OPINION
1. This case is before us on certification from the Court of Appeals pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 34-5-14(0(2) (Repl. Pamp.1990) (providing for certification from Court of Appeals to Supreme Court matters that involve “substantial public interest”). We address the scope of liability under the New Mexico Wrongful Death Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 41-2-1 to -4 (Repl.Pamp.1989) (hereafter “the Wrongful Death Act” or “the Act”); specifically, whether New Mexico recognizes an independent cause of action for the wrongful death of a nonviable fetus. Because we hold that the Wrongful Death Act does not recognize that claim, we do not address the second issue regarding the availability of hedonic damages.
2. This case involves an action brought by Appellant Cynthia Miller for the alleged wrongful death of her 18 to 22 week-old fetus. Appellant filed a complaint against Appellee Robert- Kirk, alleging claims for personal injury and wrongful death arising out of an automobile accident. The personal injury claims were settled, including the injuríes to the mother and her son Jimmy, a passenger in the car. The only remaining claim is for the wrongful death action brought on behalf of the fetus. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Appellee concluding that no independent cause of action exists for the wrongful death of a nonviable fetus. The trial court also granted Appellee partial summary judgment on the issue of hedonic damages. Appellant appeals from these rulings.
8. In reviewing a summary judgment, this Court must consider what the applicable law is and whether genuine issues of material fact exist that preclude summary judgment under the law. See SCRA1986,1056 (Repl.Pamp.1992); Jaramillo v. Providence Washington Ins. Co.,
4. On August 6, 1991, Appellant was injured in an automobile accident when her car collided with another car driven by Appellee. At the time of the accident, Appellant was 18 to 22 weeks pregnant with a male fetus. As a result of the accident, Appellant sustained blunt trauma injuries to the abdomen and was taken to the emergency room. Upon examination of Appellant, the emergency room doctors diagnosed the separation of the placenta from the uterus wall. An emergency Caesarean section was performed with the delivery of an approximately 18 to 22 week-old fetus with cardiac activity, i.e. a heartbeat. The' fetus died within minutes of birth. The doctor who performed the Caesarean testified that she could not recall whether there were any other signs of life and she did not attempt to resuscitate the nonviable fetus due to its extreme immaturity.
5. Under the Wrongful Death Act an action for damages may be maintained for a wrongful act or omission that results in death if the decedent might have maintained that the personal representative of a “person” killed by the wrongful act or omission of another may maintain an action for damages resulting from such action if the decedent might have maintained the action had he or she lived. Section 41-2-3. Thus, our ultimate inquiry is whether a nonviable fetus is a “person” within the meaning of the Act.
6. We first addressed the scope of liability under the wrongful death statute for the death of an unborn fetus in Salazar v. St. Vincent Hosp.,
7. Viability is defined as “[t]hat stage of fetal development when the life of the unborn child may be continued indefinitely outside the womb by natural or artificial life-supportive systems.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1565 (6th ed. 1990). Thus, a fetus is nonviable if it is incapable of sustaining life outside the mother’s womb.
8. In the instant case, all parties agree that the fetus was nonviable at the time of the collision and injury. Appellant argues, however, that the applicable test for the right of recovery under the wrongful death statute should not be based on the standard of viability. In fact, Appellant maintains that the issue of viability is simply irrelevant where the fetus is “born alive”.
9. This case does not require this Court “to make any moral, philosophical, or theological determinations of what constitutes a person or a life”. Wade v. United States,
10. Historically, determining the legal status of an unborn fetus has been troublesome. At common law, courts did not recognize a right of action for prenatal personal injuries. Salazar,
11. Today the vast majority of states, including New Mexico, Salazar,
12. Applying the viability rule, courts have also declined to allow a claim for the wrongful death of a nonviable fetus where the fetus is bom alive but dies soon after birth. Ferguson v. District of Columbia,
13. Courts denying the right of recovery to a nonviable fetus have based their holdings on several different grounds. A number of courts advance the Bonbrest rationale to support their position; that is, only a viable fetus is capable of an independent existence, and therefore it should be regarded as a separate entity capable of maintaining an action in its own right. E.g., Humes,
14. In the past twenty years following Roe v. Wade,
15.Appellant argues that viability is irrelevant in the instant ease because the nonviable fetus emerged with a heartbeat, which it maintained for a number of minutes before death. This Court’s adoption of viability as a condition precedent to recovery for fetal injuries necessarily forecloses the argument that live birth alone should define fetal rights. See Ferguson,
16. Additionally, we cannot reconcile the assertion of a wrongful death action of a nonviable fetus with the concept of a survival action. In New Mexico, the Wrongful Death Act has been characterized as a survival statute. Solon,
Where the fetus emerges from the mother without the developmental capacity to survive, it would contradict the theory of a survival action to provide a cause of action to the representative of the fetus. Absent clear indication of contrary legislative intent, it would be anomalous to view an action as one that could have been brought by the fetus had the fetus not died when the fetus never developed the capacity to survive in the first place.
17. Viability is the medical definition of the ability to survive outside the mother’s womb. See Roe,
18. For these reasons, we hold that the term “person” in Section 41-2-1 does not include a nonviable fetus. The trial court’s grant of summary judgment is affirmed.
19. IT IS SO ORDERED.
