RULING ON PLAINTIFFS’ MOTIONS TO AMEND THEIR COMPLAINTS
These two wrongful death actions were recently consolidated for joint discovery and trial. Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(a). Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. 28 U.S.C. Section 1332. The plaintiffs now move to amend their complaints under Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P. They seek to correct insufficiently stated claims and to cite proper statutory authority. In addition, they each seek leave to add a second statе law claim to their complaints. The plaintiff Hume seeks to join this action in her individual capacity to allege a separate claim for loss of consortium. The plaintiffs Clapper and Hellmers seek leave to add a claim for double or treble damages. The defendant does not oppose these motions and has not filed any memoranda in opposition. For the reasons that follow, and subject to the conditions more fully discussed below, the motions to amend are granted.
Facts
The plaintiffs seek to recover damages permitted by Connecticut’s wrongful death statute, Conn.Gen.Stat. Section 52-555, 1 for the deaths of the plaintiffs’ decedents resulting from a motorcycle and automobile collision in New London, Connecticut on June 16,1985. In seрarate but nearly identical complaints, the plaintiffs allege that the lessee of a car owned and leased by the sole defendant, the Hertz Corporation (“Hertz”), negligently and carelessly drove a Hertz car causing a collision with a motorcycle driven by Richard Hume. Greg Clapper was a passenger on the motorcycle. (Hume complaint at parаs. 3-7; Clapper and Hellmers complaint at paras. 3-7). As a result of the collision Mr. Hume and Mr. Clapper suffered fatal injuries. (Hume complaint at para. 8; Clapper and Hellmers complaint at para. 8). The plaintiffs are Kim Hume, administratrix of the estate of Richard Hume, and Richard Clapper and Barbara Hellmers, co-administrators of the estate of Greg Allen Clapрer.
Discussion
Rule 15(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., provides that once an answer is served, the court’s grant of leave to amend a complaint “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” In ruling on a motion to amend, the court’s discretion to grant leave is limited where there is “undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant,” and “undue prejudice to the opposing party ..., [and] futility of amendmеnt____”
Foman v. Davis,
*765 a. The Plaintiff Hume
Addressing the plaintiff Hume’s motion, she first seeks leave to add a paragraph alleging that Richard Hume’s injuries were caused by the negligence of Hertz’s lessee. (Amended complaint at para. 6). Since Rule 15(a) is often used to add an allegation thereby correcting an insufficiently stated claim, 6 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil: Section 1474 at 379-80 (1971), leave to amend is granted. Hume’s second request is to correсt an improper citation to Connecticut’s statute under which the owner-lessor of a car is liable to the same extent as the operator-lessee would have been liable if the operator had been the owner. Conn. Gen.Stat. Section 14-154a. Leave to properly cite that leasing statute is granted. (Amended complaint at para. 8).
The final request for аmendment is to add a new plaintiff alleging a new cause of action. (Amended complaint at second count). Kim Hume, the decedent’s wife and the administratrix of the decedent’s estate, seeks to join this action as a plaintiff in her individual capacity “to add a related claim for loss of consortium.” (Hume’s Memorandum in Support at 3). Permissive joinder of plaintiffs under Rule 20(a), Fed.R.Civ.P., hаs been freely permitted in vehicular collision cases “when one or more of [the plaintiffs] were not present at the scene but suffered some type of injury as a result of the event.” 7 C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil:
Section 1656 at 281 (1972),
citing
cases including
Smith v. Brown,
Although Kim Hume’s joinder poses no barrier to her proffered amendment, the apparent lack of remedy under Connecticut law for a loss of consortium claim in a wrongful death action poses a potentially insurmountable barrier. The Connecticut Supreme Court recognized that either spouse has a loss of consortium claim where the other spouse suffers personal injuries caused by a third party’s negligence.
Hopson v. St. Mary’s Hospital,
Whether the law of Connecticut provides Kim Hume a remedy for the loss of her husbаnd’s consortium when her husband’s injuries are fatal is potentially dispositive of her proffered claim. If Kim Hume’s injury is not actionable, then she has no claim to assert. However, if her injury is actionable, then to avoid barring her derivative consortium claim it must be tried before this court with her deceased husband’s wrongful death action.
Hopson v. St. Mary’s Hospital,
With no clear, controlling precedent in the Connecticut Supreme Court’s decisions on this state law question, this court sitting in diversity must determine what this state’s highest court would rule .to be its law.
Reeves v. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.,
When confronted with a loss of consortium claim in a wrongful death action, Senior United States District Judge Blumenfeld and Senior United States District
*766
Judge Zampano acknowledged the absence of controlling precedent by Connecticut’s highest court.
Bauer v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
To support her proffеred amendment, the plaintiff Hume cites two Connecticut Superior Court decisions in which a surviving spouse was permitted to pursue a derivative but separate claim for loss of consortium in her deceased spouse’s wrongful death action.
Greca v. Caldarelli,
11 Conn. Law Trib. No. 29 at 18 (Conn.Super.Ct. Jan. 21, 1985) (where the court held that a loss of consortium claim “is derivative, not of the wrongful death statute, but of the dеceased injured spouse's cause of action”);
Hinde v. Butler,
The uncertainty of whether there is a remedy for loss of consortium under Connecticut’s wrongful death statute or based on common law is unequivoсally reflected by the decisions of federal courts and lower state courts. Connecticut superior court decisions have held that a spouse cannot recover for loss of consortium under the wrongful death statute.
E.g., Leland v. Chawla,
This court appreciates that its duty and responsibility in a diversity action are to determine and apply the law of the state in which it sits.
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
This court chooses to exercise an optiоn previously unavailable to courts in this district when faced with ruling on significant unresolved Connecticut law questions. 3 This option is Connecticut’s newly enacted certification procedure. Public Act No. 85-lll. 4
This court chooses to use the certification procedure in the interest of comity and cooperative judicial federalism. Certification is on the court’s own motion,
Elkins v. Moreno,
Certifying unresolved questions to state supreme courts is not uncommon in this circuit.
5
For example, in an action with a protracted appellate history, the Second Circuit ultimately certified a controlling question of Florida law to the Supreme Court of Florida for determination.
Schein v. Chasen,
More recently, Judge Kaufman, in writing for the Second Circuit, instructed a court in this district to cеrtify unsettled state law questions so that the district court “can obtain definitive and speedier answers to the quandaries” that prompted it to abstain.
Griffin Hospital v. The Commission on Hospitals and Health Care,
In view of the foregoing, counsel for the plaintiff Hume and the defendant are directed to jointly prepare, or separately prepare if counsel are unable to agree, a proposed certification order consistent with Public Act 85-111. Counsel should outline (1) the question of whether a surviving spouse may recover for loss of consortium when the other spouse’s injuries are fatal and (2) the facts of this case relevant to that unresolved question.
E.g., Ward v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
As a final comment, although cеrtification may be more expedient in the long run, delay may be engendered by the certification procedure.
Lehman Brothers v. Schein,
b. The Plaintiffs Clapper and Hellmers
Turning now to the plaintiffs Clapper and Hellmers’ motion to amend, they first seek lеave to allege with more particularity previous allegations of Hertz’s negligence. Such amendment is permissible, 6 C. Wright & A. Miller,
Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil:
Section 1474 at 380 & n. 97 (1971 & Supp.1985), and, therefore, is granted.
Parsons v. General Motors Corp.,
*769
The plaintiffs Clapper and Hellmers final request is to add a second claim for double or treble damages as permitted under Connecticut General Statutes Section 14-295.
6
In granting leave to add this second claim, the court is not deciding whether section 14-295 applies to Hertz, but merely finds that at this time the amendment is not obviously futile.
Foman,
Hertz has raised a valid issue concerning the applicability of section 14-295 to this case. (Defendant’s motion to amend scheduling order). The Connecticut Legislature’s recent enactment of Public Act 85-122 repealed section 14-295 substituting a new statute that exempts lessors of motor vehicles from the double or treble damage provisions for highway use violations. 7
Hertz has leave to file a motion to dismiss this second claim within thirty days from this date. A motion to dismiss directed at Hertz’s potential exposure to double or treble damages under section 14-295 will provide the pаrties with an opportunity to address whether the new statute was effective and, therefore, applied at the time of the collision, and, if applicable, whether Hertz is exempted from the statute.
Finally, this court finds that these motions were not filed in bad faith or with a dilatory motive, and that to grant them will neither unduly delay the resolution of these actions nor unduly prejudice the defendаnt.
For the foregoing reasons, the motions to file the amended complaints are granted to the extent permitted by this ruling.
Notes
. Section 52-555, Conn.Gen.Stat., provides that:
In any action surviving to or brought by an executor or administrator for injuries resulting in death, whether instantaneous or otherwise, such executor or administrator may recover from the party legally at fault for such injuries just damages together with the cost of reasonably nеcessary medical, hospital and nursing services, and including funeral expenses, provided no action shall be brought to recover such damages and disbursements but within two years from the date when the injury is first sustained or discovered or in the exercise of reasonable care should have been discovered, and except that no such action may be brought more than three years from the date of the act or omission complained of.
. An interesting additional indication of the uncertainty concerning a surviving spouse’s claim for loss of consortium under Connecticut law is the fact that this question was recently a moot court topic for first year law students at the University of Connecticut School of Law.
.
See Marina Management Corp. v. Brewer,
. This Public Act, entitled The Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act, became effective October 1, 1985. Conn.Gen.Stat. Section 2-32. The Act provides that:
Section 1. The supreme court may answer questions of law certified to it by the Supreme Court of the United States, a Court of Appeаls of the United States or a United States District Court when requested by the certifying court if there are involved in any proceeding before it questions of law of this state which may be determinative of the cause then pending in the certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of the supreme court of this statе.
Sec. 2. This act may be invoked by an order of any of the courts referred to in section 1 of this act upon the court’s own motion or upon the motion of any party to the cause.
Sec. 3. A certification order shall set forth: (1) The questions of law to be answered; and (2) [A] statement of all facts relevant to the questions certified and showing fully the nature of the controversy in which thе questions arose.
Sec. 4. The certification order shall be prepared by the certifying court, signed by the judge presiding at the hearing, and forwarded to the supreme court by the clerk of the certifying court under its official seal. The supreme court may require the original or copies of all or of any portion of the record before the certifying court to be filеd with the certification order, if, in the opinion of the supreme court, the record or portion thereof may be necessary in answering the questions.
Sec. 5. Fees and costs shall be the same as in civil appeals docketed before the supreme court and shall be equally divided between the parties unless otherwise ordered by the certifying court in its order of certification.
Sec. 6. Proceedings in the supreme court shall be those provided in the rules of said court.
Sec. 7. The written opinion of the supreme court stating the law governing the questions certified shall be sent by the clerk under the seal of the supreme court to the certifying court and to the parties.
Sec. 8. This act shall be so construed ar to effectuate its general purpose to make form the law of thоse states which er
Sec. 9. This act may be cited as form Certification of Questions of
. The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit "has by far the greatest experience with certification.” 17 C. Wright, A. Miller & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure, Civil: Section 4248 at 530 (1978).
. Section 14-295, Conn.Gen.Stat., provides that:
Each person who, by neglecting to conform to any provision of sections 14 — 230 to 14-242, inclusive, or section 14-245, or 14 — 247, causes any injury to the person or property of another, shall be liable to the party injured in double or treble damages if, in the discretion of the court in which any action is pending, double or treble damages are just, with the costs of such action.
. Public Act 85-122 (the new Conn.Gen.Stat. ' Section 14-295) is the same as the previous section except for the following additional sentence.
“The provisions of this section shall not apply to any person licensed under section 14-15.”
