43420. MACK v. MOORE.
Supreme Court of Georgia
DECIDED JULY 3, 1986.
(345 SE2d 338)
CLARKE, Presiding Justice.
Nickola Mack brought this wrongful death action against Sidney Moore for the death of her father Eric Harris. Zenovia Harris, the surviving spouse of the deceased, brought this motion to intervene and to dismiss. Finding that Nickola had no standing to bring the action because Georgia law confers standing to bring a wrongful death action only upon the surviving spouse if there be a surviving spouse, the court allowed the intervention of Zenovia Harris and granted the motion to dismiss. Nickola appeals, asserting as error the court‘s holding that the statute in question,
The 1985 amendment to
There is no denial of equal protection in the statute‘s giving greater rights to surviving spouses than to children to sue for wrongful death. There is a rational basis for the differentiation in the need to designate a representative of the beneficiaries of any recovery, which the statute provides shall be distributed between the surviving spouse and the children.
Ms. Mack argues that the statutory authority of the surviving spouse creates a basic unfairness because the children of the deceased are at the mercy of the spouse. She contends that the surviving spouse could settle the claim unreasonably or even refuse to assert a claim at all thereby precluding any benefits to the children. We do not share this view. Although the statute confers exclusive standing upon the surviving spouse, it does not vest in the spouse all of the rights to the claim. The spouse is required to share the proceeds with the children. This means the spouse acts not solely as an independent party but rather as an individual and as the representative of the children. A duty is owed to the children and part of that duty is to act
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Gregory, J., who concurs specially.
GREGORY, Justice, concurring specially.
I concur in the judgment of the court but not in all that is written in the majority opinion.
The right to recover for the wrongful death of a spouse is placed in the surviving spouse by
DECIDED JULY 3, 1986.
Irwin M. Ellerin, for appellant.
Chambers, Mabry, McClelland & Brooks, Eugene P. Chambers, Jr., Simmons, Warren & Szczecko, Joseph Szczecko, Marc Astore, for appellee.
