This case presents the question whether a child may recover for loss of consortium arising from injuries negligently inflicted on a parent by a third party if, at the time of injury, the child was a nonviable fetus. The plaintiff Jeremy Michael Angelini was en ventre sa mere at the time his father Leo LePage was injured on September 29, 1985. On that day, an automobile driven by Mark W. Laberge, in which Leo was a passenger, hit a light pole. As a result of the accident, Leo, Shawn Lewis (another passenger in the automobile), and Jeremy 4 brought a twelve-count complaint naming Mark Laberge, OMD Corporation (OMD) (doing business as B. B. Binks) and Hoy Tin Restaurant, Inc. (Hoy Tin), as defendants. B.B. Binks and Hoy Tin are restaurants in Swansea.
The complaint alleged that Laberge operated the automobile in a negligent manner. The complaint also alleged that OMD and Hoy Tin negligently served alcoholic beverages to Laberge shortly before the accident and violated the dram shop act. G. L. c. 138, § 69 (1988 ed.). In addition, counts XI and XII of the complaint alleged that Leo “was an able bodied man who had worked regularly and had properly cared for the woman who was carrying his child and had made plans for supporting his minor child” and that “[a]s a direct and proximate result of the actions” of OMD and Hoy Tin, the child, who had not been born at the time the complaint was filed, “has been and will be in the future deprived of the regular and reasonable support, maintenance and comfort that [he] would have received but for the accident.” OMD and Hoy Tin filed separate motions for summary judgment on counts XI and XII. In memoranda of law in support of the motions, both defendants argued that, since Jeremy was a nonviable fetus at the time of the injury to Leo, Jeremy could not as matter of law maintain an action for loss of consortium. The judge granted the motions for summary judgment. A motion for entry of separate and final judgment
A motion for summary judgment should be allowed “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Mass. R. Civ. P. 56(c),
In
Diaz
v.
Eli Lilly & Co.,
The Appeals Court has on two occasions elaborated on our holding in
Ferriter.
In
Glicklich
v.
Spievack,
This court has recognized, however, that, as a matter of policy there must be limits to the types of relationships from. which an action for loss of consortium can arise. In
Feliciano
v.
Rosemar Silver Co.,
Jeremy argues that the fact that he was not a viable fetus at the time of Leo’s injury should not as matter of law preclude him from recovering for loss of parental consortium. He contends that, since he was conceived before Leo was injured, and was bom alive, he should be allowed to recover for loss of parental consortium. The defendants argue that to include nonviable fetuses within the class of children who may recover for loss of parental consortium would be an unwarranted expansion of the Ferriter doctrine. The defendants urge us to limit recovery to those children who were born before the injury to the parent or, at the very least, to those children who at the time of the injury were viable fetuses.
As a threshold issue, we must determine first whether, as matter of law, there should be
any
restriction placed on the class of children eligible to recover for loss of parental consortium. Should, for example, children who were conceived after the parent was injured be allowed to recover for loss of parental consortium? It can be argued convincingly that a child’s loss of parental consortium is not affected by the time of injury to the parent. A child conceived after the injury, and eventually born alive, may suffer the same loss of parental consortium as a child conceived before the injury and also born alive. It may be asked, therefore, why should the latter be allowed to recover for loss of consortium and not the former? The answer is that, after a parent is negligently injured
Having determined that there must be some restriction placed on the class of children who may recover for loss of parental consortium, we must next determine the nature of the limitation. 7 The parties in the present case address the question whether viability of the fetus at the time of injury to the parent should be the dispositive issue. We begin our analysis with that question.
In deciding whether to apply a “viability at the time of injury” test we seek guidance from the line of prenatal injury cases which discuss the significance of a fetus’s viability in actions for wrongful death. The first reported case in the nation dealing with the tortious injury of a fetus was
Dietrich
v.
Northampton,
In
Keyes,
we held that the administrator of the estate of the deceased child could recover for wrongful death if the child was a viable fetus at the time of the injury, and was born alive.
Id.
at 637.
8
Seven years later, however, in
Torigian
v.
Watertown News Co.,
After
Torigian
the dispositive issue in wrongful death cases involving prenatal injuries to the child appeared to be whether the child was born alive, and not whether the fetus was viable at the time of injury. This was reaffirmed in
Lec-cesse
v.
McDonough,
Mone
applied a “viability rule” in cases of prenatal injury where the infant was stillborn.
Mone
did not discuss cases where the infant was born alive and the injury occurred while the fetus was not viable.
Mone,
in other words, while overruling
Leccesse,
did not disturb the holding in
Torigian.
See
Mone
v.
Greyhound Lines Inc., supra
at 366 (Braucher, J., dissenting). The case law suggests, therefore, that, if a fetus is injured while it is nonviable, a cause of action will lie under the wrongful death statute if the fetus continues to develop and is eventually born alive.
Torigian, supra.
Cf.
Payton
v.
Abbott Labs,
The present case differs from the above-mentioned cases because the injury alleged here, namely the loss by Jeremy of his father’s parental society, could occur only after Jeremy
While viability is not dispositive in a wrongful death claim involving a prenatal injury when the child is subsequently born alive, Torigian, supra, the wrongful death statute necessarily subsumes that a child who seeks to recover for the wrongful death of a parent was conceived prior to the wrongful death of its parent. The children of the deceased are persons entitled to recover for the loss of society and companionship which results from the wrongful death. See G. L. c. 229, §§ 1 & 2. As a result, if an individual conceives a child, and the child is born after the individual’s wrongful death, the child will be allowed to recover since the deceased parent was survived by the child. See id.
If a child may recover for the wrongful death of a parent, it would be anomalous to deny recovery for loss of parental consortium to a child who was conceived before the parent was seriously (but not fatally) injured. “There should be a consistency between our statutory law and our case law.”
Liebovich
v.
Antonellis, ante
568, 578 (1991), quoting
Norman
v.
Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth.,
Additionally, the child must, in order to recover for loss of parental consortium, establish a reasonable expectancy of a dependent relationship with the injured parent. See Ferriter, supra at 516. We cannot conclude, based on the record before us, that Jeremy lacked a reasonable expectancy of the necessary economic and emotional ties with Leo, which would allow him to recover for loss of parental consortium as a result of the injuries suffered by Leo. We believe that there are material facts in dispute regarding the issue whether Jeremy had a reasonable expectancy of such dependency. 10
The defendants make one other argument which we think should be addressed. It is undisputed that the plaintiffs mother and father were never married to each other. The defendants, citing
Feliciano, supra,
argue that Jeremy’s illegitimacy, while not dispositive, is an important factor in determining whether he should be allowed to recover for loss of parental consortium since “[illegitimacy] derogates from the values of a viable family unit, values which are at the heart of a recognition of consortium damages.” It is clear, however, that Jeremy and Leo, unlike the unmarried couple in
Feliciano,
have a relationship which is recognized by the law. See G. L. c. 209C, § 1 (1990 ed.) (“[c]hildren born to parents who are not married to each other shall be entitled to the same rights and protections of the law as all other children”). The traditional common law rules which discriminated against children born out of wedlock have been discarded. The trend of the law has been to treat illegitimate children in the same way as legitimate children. See C.C. v.
Conclusion. Since Jeremy was conceived before Leo was injured, and Jeremy was subsequently born alive, he should not be precluded as matter of law from recovering for loss of parental consortium. We cannot conclude from this record that there were no material facts in dispute regarding the issue whether Jeremy had a reasonable expectation of such dependency. The summary judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
Jeremy’s mother, Susan Beth Angelini, was not in the automobile at the time of the accident.
In
Norman
v.
Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth.,
“The claim for loss of consortium is independent of the claim of the injured [party],
Feltch
v.
General Rental Co.,
To our knowledge, there are no reported cases from any jurisdiction on the issue.
The
Keyes
court was convinced by the argument that “whenever a child in útero is so far advanced in prenatal age as that, should parturition by natural or artificial means occur at such age, such child could and would live separable from the mother and grow into the ordinary activities of life, and is afterwards born and becomes a living human being, such child has a right of action for any injuries wantonly or negligently inflicted upon his or her person at such age of viability, though then in the womb of the mother.”
Id.
at 636, quoting
Allaire
v.
St. Luke’s Hosp.,
In cases involving prenatal injuries, an increasing number of courts across the country have rejected the requirement that a fetus be viable at the time it was injured provided that the child was later born alive. See cases cited in 3 F. Harper, F. James & O. Gray, Torts § 18.3, at 678 n.16 (1986). In addition, “[cjommentators seem to be virtually united in rejecting the requirement of viability at the time of injury at least where the child is later born alive.” Id.
In
Commonwealth
v.
Cass,
The record includes affidavits from the defendants’ attorneys which state that Leo, after the accident, sired a child with a woman other than Susan. The defendants argue that this is further evidence that Leo did not provide Jeremy with emotional guidance, support, or nurture. We do not agree. The fact that Leo had a child with another woman is not conclusive of the question whether Jeremy had a reasonable expectancy of economic and emotional dependency on Leo.
