.          Adhering to the teaching of Xiong and examining
    the    unique       relationship        of    the     parties   in    the   present     case
    dictate that the long-time estranged relationship not be treated
    as     a    marriage        and    that      Linda    Force     not   be    considered     a
    "surviving spouse" under Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2).
    ¶94     Additional support for the children's position comes
    from       Steinbarth       v.    Johannes,     
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    ,        
    423 N.W.2d 540
    (1988).
    ¶95     Steinbarth,          like     Xiong,    relied    on   the   unique     facts
    rather than the formality of the legal relationship.                              Steinbarth
    teaches that under unusual circumstances in which the purposes
    36
    No.     2012AP2402
    of the statutes would not be met, the phrase "surviving spouse"
    excludes a living spouse and the children may recover damages
    under the wrongful death statutes.
    ¶96       In    Steinbarth,     the     husband      allegedly      intentionally
    shot and killed his wife.                    The deceased wife's adult children
    (the    husband's         stepchildren)        sued       the   husband    for    wrongful
    death.       Using a literal interpretation of the statute rendering
    the husband a "surviving spouse," the circuit court and court of
    appeals concluded that the adult children's wrongful death claim
    was barred under Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) (1985-86).59                         The supreme
    court reversed.
    ¶97       The    Steinbarth      court       was    persuaded      that    statutes
    prohibiting an intentional killer from benefiting from the crime
    aided       in   interpreting        the     phrase   "surviving       spouse"     in   the
    wrongful death statute.60                  The Steinbarth court held "that a
    spouse      who       'feloniously     and    intentionally'       kills    his    or   her
    spouse is not a surviving spouse for purposes of [the wrongful
    death       statutes],      and   is       treated    as    having     predeceased      the
    decedent so that the cause of action may accrue to the next
    designated beneficiary."61
    59
    
    Steinbarth, 144 Wis. 2d at 165
    .         The statute in
    Steinbarth is substantially identical to the present statute in
    the relevant provisions.
    60
    
    Id. at 166-167
    (e.g., life insurance, beneficiary under
    contract, joint tenancy).
    61
    
    Id. at 167-68
    (emphasis added).
    37
    No.      2012AP2402
    ¶98       The Steinbarth court noted that the unique facts of
    the   case      dictated      the    outcome.        The    court    reasoned         that    an
    alternative        holding     would    create       an    "anomalous       result"         that
    "[t]he legislature could not have intended."62
    ¶99       The    Steinbarth      court    distinguished           Cogger.         Cogger
    involved a surviving spouse who negligently caused the wrongful
    death;     no    basis      existed    in    Cogger       for    stopping       a   surviving
    spouse who unintentionally but negligently caused the spouse's
    death from seeking wrongful death benefits for the loss of the
    spouse from a more negligent wrongdoer.63
    ¶100 On         the    other    hand,     in    Steinbarth,         the       "surviving
    spouse," a felonious and intentional killer, could not "under
    any conceivable circumstance seek recovery under the wrongful
    death statute for the loss of the decedent."64                          Unlike Cogger and
    its progeny, the surviving spouse in Steinbarth had no claim
    against a third-party wrongdoer or any ability to recover for
    wrongful death of the deceased.
    ¶101 The instant case does not align precisely with Cogger,
    Hanson, Bowen, Xiong, or Steinbarth.                       Nevertheless, these cases
    support      the      conclusion      that    under       the    unique    facts       of    the
    instant case, the claim of the minor children should prevail.
    ¶102 The        case    law    demonstrates         that    the     meaning      of    the
    phrase "surviving spouse" has been elucidated by scrutinizing
    62
    
    Id. at 167.
          63
    
    Id. at 168.
          64
    
    Id. at 169.
    38
    No.     2012AP2402
    unique fact situations to define "surviving spouse" in accord
    with the legislative purposes of the wrongful death statutes,
    rather than considering only the literal meaning of the phrase
    "surviving spouse."            Linda Force, like the spouse in Steinbarth,
    is     barred     from       recovering      for        wrongful        death        under    any
    circumstances, according to the circuit court.                            To hold against
    the children here would allow a wrongdoer to escape liability
    and deprive relatives of recovery for their loss, simply because
    of an unusual fact scenario.
    ¶103 Courts in other jurisdictions that have wrongful death
    laws    similar        to   Wisconsin's     placing        children       in    a     secondary
    beneficiary class,65 when confronted with unique facts, have held
    that the secondary beneficiaries have a claim even when the
    primary beneficiary may exist.                  Courts have allowed ameliorating
    common-law       principles          to   apply       to   fill    in    a     legislature's
    unintended gaps in a wrongful death statute.
    ¶104 The case Evans v. Atlantic Cement Co., 
    272 So. 2d 538
    ,
    541    (Fla.     Ct.    App.    1973),     is     a    typical    example        of    a     court
    looking     to    the       unique    factual         circumstances       to    fulfill       the
    underlying purpose of the wrongful death statute.                              In Evans, the
    court held that a woman who lived with the deceased for nine-
    and-a-half years and had children with him, and for whom the
    decedent provided support, could maintain an action for wrongful
    65
    See Stuart M. Speiser & James E. Rooks, Jr., Recovery for
    Wrongful Death § 3:3 & n.2 (4th ed. 2005) (noting that in some
    jurisdictions children are among the primary beneficiary class,
    while in others, listed in the footnote, children are designated
    secondary beneficiaries behind the surviving spouse).
    39
    No.     2012AP2402
    death although she was not literally a "surviving spouse" of the
    deceased.     The deceased was survived by a surviving spouse and
    another child from a different marriage who, under Florida law,
    could maintain a wrongful death action.
    ¶105 The court reasoned that it had to construe the statute
    in the context of the unique facts of the case in order to avoid
    a result contrary to the purposes of the wrongful death statute:
    [T]he preference given by statute to a spouse over a
    child presupposes the existence of a family, including
    a parent-child relationship, in the survivors.     When
    the statutes are examined entire, the conclusion
    cannot   be  reasonably   reached   that  these   class
    priorities were intended by the legislature to be
    applied where the fundamental family relationships
    have been legally destroyed. . . . It is unreasonable
    to conclude the legislature intended that dependent
    children or other family members be left without
    support or remedy, in favor of strangers to them.
    . . . .
    [W]e believe the literal wording of the statute [is]
    applicable where fundamental family relationships
    still   obtain.    However,   where . . . the    family
    relationships have ruptured or divided . . . it is
    proper to allow the additional classes to intervene.66
    ¶106 Other        state        courts     have    permitted          secondary
    beneficiaries to recover damages              when the deceased's spouse is
    still alive.     They have done so on a variety of grounds.
    ¶107 For    example,      in    Foster    v.   Jeffers,     
    813 S.W.2d 449
    (Tenn. App. 1991), the Tennessee court of appeals held that when
    a   spouse    still    living       after     the   death   of     the     deceased
    66
    Evans v. Atlantic Cement Co., 
    272 So. 2d 538
    , 541 (Fla.
    Ct. App. 1973).
    40
    No.     2012AP2402
    affirmatively         waives      his    or      her    claim,      the     secondary
    beneficiaries (in that case, the deceased's nephews) can collect
    the proceeds from the wrongful death action.67                     The Foster court
    reasoned that a secondary beneficiary, who would otherwise be
    barred from a claim by the existence of a surviving spouse, must
    be able to pursue a claim "to keep alive the decedent's cause of
    action"    and   to     achieve    the   statutory       purpose    of     ending   the
    regime in which "it was more economical to kill someone than to
    merely inflict a nonfatal injury."68                   Although Wisconsin courts
    have explicitly rejected this waiver approach to the wrongful
    death     statute,69     Foster     is     instructive,      standing        for     the
    proposition      that    sister    states       with   hierarchical       beneficiary
    structures permit secondary beneficiaries to collect even when
    primary beneficiaries are still alive, in order to fulfill the
    purposes of the statute in unusual or unique fact situations.
    ¶108 Georgia         courts     have      similarly     held     that    in     some
    circumstances, secondary beneficiaries can recover damages when
    the deceased's spouse is still alive.                  In Brown v. Liberty Oil &
    Refining Corp., 
    403 S.E.2d 806
    (Ga. 1991), the Georgia Supreme
    Court held that although the deceased's spouse was still alive
    and prior interpretations of the statute had barred children's
    67
    Foster v. Jeffers, 
    813 S.W.2d 449
    (Tenn. App. 1991); but
    see Bowen, 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , ¶¶13-15 (rejecting this waiver rule
    in Wisconsin).
    68
    
    Foster, 813 S.W.2d at 452
    .
    69
    Bowen, 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , ¶¶13-15 (rejecting this waiver
    rule in Wisconsin).
    41
    No.     2012AP2402
    wrongful death claims when there was a surviving spouse,70 in the
    unique fact scenario of the case in which the surviving spouse
    abandoned the children and could not be located, "the factual
    circumstances      of    this    case      demand       the    exercise      of   [equity]
    powers to preserve the rights of the minor children."71                                    The
    Georgia courts have subsequently applied this holding to other
    unusual     fact    scenarios         to    hold    that       secondary     beneficiary
    children can recover damages for wrongful death even when the
    deceased's spouse is still alive.72
    ¶109 Although        these       cases       are    not    dispositive         of     the
    instant    case    and   do     not    present     a    unified      theory,      they     are
    informative in teaching that state courts have recognized that
    secondary    wrongful      death       beneficiaries           can   bring      claims      in
    unique    fact     scenarios      in       which    barring      such      claims        would
    undermine or contradict the wrongful death statutes' purposes of
    punishing wrongdoers and compensating the deceased's relatives.
    ¶110 In sum, Wisconsin case law and case law from other
    jurisdictions supports the children's claim in the present case.
    VI
    ¶111 Finally, we examine the statutory history.                               We have
    explored statutory history previously in our discussion of the
    text, the legislative purposes, and the case law.                          The statutory
    70
    See Mack v. Moore, 
    345 S.E.2d 338
    (Ga. 1986).
    71
    Brown v. Liberty Oil & Ref. Corp., 
    403 S.E.2d 806
    , 808
    (Ga. 1991).
    72
    Emory Univ. v. Dorsey, 
    429 S.E.2d 307
    (Ga. App. 1993).
    42
    No.    2012AP2402
    history shows that the legislature has repeatedly amended the
    classes   of    potential   beneficiaries.           It   appears    from   the
    statutory history that when a court excluded a class from being
    a beneficiary, often the legislature would amend the wrongful
    death statute to include the class.73
    ¶112 For our purposes, amendments in 1961 and 1962 are key
    in the statutory history, because they directly addressed the
    right of minor children to recover for wrongful death.
    ¶113 Before 1961, the statute made the spouse the primary
    beneficiary and the children secondary beneficiaries as lineal
    heirs of the deceased:
    The amount recovered shall belong and be paid to the
    spouse of the deceased; if no spouse survives, to the
    deceased's lineal heirs as determined by section
    237.01; if no lineal heirs survive, to the deceased's
    brothers and sisters.     If any such relative dies
    before judgment in the action, the relative next in
    order shall be entitled to recover for the wrongful
    death.   A surviving nonresident alien wife and minor
    children shall be entitled to the benefits of this
    section.
    Wis. Stat. § 331.04(2) (1959-60).
    ¶114 The     1961   amendment        switched    the    order    of    the
    beneficiaries, placing the children as primary beneficiaries and
    the surviving spouse as a secondary beneficiary.              If there were
    73
    See, e.g., chs. 164, 581, Laws of 1907 (permitting
    recovery for brothers and sisters, superseding Brown, 
    102 Wis. 137
    ); ch. 226, Laws of 1911 (permitting nonresident aliens to
    recover, superseding McMillan, 
    115 Wis. 332
    ); § 1, ch. 263, Laws
    of 1931 (allowing beneficiaries in the hierarchy to recover if a
    higher beneficiary died, superseding Woodward, 
    23 Wis. 400
    ).
    43
    No.    2012AP2402
    no     minor    children,     the     surviving       spouse      recovered.            The
    legislature amended the statute in 1961 to read as follows:
    If the deceased leaves surviving a spouse, and minor
    children with whose support he was legally charged,
    said minor children shall be entitled to an amount as
    fixed by the circuit court . . . ; said benefits to be
    used for the support of such child or children during
    their minority, and after the youngest child reaches
    21 years of age, the balance, if any, shall be divided
    equally among said children surviving.   The remainder
    of the amount recovered or the amount recovered if
    there are no such surviving minor children shall
    belong   and   be   paid   to  the   spouse   of   the
    deceased . . . .
    Ch. 285, Laws of 1961 (enacted July 27, 1961).
    ¶115 The bill drafting file does not reveal the backstory
    of   this      amendment,     but    the    language      makes    clear        that    the
    legislature intended to favor minor children whom the deceased
    was legally charged to support over a surviving spouse.
    ¶116 A     1962    amendment        reveals    the    legislature's         second
    thoughts       about   the   newly    adopted      1961     hierarchy.          The    bill
    drafting file of the 1962 amendment also does not reveal the
    backstory of this amendment.
    ¶117 The 1962 amendment, adopted about six months after the
    1961     amendment,       returned    the        surviving      spouse     to    primary
    beneficiary status but protected the minor children by creating
    a    set-aside     from      the    surviving        spouse's     recovery.            This
    amendment       supports      the    defendant's          interpretation         of     the
    wrongful death statute that the children are not in the primary
    class of beneficiaries.
    ¶118 The 1962 amendment reads as follows:
    44
    No.    2012AP2402
    If the deceased leaves surviving a spouse, and minor
    children under 18 years of age with whose support he
    was legally charged, the court before whom an action
    is pending, or if no action is pending, any court of
    record, in recognition of the duty and responsibility
    of a parent to support his minor children, shall
    determine the amount, if any, to be set aside for the
    protection of such children after considering the age
    of such children, the amount involved, the capacity
    and integrity of the surviving spouse, and any other
    facts or information it may have or receive, and such
    amount may be impressed by creation of an appropriate
    lien in favor of such children or otherwise protected
    as circumstances may warrant, but such amount shall
    not be in excess of 50 per cent of the net amount
    received after deduction of costs of collection.    If
    there are no such surviving minor children, the amount
    recovered shall belong and be paid to the spouse of
    the deceased . . . .
    Ch. 649, Laws of 1961 (enacted Jan. 30, 1962).
    ¶119 This     1962   amendment    gave      the   courts    discretion    to
    consider how much the set-aside for the minor children would be,
    considering "the age of such children, the amount involved, the
    capacity and integrity of the surviving spouse, and any other
    facts   or    information   [they]    may    have      or   receive."        The
    legislature made clear that the statute was enacted to protect
    the spouse but also to recognize "the duty and responsibility of
    a parent to support his minor children."
    ¶120 Other than the 1961 and 1962 amendments, in recent
    years   the   legislature   has   left    the    wrongful      death   statutes
    largely intact in the wake of cases depriving or granting the
    children recovery in unusual fact situations.
    ¶121 Cogger established that a surviving spouse, even one
    who was a wrongdoer in causing the deceased's death, remained a
    primary beneficiary despite cutting off the claims of the minor
    45
    No.     2012AP2402
    children.74        After Cogger, the legislature took no action to
    amend the statute.
    ¶122 Steinbarth           established      that     a       living       spouse     who
    intentionally kills the deceased cannot be a surviving spouse
    under the wrongful death statute, and the children can recover.75
    Again, the legislature took no action to amend the statute.
    ¶123 According            to   the   defendants,            their     position       is
    supported     by   the   legislature's         failure      to    revise        Wis.   Stat.
    § 895.04(2) after Cogger and other cases.                         These cases barred
    secondary      beneficiaries          from       recovering          under         certain
    circumstances.
    ¶124 We       are   not    persuaded      that   the    legislative          inaction
    supports    the    defendants.        Legislative        inaction        is     ordinarily
    weak evidence of legislative acquiescence in or countenance of a
    judicial or executive branch interpretation.76
    ¶125 Rather, the statutory history, including the 1961 and
    1962 amendments, teaches that the legislature has protected the
    interests of both the surviving spouse and the minor children
    74
    
    Cogger, 35 Wis. 2d at 354-55
    .
    75
    
    Steinbarth, 144 Wis. 2d at 165
    -67.
    76
    See Green Bay Packaging, Inc. v. DILHR, 
    72 Wis. 2d 26
    ,
    36, 
    240 N.W.2d 422
    (1976) ("[L]egislative inaction . . . has
    been called 'a week [sic] reed upon which to lean' and a 'poor
    beacon' to follow in construing a statute" (quoted source
    omitted)); Milwaukee Journal Sentinel v. City of Milwaukee, 
    2012 WI 65
    , ¶43 n.21, 
    341 Wis. 2d 607
    , 
    815 N.W.2d 367
    (noting that
    "cases   have  expressed   skepticism  about   the  meaning   of
    legislative inaction") (citing Wenke v. Gehl Co., 
    2004 WI 103
    ,
    ¶32, 
    274 Wis. 2d 220
    , 
    682 N.W.2d 405
    ).
    46
    No.   2012AP2402
    and that the legislature has left interpretation of the phrase
    "surviving      spouse"     to   the     courts     when    unanticipated        fact
    scenarios have emerged.
    ¶126 In    the      instant    case,    we    must     consider,      as    the
    statutory history instructs, the interests of both the surviving
    spouse and the children based on the facts at hand.
    * * * *
    ¶127 For the reasons set forth, we interpret the phrase
    "surviving spouse" in the present case as not including Linda
    Force, the deceased's estranged spouse who, as a result of the
    circuit court's dismissal of her wrongful death claim (which was
    not   appealed),       is   barred     from      recovery    under     Wis.      Stat.
    §§ 895.03 and 895.04(2).             If Linda Force is not a "surviving
    spouse" under the statute, the parties do not dispute that the
    minor children have a cognizable claim as lineal heirs.                             As
    lineal heirs of the deceased, the children would be first in
    line for any recovery for the wrongful death of their father.
    ¶128 We conclude that the circuit court erred in granting
    the   defendants    summary      judgment     and   erred    in   dismissing      the
    minor children's causes of action against the defendants for
    wrongful death.        The minor children in the present case have a
    cause of action against the defendants for wrongful death as if
    Linda Force were not alive at the death of                 the deceased.77
    77
    In light of our holding, we need not and do not address
    the children's equal protection constitutional claim that if
    Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) bars their claim absent recovery by the
    surviving spouse, the statute is unconstitutional.
    47
    No.   2012AP2402
    ¶129 Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the circuit
    court against the children and in favor of the defendants and
    remand the matter to the circuit court for further proceedings
    not inconsistent with this opinion.
    By the Court.——The judgment and order of the circuit court
    are reversed and the cause is remanded to the circuit court.
    48
    No.    2012AP2402.dtp
    ¶130 DAVID T. PROSSER, J.            (concurring).           This is a case
    of    statutory    interpretation.        The     seminal     case        on   statutory
    interpretation in recent years is State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit
    Court    for     Dane   County,   
    2004 WI 58
    ,   
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,          
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .
    ¶131 In    Kalal,   the    court    emphasized         the     importance      of
    statutory text when it embraced the principle that a court's
    role is to determine what a statute means rather than determine
    what the legislature intended.            
    Id., ¶44. The
    court said:
    It is . . . a solemn obligation of the judiciary to
    faithfully give effect to the laws enacted by the
    legislature, and to do so requires a determination of
    statutory meaning.   Judicial deference to the policy
    choices enacted into law by the legislature requires
    that statutory interpretation focus primarily on the
    language of the statute.         We assume that the
    legislature's intent is expressed in the statutory
    language.   Extrinsic evidence of legislative intent
    may become relevant to statutory interpretation in
    some circumstances, but is not the primary focus of
    inquiry.   It is the enacted law, not the unenacted
    intent, that is binding on the public. Therefore, the
    purpose of statutory interpretation is to determine
    what the statute means so that it may be given its
    full, proper, and intended effect.
    
    Id. ¶132 The
       court    explained      that     statutory         interpretation
    begins with the language of the statute.                
    Id., ¶45. "Statutory
    language is given its common, ordinary, and accepted meaning,
    except that technical or specially-defined words or phrases are
    given their technical or special definitional meaning."                              
    Id. (citations omitted).
          Then the court added:
    Context is important to meaning. So, too, is the
    structure of the statute in which the operative
    language appears.    Therefore, statutory language is
    1
    No.   2012AP2402.dtp
    interpreted in the context in which it is used; not in
    isolation but as part of a whole; in relation to the
    language of surrounding or closely-related statutes;
    and reasonably, to avoid absurd or unreasonable
    results.
    
    Id., ¶46 (emphasis
    added) (citations omitted).
    ¶133 In my view, this case requires the court to confront
    head-on      statutory    language    that,      if    applied     literally,      would
    produce an absurd or unreasonable result.
    ¶134 Historically,          courts    have      tried   to   avoid    absurd      or
    unreasonable results.         The year before Kalal, this court said in
    State    v.    Hamilton,    
    2003 WI 50
    ,     ¶38,   
    261 Wis. 2d 458
    ,        
    661 N.W.2d 832
    : "The court should not search for ambiguity.                                 It
    should    enforce    a    clear    statute."          However,     "One    of   the    few
    exceptions to this sound principle is that the court will seek
    to   avoid    a   truly   absurd     or    unreasonable       result."          
    Id., ¶39 (citing
    State v. Burkman, 
    96 Wis. 2d 630
    , 642, 
    292 N.W.2d 641
    (1980); State v. Mendoza, 
    96 Wis. 2d 106
    , 115, 
    291 N.W.2d 478
    (1980); Kayden Indus., Inc. v. Murphy, 
    34 Wis. 2d 718
    , 732, 
    150 N.W.2d 447
    (1967)).
    ¶135 There are innumerable cases in which Wisconsin courts
    have repeated or actually invoked this exception.
    ¶136 In Worachek v. Stephenson Town School District, 
    270 Wis. 116
    , 124, 
    70 N.W.2d 657
    (1955), the court stated: "This
    court has repeatedly held that a statute should not be construed
    so as to work an absurd result even when the language seems
    clear and unambiguous."            
    Id. (citing Connell
    v. Luck, 
    264 Wis. 282
    , 
    58 N.W.2d 633
    (1953); Laridaen v. Ry. Express Agency, Inc.,
    2
    No.   2012AP2402.dtp
    
    259 Wis. 178
    , 
    47 N.W.2d 727
    (1951); Pfingsten v. Pfingsten, 
    164 Wis. 308
    , 
    159 N.W. 921
    (1916)).
    ¶137 In   Isaksen      v.   Chesapeake   Instrument    Corp.,    
    19 Wis. 2d 282
    , 289-90, 
    120 N.W.2d 151
    (1963), the court stated:
    We are unable to conceive of any reason of policy
    which   might  lead   the   legislature   to  deny to
    shareholders so situated the remedy it had provided
    for others, and Chesapeake has not suggested any.
    . . . .
    "It is always presumed, in regard to a statute, that
    no absurd or unreasonable result was intended by the
    legislature.   Hence if, viewing a statute from the
    standpoint of the literal sense of its language, it is
    unreasonable or absurd, an obscurity of meaning
    exists, calling for judicial construction."
    
    Id. (some citations
    omitted) (quoting Rice v. Ashland Cnty., 
    108 Wis. 189
    , 192, 
    84 N.W. 189
    (1900)).
    ¶138 In Kayden Industries, Inc. v. Murphy, 
    34 Wis. 2d 718
    ,
    732, 
    150 N.W.2d 447
    (1967), the court stated:
    Where there is no ambiguity in the literal terms of
    the provision under consideration there is no room for
    judicial   construction. . . .    The   only   general
    exception to the above rule[] . . . is that the court
    may construe a provision whose meaning is clear if a
    literal application of the provision would lead to an
    absurd or unreasonable result.
    
    Id. (citations omitted).
    ¶139 In Alberte v. Anew Health Care Services, Inc., 
    2000 WI 7
    , ¶10, 
    232 Wis. 2d 587
    , 
    605 N.W.2d 515
    , the court stated:
    While it is true that statutory interpretation
    begins with the language of the statute, it is also
    well established that courts must not look at a
    single, isolated sentence or portion of a sentence,
    but at the role of the relevant language in the entire
    statute.   Moreover, courts have "'some "scope for
    adopting a restricted rather than a literal or usual
    3
    No.   2012AP2402.dtp
    meaning of its words where acceptance of that
    meaning . . . would thwart the obvious purpose of the
    statute."'"   When a literal interpretation produces
    absurd or unreasonable results, or results that are
    clearly at odds with the legislature's intent, "[o]ur
    task is to give some alternative meaning" to the
    words.
    
    Id. (brackets in
    original) (citations omitted).
    ¶140 In Teschendorf v. State Farm Insurance Companies, 
    2006 WI 89
    , ¶15, 
    293 Wis. 2d 123
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 258
    , the court stated:
    [I]f the meaning of the statute appears to be plain
    but that meaning produces absurd results, we may also
    consult legislative history.     The purpose in this
    situation is to verify that the legislature did not
    intend these unreasonable or unthinkable results.
    Because our purpose in these situations is grounded in
    open disbelief of what a statute appears to require,
    we are bound to limit our off-statute investigations
    to obvious aberrations.
    
    Id. (internal citations
    and explanatory parentheticals omitted).
    The court went on, "The reason to doubt a literal meaning of
    [the statute] is that it clashes with related statutes."                  
    Id., ¶24. ¶141
    In   Gasper   v.   Parbs,   2001   WI   App    259,     ¶8,   
    249 Wis. 2d 106
    , 
    637 N.W.2d 399
    , the court of appeals stated:
    [T]he plain language of a statute should not be
    construed in a manner that leads to absurd or
    unreasonable results.   State v. Yellow Freight Sys.,
    Inc., 
    101 Wis. 2d 142
    , 153, 
    303 N.W.2d 834
    (1981). We
    presume that "the legislature intends for a statute to
    be interpreted in a manner that advances the purposes
    of the statute."    Verdoljak v. Mosinee Paper Corp.,
    
    200 Wis. 2d 624
    , 635, 
    547 N.W.2d 602
    (1996).
    
    Id. ¶142 These
      principles     were    undoubtedly          applied    in
    Steinbarth v. Johannes, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    , 
    423 N.W.2d 540
    (1988),
    where the court said: "A court will not ordinarily engage in
    4
    No.    2012AP2402.dtp
    statutory   interpretation      unless     a    statute     is    ambiguous.         A
    statute may be ambiguous and require judicial construction if
    the literal application of the language would lead to an absurd
    result."    
    Id. at 165
    (citing DeMars v. LaPour, 
    123 Wis. 2d 366
    ,
    370, 
    366 N.W.2d 891
    (1985)).        Steinbarth, of course, interpreted
    the same statute now before the court.
    ¶143 Courts try to avoid absurd results, but courts are not
    eager to disregard the seemingly clear language of a statute.
    This reluctance is salutary because it reflects the deference
    and respect of the judiciary for the policy choices of other
    branches of government.
    ¶144 For judges, there is plenty of solid ground between
    judicial    activism      and   judicial       paralysis.          Our       precedent
    provides guidance on when judges should act and when they should
    not.
    ¶145 Absurd results are much more than undesirable results.
    Absurd   results    are    aberrations     that   clash     with       the    manifest
    purpose of a statute or related statutes (evidenced by statutory
    language) and cannot be explained as a rational exception to the
    statutory scheme.         Absurd results are usually unexpected.                 They
    are different from harsh consequences because they are seldom
    the fault of an adversely affected party.                 Instead, they almost
    always   result    from    circumstances       beyond   the   party's         control.
    Absurd results produce hardship or unfairness that is quickly
    recognized and cannot be ignored.
    5
    No.   2012AP2402.dtp
    ¶146 This case satisfies these standards, as is documented
    in the majority opinion.   We ought to act but also implore the
    legislature to rewrite the statute.
    ¶147 For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully concur.
    6
    No.    2012AP2402.pdr
    ¶148 PATIENCE         DRAKE    ROGGENSACK,         J.   (dissenting).            While
    the majority opinion reaches an appealing result as it permits
    the minor children of Billy Joe Force to maintain a claim for
    his wrongful death, I cannot join the opinion.                       In my view, the
    majority opinion's conclusion that the statutory term "surviving
    spouse" does not mean a spouse who has survived the death of her
    husband because she was estranged from her husband at his death
    is    not    based     on    statutory         construction      and       will       create
    considerable      mischief      in       the   future.        Accordingly,        I    would
    affirm the circuit court, and I respectfully dissent.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    ¶149 The underlying facts are not disputed or complicated.
    On December 12, 2008, Billy Joe Force died as a result of a
    motor vehicle accident.              At the time of his death, Billy was
    married     to   Linda   Force.          However,   Billy      and   Linda     had      been
    separated since 1996, and Billy had not provided any support to
    Linda since 1997.
    ¶150 Billy and Linda had no children of their marriage.
    However, at his death, Billy had three minor children, born of
    two women, neither of whom he had married.                       It is these three
    children who seek to maintain this wrongful death action against
    Jeffrey Brown, the driver of the other vehicle in the accident;
    his   insurer,       American    Family        Mutual    Insurance         Company;      and
    1
    No.    2012AP2402.pdr
    Regent Insurance Company, the insurer of Billy's employer, for
    whom Billy was driving at the time of the accident.1
    ¶151 The     circuit       court        granted     summary     judgment     of
    dismissal, concluding that:            (1) Linda survived Billy; (2) the
    children had no independent cause of action under Wis. Stat.
    § 895.04(2);     (3)    Linda   had     no    compensable    damages;     and   (4)
    because Linda could not recover, no offset was available for the
    children.    The court of appeals certified the issue of whether
    children have an independent claim for relief under § 895.04
    when there is a surviving spouse, who has been estranged from
    the decedent for more than ten years and could not recover,
    thereby precluding any set aside for the children.2                   We accepted
    certification.
    II.   DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    ¶152 We are asked to construe the term "surviving spouse"
    in Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2).            Statutory interpretation presents a
    question of law for our independent review; however, we benefit
    from the circuit court's discussion.                 Spiegelberg v. State, 
    2006 WI 75
    , ¶8, 
    291 Wis. 2d 601
    , 
    717 N.W.2d 641
    .                  When we construe a
    statute,    we   also   consider      our     past     interpretations    of    that
    1
    Because Billy was driving for his employer at the time of
    the accident, the employer could bring a third party liability
    action to recover money the employer may have paid on Billy's
    behalf.   See Wis. Stat. § 102.29; Adams v. Northland Equipment
    Co., 
    2014 WI 79
    , ¶4, __ Wis. 2d __, __ N.W.2d __.        Section
    102.29 claims are mentioned in Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2).
    2
    Force v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., No.                         2012AP2402,
    unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. July 3, 2013).
    2
    No.    2012AP2402.pdr
    statute.       Schill v. Wis. Rapids Sch. Dist., 
    2010 WI 86
    , ¶49, 
    327 Wis. 2d 572
    , 
    786 N.W.2d 177
    .
    B.    Wisconsin Stat. § 895.04(2)
    ¶153 We are not writing on a clean slate as we interpret
    Wis. Stat. § 895.04(2) in the case now before us.                           As the court
    of appeals correctly pointed out, our interpretation of Cogger
    v. Trudell, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    , 
    151 N.W.2d 146
    (1967), precludes
    recovery      for    children    when    there      is   a   surviving        spouse   who
    cannot      recover.         Courts    have   followed       Cogger    with     only   one
    exception since 1967, Steinbarth v. Johannes, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    ,
    
    423 N.W.2d 540
    (1988).
    ¶154 In        Steinbarth,         the       husband      feloniously           and
    intentionally killed his wife, whose death was the basis for the
    children's wrongful death claim.                    During our consideration of
    the children's claim, we reviewed Wis. Stat. § 852.01(2m) (1985-
    86),       which    precluded    one    who       feloniously    and        intentionally
    killed a decedent from recovering as an heir of the decedent.
    
    Id. at 166.
             We noted that § 852.01(2m) (1985-86) treated the
    killer as having predeceased the decedent.3                       
    Id. We reasoned
    that the husband in Steinbarth should be treated consistent with
    3
    Wisconsin Stat. § 852.01(2m) (1985-86) provided:
    Requirement that heir not have intentionally
    killed the deceased.     (a) If any person who would
    otherwise be an heir under sub. (1) has feloniously
    and intentionally killed the decedent, the net estate
    not disposed of by will passes as if the killer had
    predeceased the decedent.
    3
    No.   2012AP2402.pdr
    the statutory directive of § 852.01(2m) (1985-86).4                 In order to
    do     so,    we   concluded      that   a   husband   who    feloniously     and
    intentionally killed his wife will be treated for purposes of a
    wrongful death claim as though he had predeceased his wife.
    Accordingly, there would be no surviving spouse under Wis. Stat.
    § 895.04 and the children could maintain an action for wrongful
    death.       
    Id. at 167.
    ¶155 In Steinbarth, we distinguished Cogger by noting that
    the spouse's death in Cogger was based on negligence and in
    Steinbarth, it was based on intent to kill.                   We also noted a
    specific legislative directive about the status of one who kills
    his spouse for purposes of claims made relative to the death of
    the spouse.         Neither distinction is present here.              Linda had
    nothing to do with Billy's death, and there is no statutory
    directive, other than the wrongful death statute, Wis. Stat.
    § 895.04, that applies here.
    ¶156 If I were writing for the majority, I would affirm the
    circuit court and fully describe how unfair the current statute
    is to children who have suffered significant damages due to the
    wrongful death of a parent, but who have no claim when the
    surviving spouse has no recovery.               By the 1961 amendments to
    Wis.       Stat.   § 895.04(2),    the   legislature   made    an   attempt    to
    independently protect children who suffered a loss because of
    4
    Wisconsin Stat. § 852.01(2m) was revised subsequent to
    Steinbarth v. Johannes, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    , 
    423 N.W.2d 540
    (1988),
    and Wis. Stat. § 854.14 further addresses homicide and rights of
    inheritance. The revisions are not relevant to our decision in
    Steinbarth or to my dissent.
    4
    No.    2012AP2402.pdr
    the wrongful death of a parent, but more is needed today to
    finish what the legislature then began.
    ¶157 Instead               of    acknowledging       that    a     claim      for   wrongful
    death is purely statutory and that at common law no such claim
    existed, Bowen v. American Family Insurance Co., 
    2012 WI App 29
    ,
    ¶10,       
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    ,    
    811 N.W.2d 887
    ,     the    majority         opinion
    pretends             that    it    is    construing        Wis.    Stat.       § 895.04(2)       and
    creates          a    new    claim.5        It    interprets        the    statutory         phrase,
    "surviving spouse," as not including Linda, Billy's spouse who
    survived him.                The majority justifies the result it reaches by
    relating that Linda and Billy have been estranged for ten years
    and that Linda could not prove wrongful death damages on her own
    behalf.6
    ¶158 While the majority opinion's result is appealing, I
    cannot join the majority opinion's interpretation of the Wis.
    Stat. § 895.04(2) term "surviving spouse."                              The methods employed
    to     interpret            § 895.04(2)          comport     with       none    of     the     legal
    principles            that     guide      statutory      interpretation.              See,     e.g.,
    State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty., 
    2004 WI 58
    ,
    ¶¶38-46,             
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,     
    681 N.W.2d 110
    .         Saying     that
    § 895.04(2) means whatever the majority wants it to mean will
    cause confusion and repetitive litigation.
    ¶159 For             example,       is     an     estrangement          of     five     years
    sufficient time to cause a spouse who survives the decedent to
    no longer be a "surviving spouse" under the majority opinion's
    5
    Majority op., ¶¶125-26.
    6
    Majority op., ¶5.
    5
    No.   2012AP2402.pdr
    construction         of   Wis.   Stat.   § 893.04(2)?       Is   two    years   long
    enough, if there has been absolutely no communication between
    the spouses?         Furthermore, how does the majority opinion line up
    with       spousal    intestate   succession      under   Wis.   Stat.    ch.   852,
    which says nothing about a spouse's rights being limited due to
    the husband and wife being separated?               See Wis. Stat. § 852.01.
    ¶160 Claims of the type now before us under Wis. Stat.
    § 895.04(2) are commonly brought and commonly denied because of
    our decision in Cogger.7             We would assist children who attempt to
    bring wrongful death claims in the future by pointing out the
    unfairness       the      current      statute    creates    and       asking    the
    legislature          to   consider     revising    § 895.04(2),        rather   than
    creating a common law fix for the children in the present case
    and leaving all similarly situated children without a claim due
    to our interpretation of § 895.04(2) in Cogger.
    7
    See Bowen v. Am. Family Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI App 29
    , 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 887
    (father was a defendant and could
    not recover due to his contributory negligence in the accident
    that killed his wife; therefore, children had no claim); Xiong
    v. Xiong, 
    2002 WI App 110
    , 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , 
    648 N.W.2d 900
    (father drove vehicle in which mother was passenger who died
    after an accident; children had no claim); Anderson v.
    Westchester Fire Ins. Co., No. 94-1211-FT, unpublished slip op.
    (Wis.   Ct.  App.  Nov. 29,   1994)  (concluding   that  because
    stepmother survived the death of child's parent, child had no
    claim under Wis. Stat. § 895.04); Maki v. Kahler, No. 83-773,
    unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. Mar. 27, 1984) (concluding
    that children had no claim based on Cogger).     Cogger has been
    cited 25 times in cases noted in Westlaw's database and probably
    many times that number in circuit court decisions from which no
    appeal was taken.
    6
    No.   2012AP2402.pdr
    III.   CONCLUSION
    ¶161 While the majority opinion reaches an appealing result
    as it permits the minor children of Billy Joe Force to maintain
    a claim for his wrongful death, I cannot join the opinion.               In
    my view, the majority opinion's conclusion that the statutory
    term "surviving spouse" does not mean a spouse who has survived
    the death of her husband because she was estranged from her
    husband at his death is not based on statutory construction and
    will create considerable mischief in the future.
    ¶162 Accordingly, I would affirm the court of appeals and I
    respectfully dissent.
    ¶163 I   am   authorized   to       state   that   Justices    ANNETTE
    KINGSLAND ZIEGLER and MICHAEL GABLEMAN join this dissent.
    7
    No.    2012AP2402.akz
    ¶164 ANNETTE         KINGSLAND    ZIEGLER,        J.     (dissent).            I    join
    Justice Roggensack's dissent, but write separately to clarify
    that, had the majority been able to link the Force children's
    ability     to    recover      with     the    language        of   the     statute,       and
    reconcile that text with our prior case law, see, e.g., Cogger
    v. Trudell, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    , 353, 
    151 N.W.2d 146
    (1967), I would
    have joined the majority.               The majority was unable, however, to
    find    a   satisfactory,          textual        way    to    construe        Wis.       Stat.
    § 895.04(2)       so   to    allow    the     Force     children    to    recover         in   a
    wrongful death action.                As a result, I am compelled to join
    Justice Roggensack's dissent.
    ¶165 Justice Prosser concludes that the application of the
    statutory language produces an "absurd" result.                              See Justice
    Prosser's concurrence, ¶133.                  An unpalatable result is not the
    same as an absurd result.                We are to look to the text of the
    statute     to     determine         whether      relief       is   afforded      to       the
    litigants.        "In construing or interpreting a statute the court
    is not at liberty to disregard the plain, clear words of the
    statute."        State ex rel. Kalal v. Circuit Court for Dane Cnty.,
    
    2004 WI 58
    ,     ¶46,     
    271 Wis. 2d 633
    ,        
    681 N.W.2d 110
          (citation
    omitted).        It is not the           role of the courts to "save"                       the
    legislative branch from the consequences of the laws it passes,
    or to create a remedy when the plain language of the statute
    does not afford relief.
    ¶166 As     a   practical        matter,       the     legislature       cannot         be
    expected    to    meaningfully         reconsider       legislation       if    the       court
    usurps the role of the legislature in order to create a remedy
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    No.    2012AP2402.akz
    where none otherwise exists.               The long and complex history of
    the wrongful death statute provides support for the notion that
    the legislature should consider revision to provide relief when
    it   should     be   due.       See    majority   op.,        ¶¶69-102    (discussing
    Steinbarth v. Johannes, 
    144 Wis. 2d 159
    , 
    423 Wis. 2d 540
    (1988);
    Hanson    v.    Valdivia,       
    51 Wis. 2d 466
    ,      
    187 N.W.2d 151
         (1971);
    Cogger, 
    35 Wis. 2d 350
    ; Bowen v. American Family Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI App 29
    , 
    340 Wis. 2d 232
    , 
    811 N.W.2d 887
    ; Xiong v. Xiong, 
    2002 WI App 110
    , 
    255 Wis. 2d 693
    , 
    648 N.W.2d 900
    ).                       The majority's
    apparent difficulty in distinguishing these cases provides an
    apt illustration of the problem.               The court should not avoid the
    plain    language    of     a   statute   in    order    to     prevent    unpleasant
    results.       In my view, legislative action is required.
    ¶167 For the foregoing reasons, I dissent.
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    No.   2012AP2402.akz
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