OPINION
This is a personal injury action by a nine year old girl and her parents against
The first question to be resolved is whether a complaint seeking damages for injuries caused by a child’s willful and wanton act alleges a negligence cause of action against the child’s parents, when it charges the parents with failure to exercise the proper power of control over their child when they knew or should have known of his mischievous and reckless disposition.
As stated in 39 Am.Jur. 695, Parent and Child, § 58:
“ * * * the general rule is that a parent may be liable for the consequences of failure to exercise the power of control which he has over his children, where he knows, or in the exercise of due care should have known, that injury to another is a probable consequence.”
While indicating that failure to restrain a child known to possess dangerous tendencies may lead to parents’ liability, the Court in Repko v. Seriani, 3 Conn.Cir. 374,
“A parent is under a duty to exercise reasonable care so to control his minor child as to prevent it from intentionally harming others or from so conducting itself as to create an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to them, if the parent (a) knows or has reason to know that he has the ability to control his child, and (b) knows or should know of the necessity and opportunity for exercising such control.”
To the same effect see Gillespie v. Gallant,
In Klein v. Sunbeam Corp.,
“ * * * A complaint will not be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted unless it appears to a certainty that the plaintiff could not recover under any reasonably conceivable set of circumstances susceptible of proof.”
See also Phillips v. Delaware Power and Light Company,
“In Campbell v. Walker, supra, it was laid down as a general rule that it is not sufficient to state the result or conclusion of fact arising from circumstances not set forth in the declaration, nor to make a general statement of the facts which admits of almost any proof to sustain it.”
Notwithstanding a relaxing of the particularity requirement where “passive” as opposed to “active” negligence is alleged, see Phillips v. Delaware Power and Light Company,
supra,
The next issue in this case is whether a parent’s expenses for travel, lodging and telephone calls, and lost wages, incurred in order for the parents to be with an injured minor who is hospitalized in another city and to care for the minor at home after discharge from the hospital, are recoverable in the minor’s action for damages for the injuries. As stated in 39 Am.Jur. 724, 725, Parent and Child, § 80:
“Unless the child, being emancipated, is responsible for its own support, the parent, rather than the child, is entitled to recover, in an action for injury to the child, for medical and other expenses necessarily incurred in healing or attempting to heal the injury.”
In admitting evidence of travel expenses, board and lodging of parents in visiting their hospitalized child, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire stated in Woodman v. Peck,
“The evidence was admissible. Their attendance on their son might be found a reasonable need for him, by way of comfort and cheer, in recovery. If of less importance, the attendance was findably in furtherance of the same purpose as the hospital’s service, the doctor’s treatment, and the nurse’s care.”
Under the reasoning of Woodman v. Peck, it is the Court’s opinion that travel, lodging and telephone expenses incurred to be with or establish contact with an injured child in order to comfort or cheer him to recover, may, in a proper case, be reasonably incurred and thus recoverable elements of damages. On the other hand, lost wages, in the opinion of the Court, would not be so reasonably incurred and thus not proper elements of damage. See 22 Am.Jur.2d 115, 116, Damages, Sec. 81. Additionally, the measure of recovery for care furnished an injured child by the parent after the child departs the hospital is not the wages lost by the parent, but rather the reasonable value of the care or attendance rendered. See 39 Am.Jur. 724, 726, Parent and Child, Sec. 80. Accordingly, that portion of the motion to strike as pertains to lost wages is granted.
The next question in this case is whether parents may recover damages for mental anguish allegedly suffered as the result of an unwitnessed intentional, malicious and willful assault and battery upon
“The rule has been recognized in a number of the later cases that there can be no recovery by a parent, in an action for injuries to a minor child, for the pain, suffering, or other distress caused the parent by the injuries of the child.”
See also
Finally, defendants seek to strike that portion of the complaint seeking punitive damages against the defendant parents on the ground that punitive damages are not recoverable in a negligence action. Defendants also seek to strike plaintiff parents’ allegations for loss of services on the ground that this element of damages in reality belongs to the child. As to the former contention, plaintiffs are in agreement, while as to the latter contention, it is plain that recovery by the parents for loss of the child’s services is specifically authorized by 13 Del.Code § 704. Accordingly, the motion to strike the claim for punitive damages in the second count is granted, and the motion to strike the allegations for damages for loss of services in the third count is denied.
In accordance with the above, defendants’ motion to dismiss is denied. So much of defendants’ motion to strike as relates to paragraphs 6 “A” and 6 “B” of the second count, the allegations seeking recovery for punitive damages in the second count, and the allegations seeking damages for lost wages and mental distress in the third count is granted.
Leave is granted to amend Count II, Para. 6 “A” and 6 “B”.
It is so ordered.
