The sole question presented is whether a wife may recover for loss of consortium due to an injury negligently inflicted on her husband.
Appellant’s husband, George LaEace, sustained personal injuries while a passenger on a bus operated by appellee. Appellant seeks $5,000 damages for loss of consortium, alleging the injuries suffered by her husband resulted from appellee’s negligence and were the proximate cause of her loss of that consortium. Appellee’s general! demurrer to the petition was sustained. Having declined to plead further, appellant’s petition was dismissed.
The issue presented is not novel. In Cravens v. Louisville & N. R. Co,
However, appellant ably argues that this principle of law should now be overruled hy this court. As authority for her position she cites Hitaffer v. Argonne Co.,
The reasons given for the adoption of the existing rule have been clearly set out and reiterated by this court and the courts of other jurisdictions. We think the reasoning therein sound and see no reason for adopting a rule utterly at variance therewith.
Judgment affirmed.
