The motion of plaintiff to amend his complaint by joining his wife Betty Dut-ton as a party plaintiff, and stating a claim for loss of consortium on behalf of said wife together with the brief in support of said motion, and the brief of defendant Hightower and Lubrecht Construction Company in opposition to said motion having been considered by the court, and the court being fully advised in the premises,
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED and this does order that said motion to amend the complaint be and the same is hereby granted, and the complaint is ordered amended as requested on pages 10 and 10% of plaintiff’s pretrial memorandum filed January 11, 1963.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that defendants are granted 20 days within which to plead to said complaint as amended.
In Duffy v. Lippsman-Fulkerson & Co., D.C.,
First of all, it was not intended to hold in Duffy, as counsel seem to understand, that the wife’s action for loss of consortium was created in Montana by the Married Women’s Act, and patieularly §§ 36-110 and 36-128, R.C.M.1947. The court agrees that these sections are procedural and create no new rights, but only remove the common law disability of married women to enforce their rights otherwise created and existing.
The right of the wife to consortium in Montana is created and found in other sections of the Montana Code, and particularly § 48-101, R.C.M.1947, which provides that marriage is a personal relation arising out of, a civil contract, and § 36-101 which provides that in the marriage contract
the husband and wife contract toward each other obligations of mutual respect, fidelity and support.
In Wallace v. Wallace,
Counsel also seem to misunderstand the Duffy opinion as basing the holding that a married woman has a cause of action for loss of consortium under Montana statutes and case law on the case of Conley v. Conley,
The Conley case was concerned with the question of the effect of Married Women’s Acts and in connection with the purpose of those Acts the Montana Supreme Court stated:
“The primary purpose of these acts was to free the wife from the husband’s domination in property matters; to accomplish that it was requisite to place the wife upon an equal footing with the husband as to the ownership, control, and enjoyment of property, and as to contractual rights in general, with an equal right to resort to the courts. The intention was, in these respects, to place husband and wife upon a parity.”
If the purpose of the Married Women’s-Act was to place the wife on a parity with the husband insofar as enforcing contractual rights in the courts, it must necessarily follow that the wife has the right to recover for loss of the consortium which she acquires upon marriage under the provisions of § 36-101, R.C.M.1947, because the husband undoubtedly has the right to recover for loss of consortium in Montana. In this connection, as pointed out in the Duffy case, no Montana case has been found specifically allowing such action on behalf of the husband, but Montana is committed to the common law as the law and rule of decision, absent statutory law, and the common law recog *301 nized the husband’s right to maintain the action for loss of consortium. Montana has enacted no statute taking away this common law right of the husband.
The Conley case refused to permit the wife to maintain the action against her husband for injuries due to the husband’s negligence because there existed no corresponding right on the part of the husband to maintain an action for negligence against the wife, either at common law or under the law of Montana. In denying the action to the wife in the Conley case, the court was merely preserving that equality between husband and wife which it held it was the purpose of the Married Women’s Act to achieve, whereas by denying the right of action to the wife in the instant case, the court would be perpetuating that inequality between husband and wife which the Montana Supreme Court held the Married Women’s Act was intended to remove.
Finally, counsel suggest that in deciding the Duffy case, this court exceeded its “law making” power, pointing out that a Federal Court, sitting in a diversity case, does not enjoy the same “freedom to make law as does a State Court”. The fallaciousness of this argument becomes immediately apparent when it is considered that in ruling either way in the Duffy case or in this case, the court would, to the same extent, be “making law”, because there is no Montana statute either authorizing or forbidding the action in so many words, and the Montana Supreme Court has never directly ruled on the precise question, nor has any decision on the question by a lower Montana Court been called to the court’s attention. However, as the Supreme Court of the United States pointed out in West v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
