The sole issue raised by this appeal is whether this court should judicially abrogate the rule of interspousal immunity prohibiting one spouse from maintaining an action against the other to recover damages for personal injury resulting from a negligent tort.
Plaintiff was injured when an automobile operated by defendant in which she was a passenger struck a parked vehicle. About 11 months after she commenced her action alleging negligence on the part of defendant, she and defendant were married. Thereafter, upon motion made in behalf of defendant by attorneys furnished by his liability insurance carrier, the trial court dismissed the action.
The issue presented is directly controlled by Patenaude v. Patenaude,
We are not disposed to overrule precedent or depart from the rule presently adhered to by a majority of jurisdictions 2 where upon the record we find no showing of gross injustice but rather indications that the primary, public-policy reason for the rule — that of promoting marital harmony — has realistic application. Since virtually every phase of this issue has been exhaustively discussed by scores of judicial opinions and legal writers, an analysis for and against judicial abrogation would be mere repetition. 3
We recognize that for the past 50 years this common-law doctrine of marital immunity has been under attack and that many of the reasons advanced for continued judicial adherence are out of tune with the realities of life about us, especially as to torts arising out of the operation of motor vehicles. However, this long-established immunity is based upon significant considerations of public policy, questions concerning which are peculiarly suited to legislative resolution. The growing number of decisions in jurisdictions permitting direct suits by the spouse are based either upon express statutory authority
4
or, in large part, upon a liberal construction of their married women’s acts.
5
In the period that the rule has been criticized, only three states have effectively abandoned it by expressly reversing prior decisions.
6
Shortly after Illinois judicially abrogated the rule in Brandt v. Keller,
Without foreclosing a reexamination of the rule when an appropriate case
*545
compels us to do so, we believe the proper course is to suggest, as we have repeatedly implied,
8
that the legislature consider the need and propriety of any change of the rule. We followed that course recently with respect to the problem of governmental immunity in Spanel v. Mounds View School Dist. No. 621,
Affirmed.
Notes
Woltman v. Woltman,
See, Note, 27 Ohio St. L. J. 550.
See, Smith v. Smith,
E. g., Wis. Stat. 1965, §§ 246.07 and 246.075; Laws of New York 1937, c. 669, § 1 of which granted the right of each spouse to sue the other, but § 2 of which changed liability insurance laws to provide that no policy “shall be deemed to insure against any liability of an insured for injuries to his or her spouse * * * unless express provision for such insurance is included in the policy.”
E. g., Rains v. Rains,
Mosier v. Carney,
Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, c. 68, § 1.
Kyle v. Kyle,
