IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JEREMIAH BENNETT
No. OP 13-0294.
Supreme Court of Montana
Decided August 20, 2013.
2013 MT 230, 371 Mont. 275, 308 P.3d 63
OPINION AND ORDER
¶1 Abеl Robert Bennett and Judy Bennett have petitioned this Court to exercise supervisory control over the Twentieth Judicial District Court, and determine the District Court is proceeding under a mistake of law by its April 18, 2013 order holding that Bennetts are not entitled to claim damages resulting from the wrongful death of their adult son, Jeremiah Bennett. We grant the petition.
BACKGROUND
¶2 The underlying action is а dispute regarding the administration of the estate of Jeremiah Bennett (Jeremiah). Jeremiah died as a result of injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident on September 8, 2012. Jeremiah is survived by two minor children he had with his former wife, Sabrina Bennett (Sabrina), and his parents, Abel Robert Bennett and Judy Bennett (Bennetts). Sabrina is the court-appointed guardian and consеrvator for the two minor children. Jeremiah‘s fiancée, Christina Jackson, was also killed in the accident, and his two minor children suffered serious injuries. Jeremiah died intestate.
¶3 The District Court informally appointed Abel Robert Bennett (Abel Robert) personal representative of the Estate of Jeremiah Bennett (Estate) on October 19, 2012. On November 14, 2012, Sabrina petitioned the District Court to remove Abel Robert and appoint her as personal representative. After hearing, the District Court granted Sabrina‘s requests. The District Court‘s granting of Sabrina‘s petition for formal probate and for removal of Abel Robert as personal representative was the subject of an interlocutory appeal. In re the Estate of Bennett, 2013 MT 228, 371 Mont. 270, 312 P.3d 400.
¶4 On March 4, 2013, Sabrina petitioned the District Court for a declaration that the Bennetts had no standing to claim wrongful death damages as a result of Jeremiah‘s death. The same day, Bennetts filed a motion to intervene, arguing that their wrongful death claims were not being recognized or pursued by Sabrina in her role as personal representative. Bennetts conceded that they did not hаve a viable claim for loss of consortium under this Court‘s precedent, see Hern v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Ill., 2005 MT 301, ¶ 58, 329 Mont. 347, 125 P.3d 597, but maintained they could claim damages for grief, sorrow, and mental anguish that Sabrina, as personal representative of Jeremiah‘s estate, had a fiduciary duty to advance on their behalf. After a hearing, the District Court entered its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order on April 18, 2013 (Ordеr), holding that “the minor children of the decedent are the sole heirs of the estate under the laws of intestate succession and therefore have priority over any wrongful death and survivorship claims.” The Order continued:
... [T]he Court does not accept Abel Robert and Judy‘s argument that because the parents in Hern recovered grief, sorrow and mental anguish, through the personal representative, that Abel Robert and Judy may also personally recover those damages. Becky Hern‘s parents were her “heirs.” In this case, Jeremiah‘s [minor children] are his only heirs under the Montana laws in intestate succession and therefore have the exclusive right to
recover wrongful death damages for grief, sorrow and mental anguish. That because Abel Robert and Judy are neither intestate heirs nor statutory heirs ... any claims to wrongful death damages for grief, sorrow and mental anguish are subordinate to those of decedent‘s minor children. They lack standing to participate, object or intervene in any estate proceedings or wrongful death claims arising out of Jeremiah‘s deаth.
The Order granted Sabrina‘s petition for declaratory relief, and denied Bennetts’ motion to intervene, concluding “[Bennetts] are not entitled to wrongful death benefits arising out of Jeremiah‘s death as they concede they lack the relationship requirement for loss of consortium and they are not entitled to grief, sorrow, and mental anguish benefits.”
¶5 Bennetts pеtitioned this Court for supervisory control, and we ordered that a response be filed by Sabrina and, if it desired, the District Court. Sabrina has filed a response. On Bennetts’ motion, we imposed a stay preventing Sabrina from releasing any of Bennetts’ claims and from entering agreements for allocation of insurance proceeds, until the matters pending before this Court were resolved.
¶6 The subject of this petition is whether the District Court erred as a matter of law by concluding the Bennetts are not entitled to claim wrongful death damages for grief, sorrow, and mental anguish under
DISCUSSION
¶7 This Court “has general supervisory control over all other courts.”
¶9 Bennetts argue that Montana law recognizes a claim for grief, sorrow, and mental anguish by parents for the wrongful death of an adult child because there is no requirement that a claimant for wrongful death damages be a probate heir or “heir in law.” Sabrina responds that Bennetts are not “heirs” as defined by the intestacy statutes, that Jeremiah‘s minor children are the only such heirs, and that allowing Bennetts to claim wrongful death damages contradicts Montana law, citing Hern, ¶¶ 46, 47, 62. We begin with a general review of wrongful death actions.
¶10 In an action for wrongful death under
¶11 Some jurisdictions statutorily identify the particular survivors who may recover under the wrongful death statutes and further classify available benefits to each class of survivor. See Jacob A. Stein, Stein on Personal Injury Damages §§ 3:2-3:3 (Gerald W. Boston, ed., 3d ed., West 1997) (citing statutеs and cases). Montana does not
¶12 In Swanson, this Court distinguished wrongful death and survival actions.1 We explained that a survival action is personal to the decedent for damages suffered by the deсedent between the wrongful act and his death. Any recovery for such damage belongs to the decedent‘s estate and is administered as an estate asset. Swanson, 197 Mont. at 515-16, 646 P.2d at 1169. In contrast, a wrongful death action seeks damages that “pertain to the personal loss of the survivors.” Swanson, 197 Mont. at 517, 646 P.2d at 1170 (emphasis in original). We explained that:
Such damages do not belong to the decedent‘s estate. They are not subject to the claims of decedent‘s creditors. They are not part of the estate for the determination of inheritance taxes ...
... The distribution of the [wrongful death] damages to the heirs is not controlled by the decedent‘s will or by the laws of intestate succession.
Swanson, 197 Mont. at 517-18, 646 P.2d at 1170-71. Although occasionally using the term “heirs” in Swanson, it is clear from the context of the entire discussion that we were not limiting those “survivors” who could bring a wrongful death claim to only intestate hеirs.
¶13 Several decisions prior to Hern addressed the issue of which survivors were permitted to claim wrongful death damages. In Carroll, the decedent‘s widow and his four children, three of which were from
¶14 In 1987, the Montana Legislature enacted legislation requiring survival actions under
¶15 The common law developed further in Hern, where this Court recognized that parents of an adult decedent may recover wrongful death damages for loss of consortium when there was “significant evidence of an extraordinarily close and interdependent relatiоnship,” adopting the test applied in Bear Medicine. Hern, ¶¶ 58, 68. Although not expressly discussed, our decision in Hern also implicitly approved of recovery of wrongful death damages for grief, sorrow, and mental
¶16 In 2009, the United States District Court for the District of Mоntana reviewed our precedent in deciding Adams v. U.S., 669 F. Supp. 2d 1203 (D. Mont. 2009). In Adams, the decedent, Jay Allen, was survived by his spouse, Kathleen Adams, three children, his parents, and several siblings. Kathleen was named the personal representative and brought a survival claim and wrongful death claims on behalf of
[T]he [defendant] contends, because Kathleen would receive all proceeds from the wrongful deаth claim, Jay‘s parents and siblings may not recover any damages in this action. While the [defendant] correctly identified Jay Allen‘s intestate heirs, these statutes would apply, if at all, to survival damages awarded to Jay‘s estate. In light of the Montana Supreme Court‘s recognition that parents may be compensated for loss of consortium of their adult children, thе intestacy laws seem inapplicable to this motion. Wrongful death claims belong to the survivors while survival claims belong to the estate.
Adams, 669 F. Supp. 2d at 1208 n. 1 (emphasis added).3
¶17 We conclude that the U.S. District Court‘s reasoning in Adams is appropriate. As Jeremiah‘s personal representative, Sabrina is advancing claims for survival damages and wrongful death damages. Under the survival claim, Jeremiah‘s minor children are his only intestate heirs and they will receive any survival damages that are recovered, upon administration of the Estate. However, wrongful death damages are personal to the survivors. Such damages, when recovered, are paid without regard to the intestate succession statutes, and are not controlled by the intestate succession statutes. Swanson, 197 Mont. at 518, 646 P.2d at 1171. There is no statutory prohibition оf parental claims. We have approved wrongful death claims by survivors other than the decedent‘s intestate heirs. See Johnson, 211 Mont. at 525, 687 P.2d at 671;
¶19 In conclusion, the portion of the District Court‘s Order denying the Bennetts the opportunity to recover wrongful death damages for grief, sorrow, and mental anguish was in error. We acknowledge, in defense of the District Court, that in the past we have been neither consistent in our analyses and holdings, nor precise in the use of the term “heirs.” We thus accept the petition and issue the writ to provide clarification on this issue.
¶20 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Petition for Writ of Supervisory Control is GRANTED in part.
¶21 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the portion of the District Court Order of April 18, 2013, holding that Bennetts cannot recover wrongful death claims as a matter of law is VACATED. This case is remanded to the Distriсt Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶22 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the procedural motions pending herein are DENIED and the stay previously entered herein is VACATED.
¶23 The Clerk of this Court is directed to provide copies of this Order to all counsel of record and the Honorable C.B. McNeil, Twentieth Judicial District Court Judge, presiding.
DATED this 20th day of August, 2013.
/S/ CHIEF JUSTICE MCGRATH
/S/ JUSTICE BAKER
/S/ JUSTICE COTTER
/S/ JUSTICE WHEAT
/S/ JUSTICE MCKINNON
/S/ JUSTICE MORRIS
