delivered the opinion of the court:
Owen Hall was fatally injured in an automobile collision. Grace Hall, his widow, and James Hall, his surviving nine-year-old son, by his mother as next friend, filed the complaint in this case. They alleged that the collision was due to the negligence of the defendant, and that as a direct result of that negligence each plaintiff was deprived of the support, companionship, guidance, advice and affection of the husband and father. The widow requested damages of $142,450; the son $47,500. The trial court dismissed the complaint on defendant’s motion.
On this direct appeal the plaintiffs argue that they possess “hitherto unrecognized common law rights of action for the destruction of the family unit” which are distinct and wholly different from the wrongful death action provided by statute. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1957, chap. 70, pars. 1, 2.)
The defendant’s position is that the plaintiffs can not maintain their action because the statute requires that wrongful death actions shall be brought by the personal representative of the deceased, and the plaintiffs’ action does not differ in essence from the statutory action. They argue also that no common-law action exists because death abated any possible action at common law, and that the constitution guarantees to the plaintiffs no more than the remedy allowed by statute.
The common-law rule that no cause of action exists for a wrongful death dates back to Huggins v. Butcher, decided in 1607. (1 Brownl. & Golds. 205, Yelv. 89, 80 Eng. Rep. 61.) It was crystallized in Lord Ellenborough’s instruction to the jury in Baker v. Bolton, 1 Camp. 493, 170 Eng. Rep. 1033, (1808). The plaintiffs point out that no satisfactory reasons for the rule have ever been advanced, and that it has been universally criticized. (See, Holdsworth, Origin of the Rule in Baker v. Bolton, 1916 32 L. Q. Rev. 431, and authorities collected in Prosser on Torts, 2d ed., sec. 105.) They direct attention to the fact that other injuries to the family relationship have been held to be actionable, (Johnson v. Luhman,
In our opinion the constitutional question is not formidable when it is considered in the context of the situation that existed when the statute was originally enacted. At that time no action whatsoever was permitted for a wrongful death. The legislature took away no right when it enacted the statute. It created both the right and the remedy, and we think that its power to limit the maximum recovery in the action that it created can not be questioned. The fact that most States place no limit upon the amount recoverable, or that the legislative limit may seem unduly low when contrasted with recoveries in other actions, does not affect the power of the legislature, or the validity of its action.
The adequacy of the remedy that the legislature has provided, however, does have a bearing when we are asked, as a common-law court, to review the remedies available and to determine whether or not a new one should be recognized. The Wrongful Death Act provides that an action may be brought against the tortfeasor whenever the death of a
Considering first the difference in the parties who are entitled to sue, it is apparent that in a closely knit society the death of any one person will usually disrupt the pattern of many lives. Certainly the radiations of such an event are not confined to the immediate family circle. It is possible, of course, to contemplate a system of law that would, in the case of a death caused by the wrongful conduct of another, impose liability upon the wrongdoer in favor of all persons whose rights were affected in any degree. But the common law has characteristically imposed close limits upon the parties entitled to sue. If the deceased in this case had survived, for example, his injuries might have been such as to inflict upon these plaintiffs deprivations of the same kind and of equal severity. Yet the only person entitled to recover would be the injured man himself.
In common-law fashion, the legislative remedy limits recovery to a small class of persons who are immediately affected by the death. To avoid multiple lawsuits, it also requires that a single action be brought on behalf of the members of that class. The recovery that it provides is free from the claims of creditors of the deceased. The plaintiffs in this case are themselves members of the class for whom recovery is permitted under the statute.
We come then to the final point of difference, the statutory limit upon the amount recoverable. It is here that the plaintiffs’ argument presses most strongly upon us, for in most of the States there is no arbitrary limit upon the amount recoverable in a wrongful death action, and it is common knowledge that larger damages are often recovered for injuries than are permitted under our statute when the
Under these circumstances we are of the opinion that the differences between the action sought to be maintained and the action that is available under the statute are not sufficiently significant to warrant us in recognizing a new remedy. The point of greatest concern has been the subject of frequent legislative attention. Further legislative action appears likely, and the likelihood of legislative action has always militated against judicial change. We hold, therefore, that the circuit court of Douglas County properly dismissed the complaint.
Judgment affirmed.
