Opinion
Scott Lieding and Karey Lieding, husband and wife, sued Commercial Diving Center and Oceaneering International, Inc., alleging that on April 14, 1980, husband sustained personal injuries in a diving accident while he was a commercial diving student under the instruction and supervision of defendants; as a result of husband’s injuries, wife was deprived of his “services, social and consortium,” to which she is entitled. Husband sought damages for his injuries on several theories and wife (in the seventh cause of action of the complaint) sought damages for loss of consortium. Defendants moved for summary judgment on the seventh cause of action. The motion was supported by wife’s answers to interrogatories stating that she and husband were not married at the time of his alleged diving accident. In opposition to the motion plaintiffs submitted declarations wherein they stated that on March 9, 1980, husband asked wife to marry him; at that time they selected May 31, 1980, as the tentative wedding date; because of husband’s accident the wedding was postponed and plaintiffs were married on August 2, 1980. The motion was granted on the ground that wife cannot recover damages for loss of consortium because she and husband were not married, but only engaged, at the time of his injuries.
Plaintiffs appeal from the minute order granting the motion for summary judgment,
1
which is a preliminary nonappealable order.
(King
v.
State of California
(1970)
The papers submitted in support of and in opposition to the motion for summary judgment show that there is no triable issue of fact. The only issue presented to the trial court was an issue of law, which may be determined in summary judgment proceedings.
(Allis-Chalmers Corp.
v.
City of Oxnard
(1981)
In
Rodriguez
v.
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
(1974)
*75
In other states, recovery for loss of consortium has been denied where injury to one of the spouses occurred before the marriage.
(Sawyer
v.
Bailey
(Me. 1980)
In
Tremblay
v.
Carter, supra,
The policy considerations expressed in the foregoing cases are sound and support the conclusion, reached in
Tong
v.
Jocson, supra,
In support of a contrary conclusion, appellants cite
Butcher
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
The judgment is affirmed.
Hanson (Thaxton), J., and Dalsimer, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 20, 1983.
Notes
Inasmuch as it is wife who seeks damages for loss of consortium, she (not husband) is aggrieved by the order; therefore she alone has the right to appeal therefrom. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 902;
Kunza
v.
Gaskell
(1979)
After the notice of appeal was filed, an order “specifying adjudication of issues” was signed and filed determining that the seventh cause of action is without merit and there is no triable issue of material fact as to that cause of action.
In California such a provision is contained in Civil Code section 43.5, enacted in 1939. (See also Civ. Code, § 43.4.)
