The plaintiffs appeal from an order sustaining a demurrer to all six counts of their amended decía *276 ration. In substance the allegations common to all these counts are that on or about August 25, 1948, the defendant published a newspaper having a wide circulation in Boston and throughout New England; that at that time the plaintiffs’ daughter was a fifteen year old school girl living at home with the plaintiffs and having at no time achieved notoriety or prominence in the community for any reason; that on or about August 25 the plaintiffs’ daughter was killed while riding as a passenger in an automobile; that the plaintiffs as the surviving parents of their daughter, who died intestate, became entitled to the possession of her body; that on the date aforesaid the defendant through its servants, agents, or employees, and without the permission of the plaintiffs and against their will, took a photograph of the child’s body which it published in its newspaper' as and for a true likeness of their, daughter, “referring to her in the accompanying caption as being the daughter of the plaintiffs”; and that thereby the plaintiffs suffered great bodily pain and mental anguish and incurred medical expenses. It is not alleged that any likeness of the plaintiffs or either of them was published.
Counts 1 and 3 allege that the defendant’s act constituted a trespass upon the body of the plaintiffs’ daughter. The second and fourth counts allege that the photograph and accompanying caption constituted an interference with the plaintiffs’ right of privacy. Counts 5 and 6 assert that the photographic reproduction “was a gross caricature” of their daughter and “depicted her features in a deformed and hideous manner and distorted . . . [her] features.” In one of each pair of counts it was alleged that the defendant’s act was wilful and malicious, and in the other that it was done with gross negligence and indifference to the rights of the plaintiffs.
It should be said at the outset that no rights of the plaintiffs’ daughter are here involved. Since she was dead when the photographs complained of were published, no rights arising out of such publication accrued to her. In other words, the rights which the plaintiffs are seeking to assert *277 are not derivative; in all of the counts they allege an interference only with their own rights.
1. The first and third counts based on trespass set forth no actionable wrong. This court has held that one who intentionally mistreats the body of a dead person is liable in tort to the member of the family of such person who is entitled to the disposition of the body.
Burney
v.
Children’s Hospital,
2. By alleging in the second and fourth counts that the photograph and accompanying caption constituted an interference with their right of privacy the plaintiffs seek to raise the question whether there exists in this Commonwealth a legally protected right of privacy — a question left open in
Themo
v.
New England Newspaper Publishing Co.
Assuming for the purposes of this case that the plaintiffs have a right of privacy, we fail to see how it was impaired by what the defendant did. Doubtless many persons at such a time would be distressed or annoyed by a publication of the sort here involved. It is a time above all others when they would prefer to be spared the anguish of wide or sensational publicity. But if the right asserted here were sustained, it would be difficult to fix its boundaries. A *278 newspaper account or a radio broadcast setting forth in detail the harrowing circumstances of the accident might well be as distressing to the members of the victim’s family as a photograph of the sort described in the declaration. A newspaper could not safely publish the picture of a train wreck or of an airplane crash if any of the bodies of the victims were recognizable. The law does not provide a remedy for every annoyance that occurs in everyday life. Many things which are distressing or may be lacking in propriety, or good taste are not actionable. Moreover, if the parents had a cause of action in a case like the present there would seem to be no reason why other members of the immediate family, the brothers and sisters, whose sensibilities may also have been wounded should not also be permitted to sue. The only reference to the plaintiffs was that the girl whose body appeared in the photograph was their daughter. This can hardly be said to interfere with their privacy, At least, if there is such a right in this Commonwealth we would not be prepared to extend it to a case, like the present.
The plaintiffs cite two decisions
(Douglas
v.
Stokes,
3. Counts 5 and 6 allege that the photographic reproductian of the plaintiffs’ daughter “was a gross caricature and depicted her features in a deformed and hideous manner and distorted . . . [her] features.” The plaintiffs seek to support these counts on the same ground urged to sustain the second and fourth counts, namely, that the publication was an invasion of their right of privacy. The publication of such a photograph might very well be indelicate or lacking in good taste but it would not in our opinion, for the reasons already discussed, constitute an actionable wrong to the plaintiffs.
Order sustaining demurrer affirmed.
Judgment for the defendant.
Notes
See
Pollard
v.
Photographic Co.
40 Ch. Div. 345;
Moore
v.
Rugg,
