The plaintiff, the minor daughter of Joseph J. Nelson and Mary M. Nelson, brings this action of tort by her father and next friend against the defendant for enticing her mother to desert her father and herself, thereby 'depriving the plaintiff of support, maintenance and 'maternal care and affection. In the Superior Court a demurrer to the declaration was sustained, and the case was reported on the -terms that if the ruling was right judgment is to be entered .for the defendant.
■ In
White
v.
Thomson,
■ At common law it is held that one spouse may maintain an action against a third person for procuring and enticing the other spouse to desert the plaintiff, and thus causing the deprivation of the plaintiff’s right of consortium.
Bigaouette
v.
Paulet,
Until recent years, there was no authority for the maintenance of such an action by a minor child for the disruption of a home. But within recent years there have been decisions that a minor child may maintain an action for enticing a parent away from the family home.
Daily
v.
Parker,
152 Fed; (2d) 174, 162 A. L. B. 819.
Russick
v.
Hicks,
85 Fed. Sup. 281.
Johnson
v.
Luhman,
In a note in 83 Univ. of Pa. L. Bev. 276, 277, referring to the reasoning of the cases already cited permitting such an action, it is said,
“
Numerous practical obstructions, however, inhibit application of this reasoning, the more obvious difficulties being: (1) Possibility of a multiplicity of suits, since the husband has his action, and extension of the principal basis thereof would usually include other minor or dependent children; (2) Possibility of extortionary litigation, for this action, always susceptible to fraud, would become even more so by virtue of its numerical increase and the relative tenuousness of the child’s relationship; (3) Inability to define the point at which the child’s right would cease, inasmuch as the status itself hypothesizes mutability (i.e., a spouse is, barring extraordinary circumstances, always a spouse, but the very nature of childhood implies an eventual change to adulthood); (4) Inability of a jury adequately to cope with the question of damages, first, because injuries like that now under discussion are hard to measure in money and courts are averse to permitting the more or less .conjectural awards based on mental suffering, and second, because damages thus assessed are apt to overlap, the number and ages of children ordinarily being noted in a parent’s action.” Apparently approving the foregoing, is what is said in the opinion in
Taylor
v.
Keefe,
134 Conn: 156,161. The public policy involved bears some similarity to that which forbids actions of tort between a
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parent and a minor child.
Luster
v.
Luster,
On the whole, we are inclined to join the weight of author- ' ity in holding that the child in the present case has no right of action.
Taylor
v.
Keefe,
Order sustaining demurrer affirmed.
Judgment for the defendant.
