This appeal presents two questions: (1) May the administrator of a mother sue the estate of her unemancipated minor son for damages for her wrongful death caused by the son’s negligence? (2) If not, may the wife-mother’s administrator maintain thе action against the surviving husband-father, under the principle of respondeat superior, for son’s negligence?
At common law an unemancipated minor child may not maintain an action against his parent to recover damages for negligence.
Redding v. Redding,
The answer to the first questiоn, therefore, is No, and the judgment dismissing the action against the administratrix of the son of plaintiff’s intestate is affirmed.
We now consider the second question. G.S. 52-10.1 permits one spouse to maintain an action against the other for injuries caused by his оr her tort. If a husband’s negligence results in the death of his wife, her personal representative may maintain an action against him for her wrongful death.
King v. Gates,
The husband-father contends that the family-purpose doctrine was originated for the protection of third parties, not the family of the owner of the automobile, and that the doctrine should not be extended to permit a wife to rеcover from her husband under the principle of respondeat superior for the negligence of the couple’s son where the son, the active tort-feasor, is immune to her suit. In short, the husband-father' contends that he is entitled to avail himself of his son’s immunity.
Plaintiff relies upon the case of
Wright v. Wright,
Defendants stress that the defendant in
Wright
was a business employer, a stranger to the family circle. So, also, was the defendant in
Schubert v. Schubert Wagon Co.,
The only case in point which our research has discovered is
Silverman v. Silverman,
“It does not appear that the mother was other than a passenger in the car. The negligence of the operator of an automobile cannot ordinarily be imputed tо one who is a passenger in it . . . The record is barren of any evidence that the mother had anything to do with the operation of the car. The negligence of a child is not imputed to a parent who does not control, or havе the right and duty to exercise control of, the child’s conduct in the operation of a vehicle; . . . unless the parent owns the vehicle and has the child drive it for him; ... or the child was the agent of the parent in the operation of the vehicle at the time.” Id. at 668,145 A. 2d at 828 .
As the owner-provider of the automobile, the husband-father, not the wife-mother, was the one having the right to control its operation; our case is the same as Silverman. The court said:
“The principal question involved is whether the wife and mother has a cause of action against the husband and father under the family car doctrine for the tort of the unemancipated child even though she is precluded from recovering from the child. No reported cases upon this point have been cited by counsel, nor have we found any. We must decide whether it is likewise against public policy to allow recovery from the husband because of the delict of *366 his son, who was his agent but is himself immune to suit.” Id. at 664,145 A. 2d at 827 .
In reaching the conclusion that the husband-father should be held liable to the wife-mother, the Connecticut court was largely influenced by its previous decision in
Chase v. New Haven Waste Material Corp.,
The principle of Wright and Schubert is set out in Restatement (Second), Agency § 217 (1958) as follows:
“In an action against a principal based on the conduct of a servant in the course of employment: . . . the principal has no defense because of the fact that: . . . the agent has an immunity from civil liability as to the act . . .
Immunity is a word which denotes the absence of civil liability for what would be a tortious act but for the relation between the parties or the status or position of the actor. Illustrative of the immunities created by relation between the parties are those resulting from the relation of parent and child and of husband and wife.”
The older cases denied recovery from the principal for the agent’s conduct where the agent was himself immune from suit because of the family relationship. It was reasoned (1) that, the master’s liability being vicarious, he should not be liable where the servant is not or (2) thаt the master’s right of indemnity against the servant would defeat the domestic immunity by throwing the ultimate loss upon the servant because of his liability to the master. In commenting upon these arguments, Prosser says:
“The first argument confuses immunity from suit with lack of responsibility— thе servant has committed a tort which by ordinary rules of law should make the master liable, and there is no reason to include the latter within the purely personal immunity of the family. The second misses the point that the master’s recovery over аgainst the servant is not based upon any continuation of the original domestic claim, but upon the servant’s independent duty of care for the protection of the master’s interests; and that if protection of the servant is still the sine qua non, it may be accomplished merely by denying the indemnity. Accordingly the *367 overwhelming majority of the courts now hold that the employer is liable even though the servant is not.” Prosser, Torts § 101 (2d Ed. 1955).
Accord, Restatement (Second), Agency, Appendix § 217 (1958).
In answer to the seсond question, we hold that plaintiff is entitled to maintain this suit against defendant P. R. Burgess, under the family-purpose doctrine, notwithstanding that he is not a business employer, and the judgment dismissing the action against him is reversed.
In disposing of the argument that ultimately the cоnsequence of permitting an action against the master might be to cast the burden on the servant, since the master, if not personally at fault, has a remedy over, Cardozo, C. J., says, “The consequences may be admitted, without admitting its significanсe as a determining factor in the solution of the problem.”
Schubert v. Schubert Wagon Co., supra
at 257,
All this is true in the ordinary case of
respondeat superior,
but in the ordinary case the servant is not, as here, immune from suit
ex delicto
by the master. Where the servаnt’s employment contract with the master is breached by the servant’s negligence as to a third person, the master’s action against the servant for indemnity is, as Cardozo, C. J. rightly implies when he speaks of the servant’s “duty,” essentially de-lictual.
Cf. Peele v. Hartsell,
Neither will this decision permit defendant husband-father, as a dis-tributee of the estate of his wife, to profit from his own wrong. Where the beneficiary of an estate is culpably responsible for the decedent’s death, he may not share in the administrator’s recovery for wrongful death. The identity of beneficiaries entitled to share in the recovery is determined as of the time of decedent’s death.
Davenport v. Patrick,
As to the action against Burgess, Administratrix of Paul D. Burgess—
Affirmed.
As to the action against Paul R. Burgess —
Reversed.
