OPINION
After a trial by jury, a judgment of $30,000 was returned in favor of plaintiff’s husband in companion case 4618, for injuries received in an automobile collision between cars driven by plaintiff’s husband and an employee of defendant. In the instant case, a judgment of $5,000 was returned in favor of plaintiff for loss of consortium as a result of the accident.
Defendant has moved the court to set aside the judgment in case 4619, and seeks a new trial in case 4618, D.C.,
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The basis on which the court is requested to set aside the judgment of $5,000 is that under the decided cases in Indiana, which was the situs of the áccident, there is no right of a wife to recover damages for loss of consortium, although such right is recognized as to a husband. Burk v. Anderson,
In the opinion of this court, following the reasoning of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, modern concepts of the marital relationship do not allow such anachronistic practices to be perpetuated in the law. In the case of Hitaffer v. Argonne Co., 87 U.S.App.2d 57,
As pointed out by the Hitaffer court, the right existed at common law, and when female emancipation resulted in the passage of enabling legislation removing previous disabilities on a woman’s right to act in her own behalf before the law, the last barrier to the maintenance of such a suit should have been removed. (Id.
In Indiana, two theories have been advanced to support the existing rule. In Brown v. Kistleman,
In Boden v. Del-Mar Garage,
Thus again, to say that the husband has a right of action for all the elements of his consortium, but the wife does not, runs afoul of Fourteenth Amendment guarantees.
Under the Erie doctrine, federal courts are bound to follow the substantive law of the states in diversity cases. However, when, as here, a federal question is presented, the court does not look to the law of the state, but to federal law as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court, Porter Royalty Pool Co. v. C.I.R.,
Thus, this court determines that the denial of the right to sue for loss of *822 consortium, when applied to a wife but not a husband, is clearly a violation of the wife’s right to equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. To draw such a distinction between a husband and wife is a classification which is unreasonable and impermissible, and likewise a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees.
The motion to set aside the judgment in favor of Irene Owen in Civil Action 4619 is hereby denied. An order may be drawn accordingly.
