OPINION
Appellants seek reversal of the Daviess Circuit Court’s grant of partial summary judgment relating to certain elements of Appellants’ damages claim. For the following reasons, we affirm.
This case began as an action both for personal injury and for the wrongful death of William Blake Aull (Blake) that allegedly resulted from treatment rendered by Appellees. Blake was born on October 13, 1994. In early infancy he was alert, responsive, had good head control, vocalized frequently, and smiled responsively. At around five months Blake’s pediatrician noted twitching movements on Blake’s left side. Blake was soon referred to a pediatrician and neurologist at the University of Louisville.
An extensive examination revealed a seizure disorder, significant muscular hypoto-nia, regression of his development status and decreased visual responsiveness. The neurologist concluded that his findings were consistent with Leigh’s disease and informed Blake’s family that the prognosis was extremely poor; early onset of the disease is generally associated with death in early childhood and Blake’s long term survival was unlikely. Worst of all, a definitive treatment for Leigh’s disease is unavailable. In the following years Blake received treatment from physicians in multiple states.
On September 8, 2000, Blake began to experience complications after receiving certain immunizations. A series of emergency room and doctor’s office visits occurred over the next four days. On September 12, 2000, Blake passed away at the age of five. The ultimate cause of death was pneumonia and diffuse encephalopathy. Appellants brought suit in Daviess Circuit Court to determine whether Appel-lees were liable for Blake’s death.
However, liability is not the subject of our review as that issue has not been determined yet at the trial court. Our only focus is the availability of certain categories of damages.
Appellants sought recovery of damages for Blake’s pain and suffering prior to his death, his medical expenses prior to death, his funeral expenses, and his parents’ loss of Blake’s affection. Appellees did not challenge the legal availability of these categories of damage. However, they succeeded in obtaining a partial summary judgment prohibiting Appellants’ recovery of damages for Blake’s death itself, for Blake’s loss of earnings prior to his death, and for Blake’s loss of future earning capacity. This appeal followed. 2
Our role in reviewing a grant of summary judgment or partial summary judgment is to determine whether the circuit court correctly found that no genuine issue exists as to any material facts and whether based on such facts appellees are entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Scifres v. Kraft,
Dismissing the claim for damages for “Blake’s death,” separate and apart from the statutory claim for wrongful death pursuant to KRS 411.130, was proper.
Giuliani v. Guiler,
In fact, Appellants do not challenge the partial summary judgment even to the extent it relates to their claim for income Blake may have lost prior to his death. The reason is obvious. Blake was five years old when he died and was earning no income.
Appellants concentrate their challenge of the partial summary judgment on its elimination of their claim for the destruction of Blake’s future earning capacity. Appellants claim the trial court erred by finding that, even when the evidence is viewed in a light most favorable to them, they could not prove Blake suffered any destruction of earning capacity. The two arguments they present are: (1) Kentucky law presumes Blake, like every child, possesses the capacity to earn a living in the future, and (2) the destruction of the power to earn money should include loss of the decedent’s entitlement to receive state and federal disability benefits. The first of these arguments is, in essence, an argument that there was sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of fact regarding Blake’s ability to earn wages. The second presents a legal argument that, for purposes of determining damages for wrongful death, the receipt of benefits from a government entitlement program is the equivalent of earning a wage. For the following reasons, we do not find Appellants’ arguments persuasive.
Citing
Turfway Park Racing Ass’n v. Griffin,
there was no evidence that the decedent was other than a normal four-year-old boy and certainly no evidence of a disability so profound as to render him incapable of earning money upon reaching adulthood.
Id.; see also, George v. Evans,
We note first that “[t]he measure of damages in a wrongful death action in this state is the damage to the estate by the destruction of the decedent’s
power to labor and earn money.” W.L. Harper Company v. Slusher,
Appellants refer us to
Heskamp v. Bradshaw’s Adm’r,
It is a fact that in
Heskamp
the jury was allowed to consider as damages the loss of the decedent’s pension, but the reason given for allowing it was that “[t]he decedent had
earned
the pension
by his services
in the past[.]”
Heskamp,
Appellants also cite
Young’s Adm’x
for the proposition that, under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act “the dependents of the deceased are entitled to recover for the loss of pecuniary benefits which they had a reasonable expectation of receiving from him had he not been killed.”
Young’s Adm’x,
Appellants acknowledge that Kentucky case law has yet to directly address whether a jury should be allowed to consider the potential availability of social security dis
While it appears overly harsh and more than a bit cold in the case at hand, and for that matter any case dealing with the death of an individual who no longer has [or in the case now before the Court, never did have] the capacity to earn income, under existing Kentucky law damages for a wrongful death claim are based on the destruction to the decedent’s power to labor and earn money.
Smith,
We are aware that one federal court, applying Kentucky law, recently addressed “the proper interpretation of the ‘the power to earn money’ standard.”
Meinhart v. Campbell,
With all due respect to the federal court,
Meinhart
appears not to have considered the clear language of
Slusher, supra,
that juxtaposes the decedent’s “power to labor” on the one hand and the “earning of] money” on the other in a cause-and-effect relationship. Conversely, the trial court in the case before us did consider
Slusher,
albeit indirectly. Relying on
Birkenshaw v. Union Light, Heat and Power Co.,
The trial court further referenced the dicta first expressed by the Supreme Court in
Turfway,
and later repeated in
Reffitt v. Najjar,
Because damages under KRS 411.130 are measured by the loss resulting from the destruction of the decedent’s power to labor, and because Blake experienced no destruction of his power to labor at the hands of the Appellees, Appellants cannot recover damages for the destruction of his power to labor and earn money under KRS 411.130.
Finally, we address Appellants’ concern that the trial court’s order appears to “extinguish [all claims] for personal injuries Blake suffered prior to his death (medical bills, pain and suffering)”. We believe this concern to be unjustified.
Appellees acknowledge that “no disposi-tive motions were filed relating to damages for personal injury.” Furthermore, the trial court granted and this Court now affirms the “dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims for damages arising from (1) Blake’s death, (2) Blake’s loss of earnings, and (3) the destruction of Blake’s earning capacity.” (Partial Summary Judgment, April 23, 2008, p. 2). There is nothing in the partial summary judgment that should reasonably lead one to conclude that Appellants were precluded from pursuing all other claims. Nevertheless, to eliminate any controversy, we hold that nothing in the record to date prohibits the Appellants’ continued pursuit of all categories of damages available pursuant to KRS 411.133 and KRS 411.135,' except those damages specifically addressed in this opinion; ie., damages for “the affliction to the family as a result of the wrongful death[,]” Giuliani, supra, Blake’s loss of earnings, and the destruction of Blake’s power to labor and earn money.
For the foregoing reasons, the partial summary judgment of the Daviess Circuit Court is affirmed.
ALL CONCUR.
Notes
. By order entered June 5, 2008, the Daviess Circuit Court certified for purposes of appeal its April 23, 2008 order granting the partial summary judgment in favor of Appellees regarding the legal availability of these categories of damages.
. "Blake was unable to walk, talk, feed himself, dress himself, write, bathe himself, brush his teeth, or tie his shoes. He was not diaper trained, he could not breathe without the assistance of a trach[eostomy tube], and he was fed through a stomach tube.” Partial Summary Judgment, April 23, 2008, p. 3.
. Meinhart was designated as "unpublished.” However, in accordance with Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure (FRAP) 32.1, "A court may not prohibit or restrict the citation of federal judicial opinions, orders, judgments, or other written dispositions that have been: (i) designated as "unpublished” ... and (ii) issued ... after January 1, 1997.” While Kentucky courts are not bound by FRAP 32.1, the federal judiciary has determined that all of its opinions rendered after January 1, 1997, have equally persuasive import without regard to their designation as unpublished. We should take no less a view of those unpublished opinions.
. The trial court miscites this case as
Bradshaw v. Union Light, Heat and Power Co.,
