Thе amended complaint alleges that the ■plaintiff’s husband, Charles F. Lockwood, while employed by the named defendant, was injured as a ■consequence of the negligence of it and its agent, the ■defendant John Cronan; that her husband incurrеd a permanent partial or total incapacity; and that as a result of the defendants’ negligence the plaintiff has been, is now, and may in the future be, deprived of the affection, care, assistance, services, support and conjugal relations to which she is entitled by virtue of the marital relationship. She seeks money damages. Each defendant demurred to the amended complaint on the ground that it was insufficient because in this state a spouse cаnnot maintain an *157 action to recover damages for losses such as were alleged in the present complaint, where those losses were the result of personal injuries to the other spouse sustained at the hands of a third рarty. The court sustained the defendants5 demurrers and, upon the failure of the plaintiff to plead over, rendered judgmеnt for the defendants. From that judgment the plaintiff has appealed.
The plaintiff claims that she has a right to recovеr damages in an action against a third party whose negligence caused disabling personal injuries to her spousе which resulted in the loss of consortium. She bases this contention, in part at least, upon our decisions allowing recovery for loss of consortium in an action for alienation of affections or in one for criminal conversatiоn. “The gist of both the action for alienation of affections and that for criminal conversation is the same, the lоss of the
consortium.” Valentine
v.
Pollak,
We recognize only one exception to the rule that the right of recovery is personаl and the exclusive right of the injured spouse. We allow a husband to recover the amount of the expenditures which hе has been, or will be, compelled to make to aid in his wife’s restoration from injuries occasioned her by the negligеnce of a third party or for services in the maintenance of the family which his wife, except for her injuries, would havе performed.
Hansen
v.
Costello,
The plaintiff maintains that statutory changes denote the intent of legislatures to recognize rights
*159
based upon a loss of consortium, and she cites various state аnd federal statutes as authority for this claim. As provided in § 7307 of the General Statutes, a wife married on or after April 20,1877, may bring suit in hеr own name to recover for personal injuries sustained by her and obtain compensation for her resultant physical impairment and disability as fully and to the same extent as a husband can where he is the person injured.
Marri
v.
Stamford Street R. Co.,
Another claim mаde by the plaintiff is that the effect of the present judgment violates article first, § 12, of the Connecticut constitution, guaranteeing redress “for an injury done” to her. The word, “injury,” as there used, means a legal injury, that is, one violative of established lаw of which a court can properly take cognizance.
Taylor
v.
Keefe,
The plaintiff asseverates that we should adopt the rule of law stated in
Hitaffer
v.
Argonne Co.,
*160
The plaintiff’s complaint is insufficient, and the court did not err in sustaining the defendants’ demurrer to it. We treat the plaintiff’s second assignment of error, that the court erred in granting the defendants’ motion for judgment, as abandoned, since it is not even mentioned in her brief.
Somers
v.
Hill,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
