224 A.2d 406 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1966
Plaintiff Joseph A. Hatala, the administrator of the estate of Baby Girl Hatala, alleges that the baby, en ventre sa mere, was due to be born in about a month or two and that as a result of the defendant's negligent operation of an automobile the child was killed and caused to be stillborn. The defendant demurred to this complaint on the ground that there is no right of action to a stillborn child or to the representative of such stillborn child's estate for injury or death which occurred to the child before birth. The demurrer admits for the purpose of the present proceeding to the truth of the allegations of the complaint. It should be noted that the complaint specifically alleges that the fetus was seven to eight months old and was viable.
There is no reported decision of the Connecticut Supreme Court on this issue. There are, however, three well-reasoned Connecticut Superior Court decisions which have held that in Connecticut, where a viable fetus, that is, one capable of living outside the womb, is injured through negligence, the child has a cause of action against the wrongdoer. Gorke
v. Le Clerc,
Writers who have considered the question have condemned the illogical rationale of the doctrine of denial of a right of action for prenatal injuries and have urged that the viable child should be permitted to sue, or if stillborn, its representatives should be allowed to sue. To deny the infant or its representatives relief in this type of case is not only a harsh result but its effect is to do reverence to an outmoded, timeworn fiction not founded on fact and within common knowledge untrue and unjustified. The proof of a causal relationship between the injury en ventre sa mere and the damage which subsequently became apparent is difficult, but the argument based upon the difficulty of proof of a causal relationship is rejected. The court is not impressed with the reasoning that a clear remedy for an injustice should be denied because a wrong *361 is not readily susceptible to proof. The burden of proof would have been almost insurmountable in the days of Blackstone and Holmes and probably greatly influenced their conceptions of the law. The physicians of today, however, have less trouble with the problem, and the right to bring an action is clearly distinguishable from the ability to prove the facts. The claim is sometimes made that fake and fraudulent claims may be brought, but this argument should have no weight to prevent legitimate claims from being heard. The common law attributed an existence to a child prior to birth in respect to some legal rights, as Blackstone states: "Life is the immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual; and it begins in contemplation of law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother's womb." 1 Blackstone, Commentaries 129.
A review of cases from the time of Gorke v.Le Clerc,
A rule fixing survival as the determinant rather than viability has the appeal of simplicity. It might aid the judiciary but hardly justice.
The demurrer of the defendants is overruled.