At issuе in this case is whether an injured party’s release in settlement of a personal-injury action bars that party’s spouse from maintaining an independent cause of action for loss of consortium. The casе arose out of an automobile accident on March 30
Defendant moved to dismiss the loss-of-consortium action based on the release executed by Eldridge Brown, and the trial court granted his motion. Plaintiff appealed the dismissal, and the appellate сourt held that a release executed by an injured party does not bar a spouse’s loss-of-consortium action (
Loss of consortium encompasses two basic elements of the marital relationship: loss of support and loss of society, which includes companionship and sexual intercourse. (See Dini v. Naiditch (1960),
This cоurt noted the potential for double recoveries in spousal-personal-injury and related loss-of-consortium claims in Dini v. Naiditch (1960),
In adopting a joinder requirement, we join a growing number of jurisdictions which have so held. (See, e.g., Schreiner v. Fruit (Alaska 1974),
The question remains whether the mandatоry joinder rule should apply prospectively only or whether it should also govern disposition of pending loss-of-consortium
While virtually all States now allow loss-of-consortium actions by either spouse (see Restatement (Second) of Torts sec. 693 (1977)), there is considerably less unanimity as to which defenses to the impairеd spouse’s action will also bar the deprived spouse’s recovery for loss of consortium. (See, e.g., Annot.,
Normally, of course, our holdings are applied in the case before us and are not limited to future cases unlеss there are compelling reasons for such action. (Nabisco, Inc. v. Korzen (1977),
Apart from this consideration, however, is an additional factor — the pendency of plaintiff’s loss-of-consortium suit and the divorce action at the time of settlement of the husband’s injury claim. The plaintiff had joined as defendants in the divorce action the alleged tortfeasor and his insurer and secured an order prohibiting them from disbursing the proceeds of any settlement with her husband. In these circumstances defendant Metzger and his insurer were well aware of the pendency of both actions and could have sought consolidation of the husband’s personal-injury action and the wife’s loss-of-consortium suit. Instead, they apparently elected to settle with the husband alone and gamble that such settlement would bar the wife’s action dеspite the absence of any conclusive authority to that effect in this State. Similarly, the alternative argument that we should apply here the mandatory joinder rule is scarcely persuasive in light of the faсt that Metzger and his insurer made no effort to secure consolidation of the injury and loss-of-consortium actions.
In the circumstances of this case we believe plaintiff should be permitted to proceed with her loss-of-consortium suit. The trial judge will, of course, by appropriate instructions, exclude the loss-of-support and medical-expense allegations of the complaint from the jury’s consideration. The judgment of the appellate court is accordingly affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
