46 N.Y.2d 634 | NY | 1979
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
To be resolved on this appeal is the question whether the wife of an injured harbor worker may seek recovery for loss of consortium occasioned by her husband’s injury.
Respondent, while working as a ship’s lasher aboard appellant’s
In denying respondent’s motion, Special Term relied entirely upon Igneri v Cie. de Transports Oceaniques (323 F2d 257, cert den 376 US 949), in which the Second Circuit held that the spouse of a longshoreman injured while working aboard a vessel in Brooklyn harbor had no cause of action for loss of consortium whether caused by negligence of the owner or unseaworthiness of the vessel. (323 F2d, at pp 265-268, supra.) In reaching this conclusion, the court observed that maritime law will often draw upon the law of the land where clear precedent does not exist in the former. With respect to recovery for loss of consortium, the court posited that if an admiralty court found that "the common law recognized a wife’s claim for loss of consortium, uniformly or nearly so,” it would query why it should not similarly recognize such a claim. (Id., at p 260.)
Upon examining the state of the common law, the court found that although the great majority of States recognized the existence of a cause of action by a husband for loss of consortium, only 12 jurisdictions permitted a similar recovery by a wife. In light of the absence of a clear rule either permitting or prohibiting such recovery, the court turned to a consideration of which rule best comported with then existing principles of maritime law. Relying primarily upon the unavailability of such relief to the wife of an injured seaman under the Jones Act (US Code, tit 46, § 688), the court concluded that it would be anamolous to permit recovery for loss of consortium by the wife of a longshoreman, whether on a theory of negligence or unseaworthiness. (Id., at pp 265-268.)
In the years since the Second Circuit’s decision in Igneri, maritime law has not remained static but, like the common
Further delineation of the breadth of the wrongful death cause of action afforded by general maritime law soon followed in Sea-Land Servs. v Gaudet (414 US 573), wherein the court held that a decedent’s dependents may recover for, among other elements of damage, loss of society, which the court defined as including a decedent’s "love, affection, care, attention, companionship, comfort, and protection.” (Id., at p 585 [footnote omitted].) The court was careful, however, to exclude from the concept of society recovery for mental anguish or grief.
In assessing the impact of these cases upon resolution of the issue before us, we proceed cautiously cognizant that it is the general maritime law that governs the rights and liabilities of the parties. (Romero v International Term. Operating Co., 358 US 354, 373; Garrett v Moore-McCormack Co., 317 US 239, 245; Celeste v Prudential-Grace Lines, 35 NY2d 60, 62-63; Matter of Rederi [Dow Chem. Co.], 25 NY2d 576, 581, cert den 398 US 939; ALI Study of the Division of Jurisdiction Between State and Federal Courts, § 1316[b], at p 239 [Off Draft, 1969].) Were this a case in which State law were applicable notwithstanding the existence of a Federal question (see, e.g., People v Payton, 45 NY2d 300, 312), we would be free to render a decision on such Federal question differing from pertinent Federal court decisions save a controlling determination of the Supreme Court. (People ex rel. Ray v Martin, 294 NY 61, 73, affd 326 US 496.) To be distinguished, however, are those unique areas, such as admiralty and maritime matters, which either by Constitution or Congressional legislation have been deemed to require a uniform body of national law. (See, generally, Hart, Relations Between State and Federal Law, 54
It is, therefore, with great deference that we proceed to an analysis of the question before us. Critical to its resolution is the effect which Moragne and Gaudet have had upon general maritime law and in particular upon the continued validity of Igneri. Judicial interpretation of these developments has not been uniform, leaving uncertain whether there presently exists a cause of action for loss of consortium in a personal injury action under the general maritime law. (Compare Giglio v Farrell Lines, 424 F Supp 927, mot for lv to app den No. 77-8014 [2d Cir, Feb. 17, 1977],
In our opinion, examination of the ratio decedendi of the Igneri decision reveals an erosion of its theoretical underpinnings so severe as to precipitate its collapse under its own weight. To begin with, unlike the state of the law of the land as to recovery for loss of consortium then prevailing, the great majority of States, including New York, now recognize such a cause of action by either husband or wife in a personal injury action.
In addition to the absence of a rule at common law recognizing "a wife’s claim for loss of consortium, uniformly or nearly so,” (Igneri v Cie. de Transports Oceaniques, 323 F2d, at p 260, supra), the Second Circuit hinged its decision upon the anomaly it perceived in permitting a longshoreman’s wife to recover for loss of consortium when the wife of an injured seaman would not be afforded a similar right under the Jones Act (US Code, tit 46, § 688). (323 F2d, at pp 266-268.) That such anomalies do exist in the remedies afforded injured maritime workers is, however, a currently accepted fact of
The Second Circuit’s concern, in Igneri, with the absence of a clear common-law rule as to recovery for loss of consortium and with the avoidance of anomalous remedies in maritime law is clearly manifested in its observation: "If there were evidence that maritime law generally recognized a claim for negligent injury to such an intangible right, or if the common law clearly authorized a wife’s recovery, the gravitational pull of such concepts with respect to the wife of a longshoreman might be stronger than that of the analogy to the statute denying such recovery to a seaman’s wife. But, with neither of these conditions realized, our duty to avoid capricious differences in treatment between similarly situated persons forbids our fashioning a rule that would place the spouse of a harbor-worker in a different, and better, position than the spouse of a seaman.” (323 F2d, at p 267, supra.) We believe that the clear recognition by the law of the land of the right of a wife to recover for loss of consortium in a personal injury action, together with the recognition of such right in wrongful death actions under the general maritime law, exert, in the words of the Second Circuit, a "gravitational pull” of sufficient intensity to require recognition of respondent’s claim. (See 2 Benedict, Admiralty [7th rev ed], § 12, pp 1-66 — 1-74; Comment, Loss of Consortium in Admiralty: A Yet Unsettled Question, 1977 BYU L Rev 133.)
In reaching this conclusion, we are cognizant that the Fifth Circuit has interpreted Gaudet (supra) as limited to authorizing recovery for loss of consortium under the general maritime law to wrongful death actions. (Christofferson v Halliburton Co., 534 F2d 1147, supra.) Critical to the court’s determination were two factors: first, its belief that recognition of a wife’s claim for loss of consortium by 37 States is not indicative of a uniformity in the common law; and, second, its interpretation of Gaudet as holding that a cause of action for loss of consortium cannot accrue until the decedent’s death. (Id., at pp 1150-1151.)
As to the Supreme Court’s reference to the accrual of a cause of action for loss of consortium, the factual setting in Gaudet is critical. There, the injured seaman had already recovered for his personal injuries prior to his death. Thereafter, his widow commenced a wrongful death action seeking as an element of damage recovery for loss of society. The trial court dismissed the action on the ground of res judicata. In affirming the reversal of this order by the Circuit Court of Appeals (463 F2d 1331), the Supreme Court stated: "Obviously, the decedent’s recovery did not include damages for the dependents’ loss of services or of society, and funeral expenses. Indeed, these losses — unique to the decedent’s dependents— could not accrue until the decedent’s death.” (414 US, at pp 591-592, supra.) It is this language which the Fifth Circuit in Christofferson interpreted as implicitly limiting the right to recover for loss of consortium to wrongful death actions on the ground that a cause of action for loss of consortium does not accrue absent death. We would not read this language so broadly as it would appear to have been intended merely to identify the widow’s wrongful death action as an action separate and apart from the decedent’s personal injury action, precluding application of res judicata principles.
In holding as we do today, we are sensitive to the limited
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the negative.
. Appellant American Export Lines, Inc., impleaded respondent’s employer, Joseph Vinal Ship Maintenance, Inc., as a third-party defendant.
. With this definition in mind, the terms consortium and society will be used interchangeably.
. Giglio was subsequently dismissed in its entirety. (No. 75 Civ 6359, SONY, Jan. 5, 1979, app pending No. 79-7078 [2d Cir].)
. The following States recognize a wife’s cause of action for loss of consortium in a personal injury action either by statute or decisional law: (Swartz v United States Steel Corp., 293 Ala 439; Schreiner v Fruit & Equit. Life Assur. Soc., 519 P2d 462 [Ala]; City of Glendale v Bradshaw, 108 Ariz 582; Missouri Pacific Transp. Co. v Miller, 227 Ark 351; Rodriguez v Bethlehem Steel Corp., 12 Cal 3d 382; Col Rev Stat, § 14-2-209; Yoner v Adams, 53 Del 229; Gates v Foley, 247 So 2d 40 [Fla]; Brown v Georgia-Tennessee Coaches, 88 Ga App 519; Nichols v Sonneman, 91 Idaho 199; Dini v Naiditch, 20 111 2d 406; Troue v Marker, 253 Ind 284; Acuff v Schmit, 248 Iowa 272;
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). I am obliged to dissent in observance of what I perceive to be proper jurisprudential restraint. All agree that in this maritime action instituted in State court Federal maritime law governs. Our sole responsibility then is to determine the applicable Federal law. If the present state of such law is reasonably clear, we are not free to speculate what it may some day come to be.
In Igneri v Cie. de Transports Oceaniques (323 F2d 257, cert den 376 US 949) the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, within the territorial boundaries of which circuit our court sits, decided explicitly in 1963 that loss of consortium was not recognized under Federal maritime law. That determination is recognized as binding on the Federal District Courts within the Second Circuit (Tornatore v Koninklijke Nederlandsche Stoomboot Maatschappij, N. V. "Sinon”, USDCEDNY, Docket No. 75 C 69 [Dec. 6, 1976]; cf. Giglio v Farrell Lines, 424 F Supp 927, mot for lv to app den 2d Cir., Docket No. 77-8014 [Feb. 17, 1977]).
Not only, in my analysis, is the present state of the applicable Federal law clear, but even if it be recognized that Federal maritime law, as is true of most fields of the law, is and should be subject to the dynamics of appropriate growth and refinement, in my opinion the responsibility for such development properly rests with the Federal courts. Whatever may be our privilege, indeed our obligation, as a common-law court to share responsibility for the evolution and responsiveness of the common law, it is not fitting that we should venture decisional contributions to the developmental processes of maritime law which is characterized by peculiarities, even idiosyncrasies. We are neither qualified by judicial experience nor, inasmuch as any decision we hand down will have no precedential significance in the Federal courts, can we be held jurisprudentially responsible for the determination which we decide to make.
Accordingly, under constraint of the present state of Federal law, I would reverse the order of the Appellate Division and deny the motion to amend the complaint.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Gabrielli, Wachtler and Fuchsberg concur with Judge Jasen; Judge Jones dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion.
Order affirmed, etc.
In Giglio, a panel of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit declined an express invitation to overrule Igneri. That the court thereby left standing the District Court’s view that the time may have come for such overruling is not to be construed as approval or rejection of that view (cf. the denial of petitions for writs of certiorari by the United States Supreme Court). It is noted that the Giglio case has subsequently been dismissed in its entirety (USDCSDNY, Docket No. 75 Civ 6359 [Jan. 5, 1979]) and an appeal is now pending from that disposition (2d Cir, Docket No. 79-7078).