OPINION
Case Summary
C.M.L. appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment to Republic Services, Inc. ("Republic") and Kenneth Brabant ("Kenneth"). Specifically, CML. challenges the trial court's determinations that C.M.L.'s cause of action was barred by the parental immunity - doctrine and the Indiana Guest Statute. For the reasons stated herein, we decline to extend the parental immunity doctrine to apply to stepparents or to bar claims arising out of business activities. In addition, we find that the Guest Statute does not bar the action. Consequently, we reverse. 1
Facts and Procedural History
In July 2001, nine-year-old CML. accompanied Kenneth on his garbage collection route for Republic. During the route, C.M.L. was asleep under a blanket on the passenger seat. On one particular stop, Kenneth exited the truck to collect some garbage. - Unbeknownst to Kenneth, C.M.L. also exited the truck, stood on the *202 ground between the hydraulic tank and the truck cab, and urinated. When Kenneth returned, he assumed CML. was still asleep under the blanket and pulled the truck forward to the next stop. At this point, Kenneth suddenly realized C.M.L. was not under the blanket and had been struck by the truck. C.M.L. suffered serious injuries as a result of being hit by the truck.
Kenneth and Karen Brabant ("Karen"), C.M.L.'s mother, have been married since 1995 and were married at the time of the accident. Kenneth is not the biological father of CML. nor has he adopted CML.; however, C.M.L. considers Kenneth to be his father. At the time of the accident, Kenneth financially supported C.M.L. and provided him with health insurance.
In May 2002, C.M.L., by Karen, filed a complaint against Republic and Kenneth, alleging negligence. In August 2002, Republic and Kenneth filed for summary judgment, arguing that the parental immunity doctrine and the Indiana Guest Statute barred C.M.L 's claim. In September 2002, Kenneth and Karen separated and began living apart; however, Karen stated that the separation had nothing to. do with the pending lawsuit. Following the separation, Kenneth no longer financially supported C.M.L. Thereafter, in December 2002, C.M.L. filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the same issues as the motion filed by Republic and Kenneth. The trial court held a hearing and subsequently granted summary judgment in favor of Republic and Kenneth, finding that the parental immunity doctrine and the Indiana Guest statute barred C.ML.'s negligence action. C.M.L. now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
C.M.L. argues that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Republic and Kenneth In particular, C.M.L. argues that his claim is not barred by the parental immunity doctrine or by the Indiana Guest Statute. When reviewing the grant or denial of summary judgment, this Court applies the same legal standard as a trial court: summary judgment is appropriate where no designated genuine issues of material fact exist and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Munsell v. Hambright,
I. Parental Immunity Doctrine
CML. first argues that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of Republic and Kenneth on the basis of the parental immunity doe-trine. Before we determine whether parental immunity bars C.M.L.'s claim, we first review the history of the parental immunity doctrine in Indiana.
*203 A. History of the Parental Immunity Doctrine
The immunity between parent and child did not exist at common law. Restatement (Second) of Torts Parent & Child § 895G(b) (1979). In the United States, the concept of parental immunity originated in Hewlett v. George,
[Slo long as the parent is under obligation to care for, guide, and control, and the child is under reciprocal obligation to aid and comfort and obey, no such action as this can be maintained. The peace of society, and of the families composing society, and a sound public policy, designed to subserve the repose of families and the best interests of society, forbid to the minor child a right to appear in court in the assertion of a claim to civil redress for personal injuries suffered at the hands of the parent. The state, through its criminal laws, will give the minor child protection from parental violence and wrong-doing, and this is all the child can be heard to demand.
Id.
The first Indiana case to consider the parental immunity doctrine was Treschman v. Treschman,
That a stepfather or a stepmother stands in loco parentis to an infant child is true, in a limited sense. A person cannot be said to occupy that relation unless he is invested with the rights and charged with the duties of a parent. A father is legally bound to support his child, but he is not legally bound to support a stepchild. He may lawfully decline to receive the children of his wife by a prior marriage into his family. He may voluntarily assume such a relation to stepchildren that the doctrine as to compensation for services and necessities will be the same as with reference to his natural children. But his marriage to the mother of infant children does not of itself place him in loco parentis to such children.
Treschman,
Notwithstanding Treschman, parental immunity was held to bar claims based on the intentional and negligent acts of a biological parent against a child in Smith v. Smith,
*204 It is well established that a minor child cannot sue his parent for a tort. The peace of society, and of the families composing society, and a sound public policy, designed to subserve the repose of families and the best interests of society, forbid to the minor child a right to appear in court in the assertion of a claim to civil redress for personal injuries suffered at the hands of the parent.
Smith,
the one charged with the tortious acts was the stepmother of the minor involved, and no showing appears that she stood in loco parentis to such minor at the time of the infliction of the injury on which the action is based.... True, the opinion in that case contains a discussion, which appears to indicate that a minor child, under certain extreme circumstances, might maintain an action against its parent for damages arising from the infliction of personal injuries, but so much of the opinion as appears to so hold is purely obiter dictum, as no such question was involved in that action.
Id. at 128-29.
The notion that the parental immunity doctrine precluded recovery by a child against a parent for negligent actions was reaffirmed in Vaughan v. Vaughan,
From our knowledge of the social life of today, and the tendencies of the unrestrained youth of this generation, there appears to be much reason for the continuance of parental control during the child's minority, and that such control should not be embarrassed by conferring upon the child a right to civil redress against the parent....
Id. (quoting Smith,
Although parental immunity protected a parent for negligent actions against a child, Buffalo v. Buffalo,
Surprisingly, our supreme court had not spoken on the application of the parental immunity doctrine in Indiana until Barnes v. Barnes,
This Court recently applied the parental immunity doctrine to bar an action that alleged negligent acts by a joint custodial parent against a child. In Cooley v. Hosier,
Based on the above cases, it is apparent that the parental immunity doctrine has not been abrogated in Indiana and still has limited application. 2 Intentional acts committed by a biological parent as well as *206 negligent acts of a non-custodial parent without joint custody are not afforded protection under parental immunity. However, the doctrine still bars claims based on the negligent acts committed by a custodial parent or by a non-custodial parent with joint custody.
B. Application of the Doctrine
We are now being asked to decide for the first time whether parental immunity bars an action brought by a stepchild against a stepparent for negligent supervision occurring during the course of the stepparent's business activities. Based on two independent grounds, as explained below, we find that parental immunity does not bar such an action.
1. Stepparent v. Parent
C.M.L. urges us not to extend the parental immunity doctrine to include stepparents. In support of his argument, C.M.L. notes that no Indiana case dealing with parental immunity has ever applied the doctrine to bar a claim against a stepparent. The only Indiana case we can find that addressed parental immunity as relating to a stepparent is Treschman, where the stepparent repeatedly thrust the stepchild's head against the wall, causing serious bodily injury. However, in Treschman, the fact that the tortfeasor was the stepparent was not the sole reason that the parental immunity doctrine did not apply. In addition, the Court noted that this was an intentional act and that the parents were separated when the suit was filed. Treschman,
Nevertheless, we agree that parental immunity should not apply to a stepparent. -It is a basic tenet in our state that parents have a legal obligation to support their dependent children. Levin v. Levin,
Republic and Kenneth counter that Kenneth freely provided for C.M.L 's needs, and thus, he stood in loco parentis and assumed the responsibility of a parent without needing to adopt C.M.L. Consequently, the argument goes, he should be afforded the protection of parental immunity. In support of their argument, Republic and Kenneth direct our attention to Sturrup v. Mahan,
Republic and Kenneth also cite to Treschman to support the claim that Kenneth should be granted immunity for having "voluntarily assume[d]" the obligations of a parent. Treschman,
2. Business Activity
Parental immunity also does not extend to Kenneth because he was engaged in a business activity as an employee of Republic when this accident occurred. This is the first Indiana case to determine whether the parental immunity doctrine should apply where the child's injury occurred in an employment situation.
According to the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895G(F):
*208 Still another exception [to the parental immunity doctrine], recognized by several of the courts, is that there is no immunity for bodily harm inflicted by conduct that is merely negligent, if the harm is inflicted in the course of a business activity carried on by the defendant. The explanation usually given is that the parent has not injured his child while acting in his capacity as a parent but rather in his capacity of one conducting a business enterprise and that the enterprise should have no parental immunity. A factor of importance affecting this conclusion that sometimes has been mentioned is that business enterprises customarily carry lability insurance and that so far as the enterprise and the insurance are concerned the fact that the victim is a child of the insured is essentially irrelevant.
We agree with the reasoning of the Restatement. We find that Kenneth was not acting in his capacity as a stepparent when he struck CML. with his truck; rather, he was acting in his capacity as a garbage collector. Because Kenneth was engaged in a business activity when he injured C.M.L., we conclude that the parental immunity doctrine would not bar C.M.L 's claim against Kenneth.
Because Kenneth may not benefit from the doctrine of parental immunity, Repub-lie may not benefit either. However, even supposing Kenneth were granted personal immunity as a parent under this scenario, we do not believe that Kenneth's immunity should bar C.M.L.'s claim against Republic. This is so because parental immunity is a personal immunity that does not extend to an employer or any other third party. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895G(Lh). Because C.M.L. was injured while Kenneth was performing business activities for Republic, neither Republic nor Kenneth is entitled to seek the protection of the parental immunity doctrine.
II. Guest Statute
CML. also argues that the trial court erred by finding that the Indiana Guest Statute barred his complaint. The Guest Statute provides:
The owner, operator, or person responsible for the operation of a motor vehicle is not liable for loss or damage arising from injuries to or the death of ... the person's child or stepchild ... resulting from the operation of the motor vehicle while the parent, spouse, child or stepchild, brother, sister, or hitchhiker was being transported without payment in or upon the motor vehicle unless the injuries or death are caused by the wanton or willful misconduct of the operator, owner, or person responsible for the operation of the motor vehicle.
Ind.Code § 34-80-11-1 (emphasis added). The Guest Statute is in derogation of the common law; thus, it must be strictly construed against limiting a claimant's right to bring suit. Akers v. Sebren,
There is no dispute about the underlying facts of this case. C.M.L. was riding along with Kenneth while Kenneth was working for Republic collecting garbage. At some point on the route, C.M.L. exited the garbage truck to urinate. While he was standing on the ground, urinating in between the hydraulic tank and the truck cab, Kenneth-believing C.M.L. still to be asleep on the passenger seat-began driving the truck away and struck C.M.L. with the truck. Thus, the only question before us is whether the Guest Statute bars C.M.L.'s claim against Republic and Kenneth. Where the only allegation of error is that the trial court misapplied the law, our task on review is to apply the law correctly to the undisputed facts. Id. at 1286.
C.M.L. argues that he was not "in or upon" the garbage truck when he was injured, and therefore, the statute should not bar his claim. Republic and Kenneth counter that the terms "in or upon" as found in the Guest Statute are ambiguous, and we should therefore interpret their meaning. We find that the terms "in or upon" are not ambiguous and refuse to interpret their meanings. Instead, we apply their plain meanings and determine that under these facts C.M.L. was not "in or upon" the garbage truck when he was struck. We find that the Guest Statute does not bar his claim. 7
Conclusion
We find that a stepparent may not receive the benefit of the parental immunity doctrine unless the stepparent takes the formal step of becoming "invested with the rights and charged with the duties of a parent." We also find that the parental immunity doctrine does not apply if a parent is acting in a business capacity when causing an injury to a child. In addition, because the undisputed evidence shows that C.M.L. was not "in or upon" the vehicle when he was injured and because the statutory terms are unambiguous, we conclude that the Indiana Guest Statute does not bar this action.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
. We hereby deny Appellant's Motion for Oral Argument.
. We note that the parental immunity doctrine has received constant criticism, leading to its erosion by the development of numerous exceptions in many jurisdictions. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895G(d). There are now very few jurisdictions, if any, in which the doctrine exists in a complete form. Id.
. Republic and Kenneth also cite to Indiana High School Athletic Association v. Carlberg,
. There is further support for denying parental immunity to those who stand in loco par-entis in Restatement (Second) of Torts § 895G(i).
. Because we are not presented with a situation where Kenneth had been appointed the legal guardian of CML., we need not discuss whether this formal step would be sufficient to bestow a stepparent with parental immunity. But see Doe v. Shults-Lewis Child & Family Servs., Inc.,
. In addition, Republic and Kenneth argue that the public policy reason for the parental immunity doctrine is to promote peace in families; however, we are at a loss to see how family tranquility would be served by the additional injury of denying a harmed child access to the courts. See, e.g., Sorensen v. Sorensen,
. Because we find the statutory language to be unambiguous, we need not address Republic and Kenneth's arguments addressing alternative interpretations of the terms.
