Judges: Rippey
Filed Date: 7/11/1939
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On May 2, 1937, at about 1:00 P.M., the plaintiff, a boy then twelve years of age, was a passenger in an automobile being driven by defendant, his sister, then sixteen years of age, when a collision occurred between the car in which they were riding and another car due, as the jury have found, to the negligence of the defendant in the operation of the car. For the injuries received, plaintiff has recovered. The judgment entered upon the verdict of the jury has been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division and defendant has appealed by permission of this court.
Defendant in her answer denied the charge of negligence against her set up in the complaint and alleged, and the *Page 109
testimony shows, that both infants were living with their father and mother at the time of the accident and were being supported by their father, that neither had any separate estate and that both were under the control and direction of the father. Neither was married. On the issues here involved, it seems of little moment whether they were or were not emancipated. An infant is generally responsible for his own torts (Tifft v. Tifft, 4 Denio, 175; Steinberg v. Cauchois,
As a ground for reversal, the defendant asserts that the action is not maintainable because public policy forbids. Neither the Constitution, statutes nor judicial decisions of the State directly or by fair implication declare any State policy against which the maintenance of such an action offends. In the absence of such a declaration, it is asserted that such an action should not be permitted because litigation between brothers and sisters seriously disturbs the family relationships and is destructive of the family unit, which is still the basis of society, and, if permitted, will be a prolific incentive to fraud, especially in personal injury cases where the owner or operator of the automobile is protected by insurance from liability.
The family has been for centuries the fundamental unit of society. The modern family, however, is far different in structure, status and internal social and legal relationship than the family of ancient times. Rigorous restrictions upon the rights and duties of its members, not only in their relations with those outside of the family unit but, as well, with one another have gradually moderated and, in some *Page 110
respects have totally disappeared until our common law and constitutional and statutory sanctions affecting family relations are more in harmony with the common sense of modern life. "The modern tendency of decided cases is to ignore fictions and deal with things as they are" (per POUND, J., in Drobner v.Peters,
Diligence of counsel and our own investigation have brought to our attention many analogous references. The relation between the sexes has radically changed. Man and woman are now upon a plane of substantial legal equality. Although one spouse has been held incompetent to sue the other to recover damages for a tort on the theory that husband and wife are one (Young v. Young, [Eng.] 5 Fraser 330; Phillips v. Barnet, 1 Q.B.D. 436; Harper v.Harper, [1929] S.C. 220; Mertz v. Mertz,
It is unnecessary to pile up further analogous references. Allusions to others of similar import might be extensively made. Persuasive are the analogies cited and they are not too remote. Notwithstanding such changes from tradition, predictions of dire results to the continued peace and amity of the family relationship have not been sustained. Legal prohibitions alone will not hold together the family life. There is something finer and deeper than artificial compulsions *Page 112 that makes the family relationship as strong and causes it to be as zealously maintained as in the ancient age. Family ties between brother and sister are as strong today as ever. If permitting a suit by a brother against a sister to recover for injuries received by the former through the tortious negligence of the latter is to tear asunder the ties that sustain the family unit, as predicted by appellant, then it must indeed be held together by a slender thread. Under present-day realities unrelated to bygone traditions, the past ought not to dictate legal relations between them. The "unquestioned principle of jurisprudence from very early times that there can be no wrong without a remedy" (1 Cyc. p. 700) is still in force with all its ancient vigor. There is no occasion here to establish an exception to that maxim by judicial legislation vaguely gathered from the dubious implications of a legal institution. There is no sound public policy against enforcing it.
It is also urged that the courts should wait until there is legislative sanction for such an action (Mertz v. Mertz,
Legalistic doctrines and ancient traditions like those of identity of husband and wife and family unity between parent and child and other members of the household and intimate legal or social relationship between others as affecting the question of the propriety for allowing suit for personal injuries by one against another are and have been vanishing with the advent of modern means of transportation and the spread of insurance against liability of the wrongdoer and protection for the sufferer. We cannot bury our heads in the sand and ignore the new tendencies and conditions so notorious. Insurance as protection to the sufferer is now a matter of common knowledge. Of course, that fact alone creates no right to sue where one otherwise would not exist (Luster v. Luster, 13 N.E. Rep. [2d] [Mass.] 438, 440; Schneider v. Schneider, supra). But I am unwilling to admit that sanction to the maintenance of such an action between brother and sister is any more of an incentive to fraud than when a similar action was sanctioned between husband and wife, between an emancipated son and his father, between grandmother and grandchild, between owner and guest, or between intimate friends. No warrant is found for any prediction that brothers and sisters will flock into the courts on fictitious claims through mere judicial recognition of the right of one to sue the other in personal injury cases. Common honesty inherent in the family unit presents an effective barrier. If it should appear that there is any foundation for the suggestion, a means of protection may be found in diligence on the part of the insurance carriers to ferret out and expose the fictitious claims and reliance may be placed on our courts and juries to detect and prevent a fraud.
Finally, it is urged that lack of precedent for such an action must control. In Kujek v. Goldman (
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur; O'BRIEN, J., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed. *Page 115
Schneider v. Schneider ( 1930 )
Mesite v. Kirchenstein ( 1929 )