Lead Opinion
opinion:
INTRODUCTION
11 This case presents a single issue on certification from the U.S. District Court for the District of Utah: "Does Utah's wrongful death statute allow an action for the wrongful death of an unborn child?" At the time the claim was filed, Utah's wrongful death statute stated in relevant part that "a parent or guardian may maintain an action for the death or injury of a minor child when the injury or death is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another." Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-6 (Supp.2006).
2 Although there is no majority opinion, four members of this court hold that the statute allows an action for the wrongful death of an unborn child; the term "minor child," as used in the statute, includes an unborn child.
BACKGROUND
T3 Appellant Amelia Sanchez received prenatal care at the Mountainlands Community Health Center in Provo, Utah, between December 28, 2005, and April 19, 2006. On April 19, 2006, Ms. Sanchez went to the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, and it was determined that the fetus had no heartbeat. On April 20, 2006, Ms. Sanchez gave birth to a stillborn male.
T4 Ms. Sanchez and Miguel Carranza, the stillborn child's father, filed suit against the United States in federal district court.
{5 The United States filed a motion in limine to exelude from trial all evidence regarding the plaintiffs' damages for wrongful death. In response, the plaintiffs filed a motion to certify the following question to the Utah Supreme Court: "Does Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-6 allow a claim to be made for the wrongful death of an unborn child?" Noting that the plaintiffs' proposed question for certification is dispositive of the motion in limine and that there is no controlling Utah law, the federal district court granted the plaintiffs' motion to certify. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-3-102(1).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
16 "On certification, we answer the legal questions presented without resolving the underlying dispute." Iverson v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.,
ANALYSIS
17 At the time this claim was filed, Utah's wrongful death statute stated that "a parent or guardian may maintain an action for the death or injury of a minor child when the injury or death is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another." Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-6 (Supp.2006)
18 When interpreting statutes, this court's objective "is to give effect to the legislature's intent." Harold Selman, Inc. v. Box Elder Cnty.,
T9 This court has not yet reached the issue of whether the statute's reference to "minor child" includes an unborn child. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Clyde,
110 In my view, a plain language reading reveals that the term "minor child," as used in this statute, includes an unborn child. The statute does not itself define the term "minor child," but in general usage the term "child" may refer to a young person, a baby, or a fetus. Black's Law Dictionary 271 (9th ed. 2009).
T11 The United States argues that the legislature generally uses "the modifier 'unborn' when it intends to include an unborn child in statutory provisions." The United States is correct that the term "unborn child" appears elsewhere in the Utah Code, even in the same statute as the term "minor." See Utah Code Ann. § 75-7-303(6) (Supp.2011)
{12 On the contrary, my analysis results in the recognition of a cause of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child, a conclusion that is consistent with other provisions of the Utah Code. First, this cause of action mirrors the Utah Criminal Code's protection for unborn children. See, e.g., Utah Code Ann. § 76-7-301.1(1) (2008) ("It is the finding and policy of the Legislature ... that unborn children have inherent and inalienable rights that are entitled to protection by the state of Utah pursuant to the provisions of the Utah Constitution."); see also id. § 76-5-201(1)(a) (Supp. 2011) (defining the offense of criminal homicide to include the death of "an unborn child at any stage of its development"). Second, recognizing a cause of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child falls in line with the Utah Judicial Code's statement that "the public policy of this state [is] to encourage all persons to respect the right to life of all other persons, . including ... all unborn persons." Id. § 78B-3-109(1) (2008).
13 In recognizing the existence of this cause of action, I acknowledge that a plaintiff may encounter difficulties in proving causation for the wrongful death of an unborn child. However, "the substantive rights resulting from wrongful death must be protected, regardless of the inherent practical difficulties." Eich v. Town of Gulf Shores,
CONCLUSION
T 14 Utah Code section 78-11-6 allows an action for the wrongful death of an unborn child,
opinion:
€15 The question whether a fetus is a "minor child" under our wrongful death statute is a difficult one. It cannot properly be resolved by simple resort to dictionary definitions of the statutory text, as accepted definitions of "minor child" include both a narrow notion of a child postpartum and also a broader notion that encompasses a child in wtero.
1 16 Thus, Chief Justice Durham's opinion notes that some definitions of "child" encompass a "baby" or "fetus," supra ¶ 10
T17 Each side seeks to validate its construction as rooted in the statute's "plain language." Supra ¶ 10; infro ¶ 29. I fail to find a plain answer in the statutory text, however. I view the bare words of the statute to be susceptible to either a broad construction that includes unborn children or a narrow one that excludes them.
{18 Where both parties' interpretations fall within the range of meanings identified in dictionaries, it is unhelpful for the court to rest on the unelaborated assertion that our chosen construction is dictated by the "plain language." Too often, a court's conclusion that statutory language is "plain" is a substitute for careful analysis. At best, such unexplained conclusions are based on a judge's gestalt sense of the best meaning of the words in question. At worst, the bare insistence that statutory language is "plain" is cover (perhaps subconscious) for judicial poli-cymaking.
¶19 Any appearance of the latter is unacceptable. And the former is insufficient, as it gives no guidance to the drafters or targets of legislation as to how this court will interpret statutory language (beyond the unhelpful assurance that we will do what seems best and label it "plain language"). In my view, then, we need to identify the linguistic and statutory cues that persuade us that one interpretation or the other is appropriate.
120 Our commitment to the "plain language" of statutes is "simple to articulate in the abstract, but often difficult to apply in contested cases where both sides offer conceivable constructions of the language in question." Olsen v. Eagle Mountain City,
4 21 For me, it is the context of the wrongful death statute that resolves the interpretive question presented in this case. Specifically, the basis for interpreting "minor child" to include children in utero is found in the nature and scope of the right of action recognized in the wrongful death statute. A reasonably informed reader would understand that the statute's cause of action encompasses claims for "death or injury" to a "minor child." Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-6 (2006) (emphasis added). In the case of fetal injury, there is no doubt that a cause of action would accrue at the time of a battery or other tortious harm to the fetus. The universal rule, in fact, is that prenatal injuries are actionable when a child survives the tor-tious act
¶22 A contrary view would yield perverse incentives that the wrongful death statute cannot reasonably be read to countenance.
123 The dissent's contrary conclusion rests principally on the assertion that this construction of "child" is "peculiar" and that the more "commonly understood" notion of the term "contemplates a child born and capable of separate existence." Infra ¶¶ 34, 36. I do not doubt that the phrase "minor child" is ordinarily used to refer to children postpartum and not in «utero. But the question here is not which usage is ordinary or more common, for it is clear from the legal context of the statute that the legislature was not using "minor child" in its ordinary sense but in a sense that accounts for the undisputed right of a parent to sue for injury to a fetus who survives a tortfeasor's wrongful acts,
125 Case law confirms this understanding of the role of the term "minor." This term simply clarifies that a parent's right to sue for death or injury of a child is eut off when the child reaches the age of majority.
126 Thus, if an unborn person can be called a "child," he can also be called a "minor child." The adjective "minor" changes nothing, except to add an upper-bound after which a parent has no right to sue. And since that construction is possible, I find it unavoidable, as a contrary conclusion attributes to the legislature a bizarre regime in which tortfeasors can avoid liability by killing and not just injuring their vietims and surviving fetuses have claims that are foreclosed for their less fortunate counterparts. I would ground our construction of the statute on that basis and not on the notion that the statutory language is "plain."
Notes
. The legislature has since amended the statute to apply only to the injury, not the death, of a minor child. Utah Code Ann. § 78B-3-102 (Supp.2011). At the same time, the legislature amended Utah Code section 78B-3-106(1) to state that "when the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs ... may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death." This decision does not address the certified question as applied to Utah Code section 78B-3-106(1).
. Mountainlands Community Health Center, its employees, and its contracted physicians are Public Health Service employees under 42 U.S.C. § 233(g). The federal district court therefore has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1346.
. See supra ¶ 1 n.1.
. In Clyde, the court cited two cases that address the existence of a cause of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child.
. Statutory terms may have different meanings in different statutes. See, e.g., Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P'ship,
. Five other states have addressed whether the term "minor child" includes an unborn child in the context of a wrongful death statute with varying results. Compare Eich v. Town of Gulf Shores,
. Although this case involves a 2006 statute, I cite to current versions of other statutes so long as there has been no substantive change from their 2006 versions.
. Rather, recognizing the existence of a cause of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child is a logical result. See Stidam v. Ashmore,
. Thirty-six other states have recognized a cause of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child, some by statute and others by court decision. Amber N. Dina, Comment, Wrongful Death and the Legal Status of the Previable Embryo: Why Illinois Is on the Cutting Edge of Determining a Definitive Standard for Embryonic Legal Rights, 19 Regent U. L.Rev. 251, 255 n. 41, 256 n. 42 (2006).
. Three other state courts have also recognized an action for the wrongful death of an unborn child, beginning at conception. Danos v. St. Pierre,
. See Black's Law Dictionary 271 (9th ed. 2009) (defining "child" as "1. A person under the age of majority.... 5. A baby or fetus").
. See id. at 1086 (defining "minor" as a "person who has not reached full legal age; a child or juvenile"). The Utah Legislature created a similarly top-bounded definition of minority, providing that "[the period of minority extends in males and females to the age of eighteen years." Utah Code Ann § 15-2-1 (2009).
. See Wolfe v. Isbell,
. Encon Utah, LLC v. Fluor Ames Kraemer, LLC,
. The dissent hypothesizes "absurdities" in two other statutes that supposedly ensue from a construction that recognizes a wrongful death claim for unborn children, infra ¶¶ 40-45, but the scenarios it imagines are hardly a necessary result of today's decision. Identical terms may be used in different statutes in different ways, and it is our role to construe each statute on its own terms, not to preserve consistency across the various volumes of the state code. The dissent's examples thus tell us nothing of any particular value to the resolution of this case.
First, the notion of a husband acquiring a statutory right to seize a fetus and "adjacent anatomical structures" of his wife upon her abandonment, infre ¶ 43 (citing Utah Code Ann. § 30-2-10), assumes a false equivalence between the abandonment statute and this one. In the context of the cited abandonment provision, "custody of minor children" would naturally be understood to encompass only children living in the household outside the womb, as "custody" is never granted in the dissent's absurd sense of removing a fetus and a womb from a mother and awarding it to a father.
Second, the dissent's hypothetical under the Public Safety Retirement Act is interesting, infra ¶ 44, but hardly telling with respect to the issue presented in this case. I do not know whether a fetus conceived at the time of a covered employee's death would be treated as a statutory beneficiary if the employee had no spouse at the time of death. On first blush that strikes me as plausible. But in any event the answer to that hypothetical tells us nothing about the construction of "minor child" in the wrongful death statute.
. See Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P'ship,
. See, e.g., Ruth Palaver, Unnatural Selection: The Two-Minus-One Pregnancy, N.Y. Times Mag., Aug. 10, 2011, at MM22 (characterizing a fourteen-week-old fetus created "in a test tube" as a "child"); Lisa Balkan, The Science of Boys and Girls, Motherlode (July 27, 2011, 12:15 p.m.), http://parenting.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/27/ the-science-of-boys-and-girls/ ("So, fetuses of different sexes might just be sending different signals from the inside to the outside. But what about the other direction? Are there external influences that determine the sex of a child in the first place?"); James C. McKinley, Jr., Strict Abortion Measures Enacted in Oklahoma, N.Y. Times, Apr. 28, 2010, at A14 ("A second measure ... prevents women who have had a disabled baby from suing a doctor for withholding information about birth defects while the child was in the womb."); Amy Harmon, Burden of Knowledge: Tracking Prenatal Health; In New Tests for Fatal Defects, Agonizing Choices for Parents, NY-June 20, 2004, http://www.nytimes. com/2004/06/20/us/burden-knowledge-tracking-prenatal-health-new-tests-for-fetal-defects-agonizing.html?ref=amyharmon (explaining that the results of a woman's fetal health screening showed that "the child had a high chance of having Down syndrome").
. See, e.g., Burt v. Ross,
. See Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-7 (2006) ("[When the death of a person not a minor is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his heirs, or his personal representatives for the benefit of his heirs, may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death...."); Switzer v. Reynolds,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
T 27 I respectfully dissent. The majority's conclusion that an unborn fetus is a "minor child" as used in Utah Code section 78-11-6
I. THE PLAIN MEANING OF "MINOR CHILD" DOES NOT INCLUDE AN UNBORN FETUS
128 At the time of the relevant events, Utah Code section 78-11-6 provided that "a parent or guardian may maintain an action for the death or injury of a minor child when the injury or death is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another.
29 Plain language analysis has two essential characteristics: (1) the definition of the term at issue must be accessible to the average English speaker
1 30 I challenge the assertion in Chief Justice Durham's opinion that "minor child" "in general usage ... may refer to ... a fetus."
We believe that the legislature used the word "child" in its ordinary and usual sense, viz., a child which has been born. ... Until the child is born, it is usually referred to as a child in utero or a fetus. While the legislature hafs]l the power to award benefits to a child in utero, it clearly did not do so. It limited its award to children.... The unborn child in the instant case was [not] ... a "child" until she was born.8
T 31 I concede that the definition of a word used in one context may be simply wrong when used in other contexts. Thus, as an academic matter, the definition of "child" used in Aima Evans Trucking might, in fact, include a fetus in another context. But in Alma Evans Trucking, we determined that, absent specific evidence to the contrary, the definition of "child" in any context means a person who has been born. This is the "ordinary and usual" definition. To conclude that "child" means "fetus" is to adopt a definition that is both out of the realm of the ordinary and the usual.
132 Contrary to Chief Justice Durham's assertion regarding the general usage of the term, I believe that our State's populace would find the reference to a fetus as a "minor child" quite bizarre. In fact, the usage of "minor child" to refer to a fetus is far from being general. It is unique. It is usage specific to anti-abortion political rhetoric-an issue with which we are not concerned here.
133 Chief Justice Durham's opinion fails to observe that "our plain language analysis is not so limited that we only inquire into
1 34 I am troubled by Chief Justice Durham's reliance on, what is in my view, a peculiar dictionary definition of "child" that extends childhood to a pre-viable fetus. Recently there has been much discussion about how we, as a court, go about the important work of ascertaining whether a word or phrase is "plain" and, if it is, how we come to know what it means. While dictionary definitions may be a useful starting point in plain language analysis, they are not determinative, and their use should not be indiserimi-nate.
1 35 The need for caution against overreliance on dictionaries found support in the June 13, 2011 edition of the New York Times. In an article by Adam Liptak titled Justices Turning More Frequently to Dictionaries, and Not Just For Big Words, the Times recounts the growing appearance of dictionary definitions in United States Supreme Court opinions.
136 When "minor child" is properly read as a "harmonious whole,"
II. A WRONGFUL DEATH CAUSE OF ACTION SHOULD BE EXTENDED TO AN UNBORN FETUS ONLY UPON CLEAR LEGISLATIVE DIRECTION
[ 37 Because I conclude that "minor child" is not synonymous with fetus, I find it improper for the majority to stretch the meaning of this term to create a cause of action for the wrongful death of a fetus. The State has a legitimate interest in protecting the "life of [a] fetus that may become a child.
38 Our legislature has proven to be very adept and conscientious in making its intentions clear when its goal is to expand and protect the interests of fetuses. When that is the objective, our legislature unambiguously refers to "unborn" and not to "minor" children. Given this explicit difference and advised choice of words, it is by no means evident to me how reliance on Utah's Criminal Code, and in particular its commitment to protect the "unborn," helps answer the question of whether "minor child" includes a fetus in the context of Utah's wrongful death statutes.
T 39 I am reluctant to make this point. I recognize that on occasion our legislature unintentionally creates ambiguities in statutes by not clearly stating its intentions in statutory text. But it is dangerous for us to interpret a statute in a way that assumes that had the legislature drafted the statute correctly, it would have manifested our intention at the expense of another. We do not interpret statutes by assuming which rights the legislature should want to protect. The more principled and prudent approach would be to interpret "minor child" in a manner that does not create new causes of action and to thereby alert the legislature to the interpretive dilemma and invite a legislative response. However, until the legislature acts to provide a different direction, we are bound by the language contained within the statute, which indicates that a wrongful death action may be maintained on behalf of a "minor" but not an unborn child.
III, CONSTRUING "MINOR CHILD" TO INCLUDE A FETUS LEADS TO ABSURD RESULTS
40 I find no principled way to interpret "minor child" to include a fetus, and doing so affects not only the statute at issue, but also a vast swath of other Utah laws. Attempting to avoid the implications of construing "minor child" as including a fetus, the majority asserts-that such an interpretation yields no absurd result.
T41 The purpose of our plain language analysis is to give effect to legislative intent as expressed by language according to its common and ordinary usage.
{42 For example, Utah's law governing property and homestead rights of married individuals states:
Neither the husband nor wife can remove the other or their children from the homestead without the consent of the other, ... and if a husband or wife abandons his or her spouse, that spouse is entitled to the custody of the minor children, unless a court of competent jurisdiction shall otherwise direct.23
T 43 Under the majority's interpretation of "minor child," woe to the pregnant woman who abandons her husband and thereby must surrender her fetus and, presumably, adjacent anatomical structures to the custody of her husband. Given that a fetus does not have a separate existence outside the womb until birth, custody of the "minor child" could not be secured without granting a father custody of the womb in which it resides.
1 44 A similarly absurd result would occur under the Public Safety Retirement Act. Section 49-14-503(1) states that "If an inactive member who has less than 20 years of public safety service credit dies ... if there is no spouse at the time of death, the member's minor children shall receive a refund of the member's member contributions or $500, whichever is greater."
4 45 An absurd interpretation of this statute arises in the hypothetical cireumstance where an active member dies after impregnating a woman not his spouse. If "minor child" is construed to include a fetus, a decedent's fetus carried by a woman not married to the decedent would be entitled to a refund of the decedent's contributions to the retirement fund. This would be the case whether or not the fetus was actually born and could potentially create an estate subject to probate for a fetus that does not survive full-term, but dies sometime between conception and birth. The idea that an unborn fetus can own property or may have an estate subject to probate even though the fetus was never born is unprecedented in our case law.
46 I do not cite these examples for the purpose of commenting on the underlying policy, nor "to preserve consistency across various volumes of state code."
147 Justice Lee's opinion asserts that the statute provides perverse incentives and functions absurdly if it disallows a parent to recover for the death of a fetus but allows recovery for prenatal injuries to a child born alive.
CONCLUSION
48 Because the plain meaning of "minor child" contemplates only a child that has been born, I would not extend a claim for wrongful death to a fetus. If the legislature chooses to provide such a cause of action, it has the power to do so. But it has not done so here. The legislature did not contemplate "minor child" to include a fetus as evidenced by the term's use throughout our laws and the absurd results that such an interpretation would create. It is not this court's role to expand the law's reach as means of rectifying what may be deemed perverse incentives or bad policy.
. Utah Code Ann. § 78-11-6 (Supp.2006). As noted above, this statute has been renumbered and substantively altered since the relevant events. See supra ¶ 1 n. 1.
. Utah Code Ann § 78-11-6 (emphasis added).
. See supra ¶ 2.
. Salt Lake City v. Ohms,
. O'Dea v. Olea,
. See supra ¶ 10.
.
. Id. at 1148 (emphasis added).
. Anderson v. Bell,
. See supra ¶¶ 10, 24-26.
. See supra ¶¶ 10, 24-26.
. See supra ¶¶ 10, 24-26.
. Supra ¶ 14.
. Adam Liptak, Justices Turning More Frequently to Dictionaries, and Not Just For Big Words, N.Y. Times, June 14, 2011, at All.
. Anderson,
. See Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
. Only six states extend liability for the wrongful death of a pre-viable fetus. They include Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Missouri, South Dakota, and West Virginia. With the exception of West Virginia, each state has done so pursuant to express legislative direction. Compare Farley v. Sartin,
. See supra ¶ 12.
. See supra ¶ 12.
. See supra ¶¶ 11, 26
. See supra ¶¶ 11, 22 n. 6.
. Anderson v. Bell,
. Utah Code Ann § 30-2-10 (2007) (emphasis added).
. Id. § 49-14-503(1) (Supp. 2011) (emphasis added).
. See supra ¶ 22 n. 6.
. See supra ¶ 22.
