ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
In this opinion we conclude that punitive damages are not recoverable under the Child Wrongful Death Statute. We also conclude that a parent's common law claim for loss of a child's services survives enactment of the Child Wrongful Death Statute. However, under the common law, punitive damages are not a part of the claim and therefore are not recoverable.
Facts
On October 2, 1995, Jennipher Forte ("Mother") placed her five-year-old developmentally disabled son in the custody of Connerwood Health Care, Inc., a nursing home doing business as Anderson Healthcare Center. 1 According to Mother, over the course of the next several days, the nursing home committed several acts of negligence that led to her son's death on October 9, 1995. Thereafter, on her own behalf and on behalf of her son's estate Mother sued the nursing home along with several members of its medical staff (referred to collectively as "Defendants"). In her initial complaint, Mother sought compensatory damages only. However, alleging that Defendants' negligence was willful and wanton, Mother later amended her complaint to include a claim for punitive damages. After filing their answer, Defendants moved for partial judgment on the pleadings with respect to punitive damages, contending that they are not available under the Child Wrongful Death Statute. 2 In response, Mother argued that not only was she entitled to recover punitive damages under the statute, but also she was entitled to punitive damages for loss of consortium apart from the statute. The trial court granted Defendants' motion and Mother pursued an interlocutory appeal.
On review, the Court of Appeals agreed . that the trial court properly granted Defendants' motion concerning Mother's claim to a statutory right of punitive damages. See Forte v. Connerwood Health
*799
care, Inc.,
Discussion
I. Punitive Damages Under the Child Wrongful Death Statute
Although this Court has never addressed the issue, we agree with the Court of Appeals that punitive damages are not recoverable under the Child Wrongful Death Statute. At common law, there was no liability in tort for killing another because actions for personal injury did not survive the death of the injured party. Gann v. Worman,
Otherwise the statute remained essentially the same.
Although the predecessor to the 1987 statute contained no provisions concerning damages, case law severely restricted the damages recoverable in such actions to allow recovery only for pecuniary losses sustained by the parents. See Miller v. Mayberry,
With enactment of the 1987 amendment, the legislature set forth the recoverable damages for the first time. 5 Consistent *800 with then existing case authority, the statute exeluded any reference to punitive damages. The statute has been amended twice since 1987, but the damages portion has remained unchanged. 6
Concerning the general wrongful death statute, it has been held that because an action for wrongful death did not exist at common law, the statute should be strictly construed against the expansion of liability. Thomas v. Eads,
We acknowledge that for more than a century, Indiana common law has permitted the recovery of punitive damages under appropriate cireumstances. See, e.g., Citizens' St. R.R. Co. of Indiannapolis v. Willoeby,
IL - Common Law Claim for Loss of Services of a Child
We first address a preliminary matter. In their Brief in Support of Peti-
*801 tion to Transfer, Defendants question the Court of Appeals' determination that Mother could pursue a common law claim for loss of services of her child. According to Defendants, Mother never made a claim for loss of services; rather, her claim was for a loss of consortium. Defendants argue that the two are not the same. We agree the claims are different. 8 However, because of the procedural posture of this case, the Court of Appeals was correct in addressing the issue.
After Mother filed her amended complaint and Defendants filed their answer, Defendants moved for judgment on the pleadings under the provisions of Indiana Trial Rule 12(C), which the trial court granted. A motion for judgment on the pleadings should be granted "'only where it is clear from the face of the complaint that under no cireumstances could relief be granted." Culver-Union Twp. Ambulance Serv. v. Steindler,
The origins of a common law claim for loss of services are generally traced to 13!" Century Roman law. Francis Bowes Sayre, Inducing Breach of Contract, 36 Harv. L.Rev. 663, 663-64 (1928). The Roman system allowed the head of the household to pursue a claim stemming from a violent action or insult upon any member of the household. Id. at 665. English common law followed suit in the 14" Century when it allowed a master, in order to protect his property right in his servant, to initiate a lawsuit to compensate him for lost services due to an intentional injury to his property. Id.; see also Keeton et al., § 125, at 9831.
The development of loss of services claims in this country followed the English common law. However, in addition to a master's claim to the services of his servant, the claim was expanded to include a father's right to recover for the loss of services of his child. See, eg., Plummer v. Webb,
As with other jurisdictions, by the latter half of the nineteenth century, this jurisdiction also began to recognize a father's right to recover for the services he lost as a result of an injured child. See Binford v. Johnston,
As the case law has developed, Indiana has continued to acknowledge a common law cause of action for loss of a child's services. Although we have long departed from the notion that only the father may pursue such an action-either parent may do so-we have continued to maintain that the action is in the nature of a property right as opposed to an action for personal injury. See Graf v. City Transit Co.,
Consistent with the common law, the Child Wrongful Death Statute also allows a parent to pursue damages for loss of a child's services. However, unlike a common law claim where damages are measured from the date of injury to the date of death, see Mayhew v. Burns,
We first acknowledge that we have found no cases in this jurisdiction specifically addressing whether a parent is entitled to punitive damages as a result of injury to his or her property rights in a child. Cf. Thompson,
Our review of the relevant case authority leads us to the conclusion that although Indiana common law has permitted the recovery of punitive damages under "appropriate cireumstances," those cireum-stances have never included the recovery of punitive damages for a claim of loss of a child's services. Our legislature has not addressed this issue, and Mother has not argued that this Court should abandon the doctrine of stare decisis and change the common law. Accordingly, as with the claim for a statutory right of punitive damages, the trial court properly granted Defendants' motion for partial judgment on the pleadings on this issue as well.
Conclusion
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. - After this case was fully briefed and transfer granted, Connerwood Healthcare, Inc. filed a bankruptcy petition, triggering an automatic stay of action. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(a)(1). However, Connerwood's bankruptcy does not prevent this Court from proceeding with this appeal at least with respect to the non-bankrupt parties. See Seiko Epson Corp. v. NuKote Int'l, Inc.,
. Ind.Code § 34-1-1-8 (current version at LC. § 34-23-2-1).
. - The first Child Wrongful Death Act provided:
A father, or in case of his death or desertion of his family, or imprisonment, the mother, may maintain an action for the injury or death of a child; and a guardian for the injury or death of his ward. But when the action is brought by the guardian for an injury to his ward, the damages shall inure to the benefit of his ward.
1852 Ind. Acts vol. 2, pt. 2, ch. 1, art. 2, § 27, p. 56.
. See Pub.L. No. 1-1998, § 18, 1998 Ind. Acts 141-43; Pub.L. No. 33-1989, § 116, 1989 Ind. Acts 608-10; Pub.L. No. 306-1987, § 1, 1987 Ind. Acts 2990-91; Pub.L. No. 316-1975, § 1 1975 Ind. Acts 1759; 1951 Ind. Acts ch. 112, § 1, p. 307-08; 1881 Ind. Acts ch. 38, § 29, p. 244.
. The statute provides in pertinent part:
In an action to recover for the death of a child, the plaintiff may recover damages:
(1) for the loss of the child's services;
(2) for the loss of the child's love and companionship; and
(3) to pay the expenses of:
(A) health care and hospitalization necessitated by the wrongful act or omission that caused the child's death;
(B) the child's funeral and burial;
(C) the reasonable expense of psychiatric and psychological counseling incurred by *800 a surviving parent or minor sibling of the child that is required because of the death of the child;
(D) uninsured debts of the child, including debts for which a parent is obligated on behalf of the child; and
(E) the administration of the child's estate, including reasonable attorney's fees.
LC. § 34-23-2-l(e). See Pub.L. No. 306-1987, § 1, 1987 Ind. Acts 2990-91.
. See Pub.L. No. 1-1998, § 18, 1998 Ind. Acts 141-43; Pub.L. No. 33-1989, § 116, 1989 Ind. Acts 608-10.
. See also Forte,
. A claim for loss of services differs from loss of consortium because loss of services "d[foes] not expand to include intangible losses, ... the parent [has] no claim for loss of the child's society and companionship." W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser & Keeton on the Law of Torts, § 125, at 934 (5th ed.1984) (footnotes omitted). Whereas, "[clonsortium is more than 'services' in the ordinary sensel, ain action for consortium rests in large part on the impairment or destruction of the sexual life of the couple." Boland,
. Specifically the statute provides:
(f) Damages may be awarded under this section only with respect to the period of time from the death of the child until:
(1) the date that the child would have reached:
(A) twenty (20) years of age; or
(B) twenty-three (23) years of age, if the child was enrolled in an institution of higher education or in a vocational school or program; or
(2) date of the child's last surviving parent's death; whichever first occurs.
§ 34-23-21.
