delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision in this appeal is whether the doctrine of intra-family immunity bars recovery of damages for the death of an unemancipated child as a result of a parent’s negligent or intentional act. The question stems from a motion for judgment filed by Shari G. Pavlick, Administratrix of the Estate of Justin Robert Pavlick, *178 deceased, against the defendant, Thomas Matthew Pavlick, Jr., seeking damages for the wrongful death of the deceased, the infant son of Shari Pavlick and the defendant.
The defendant filed a plea to the motion for judgment asserting that he was “immune from suit under the doctrine of intra-family immunity.” The trial court sustained the plea and dismissed the plaintiff’s motion for judgment. We awarded the plaintiff an appeal.
Justin was bom June 24, 1994. He died August 18, 1994, when less than two months old, allegedly from injuries sustained while in the care and custody of the defendant. In her two-count motion for judgment, the plaintiff alleged that Justin died as a result of the defendant’s negligence or, alternatively, that the death resulted from the defendant’s intentional act. 2
In sustaining the plea of immunity, the trial judge noted that there is no Virginia precedent “supporting a denial of the plea.” The plaintiff responds on appeal with a request that we abrogate the rale of intra-family immunity completely or, alternatively, that we recognize an exception to the rule allowing recovery for the death of a child resulting from the intentional act of a parent.
Citing numerous out-of-state cases, the plaintiff says that “[cjourts in the majority of states which have considered the matter in recent years have found that the doctrine of intra-family immunity can not be justified and have abolished parental tort immunity.”
3
In abolishing parental immunity, the plaintiff states, courts have rejected the several factors that prompted adoption of intra-family immunity in the first place,
viz.,
“(1) the wish for domestic peace and tranquility; (2) the desire to allow the parent to discipline and control the child; (3) the wish not to allow family resources to be depleted; [and] (4) the wish to avoid possible fraud or collusion.” Quoting
Kirchner v. Crystal,
With respect to injuries caused by the intentional acts of a parent, the plaintiff says that “[vjirtually every reported case that has considered [the issue] has held that the bar of intra-family immunity should not apply to such [acts].” 4 In so holding, the plaintiff states, courts “have recognized that to permit a child to maintain a suit against a parent [for injuries] resulting from an intentional or willful tort is no more disruptive to the family peace and tranquility than depriving the child of the right to bring such a suit.”
The defendant argues, on the other hand, that “[t]he doctrine of intra-family/parental immunity is alive and well in Virginia.” There are no cases in Virginia, the defendant states, “which allow suit by a deceased unemancipated child’s estate against [a] living parent [for the parent’s allegedly negligent or intentional acts,] given the instant circumstances.” The defendant asserts that while there are several exceptions to the doctrine in Virginia, none is applicable here.
The considerations prompting the initial adoption of intra-family immunity are still viable, the defendant maintains, especially when, as here, the family includes another child of the parents’ marriage. The defendant submits that “[t]o allow one child’s cause of action to take assets of the family required to support the entire family unit is certainly cause for disharmony in the family unit, even where the parent responsible for the egregious conduct is no longer an integral part of that unit.”
Quoting from Hewellette v. George, 9 So. 885 (Miss. 1891), 5 the defendant maintains that “[t]he state, through its criminal laws, will give the minor child protection from parental violence and wrongdoing, and this is all the child can be heard to demand.” Id. at 887. This is sufficient reason, the defendant submits, to forbid a minor child from asserting a civil claim to redress personal injuries suffered at the hands of a parent. Other courts have followed this rationale, *180 the defendant states, “and to this date the majority of states have not completely abrogated the [intra-family immunity] Rule.” 6
Finally, the defendant asserts that there is a strong public policy in Virginia against the complete abrogation of the rule. Accordingly, the defendant concludes, we should refrain from abrogating the rule in the interest of maintaining “parental discipline and control and family harmony.”
This Court first considered the doctrine of intra-family immunity in
Norfolk Southern R.R.
v.
Gretakis,
We soon recognized an exception to the intra-family immunity rule. In
Worrell
v.
Worrell,
We next considered the intra-family immunity rule in
Brumfield v. Brumfield,
Later, in
Smith v. Kauffman,
Finally, in
Wright
v.
Wright, 213
Va. 177,
This examination of our prior decisions on the rule of intrafamily immunity establishes two propositions. First, the rule is “alive and well in Virginia,” as the defendant maintains, at least to the extent it still bars recovery by an unemancipated child against a parent for negligence in a non-automobile or non-business related situation. See Gretakis, Brumfield, and Wright. Second, as the plaintiff observes on brief, “[n]o Virginia case has ever held that the bar of intra-family immunity applies to intentional, wilful, or malicious torts.”
This brings us to the question whether we should abrogate the rule of intra-family immunity completely, as the plaintiff requests, refuse to alter the rule in any way, as the defendant urges, or recognize an exception to the rule to allow recovery for injuries to an unemancipated child resulting from the intentional act of a parent, as the plaintiff asks alternatively.
*182
In order to abrogate the rule completely, we would be required to overrule
Gretakis, Brumfield,
and
Wright.
Yet, those decisions were accepted as correct when made, they have been relied upon since by the bench, the bar, and the public, and nothing has occurred, such as the advent of “[t]he very high incidence of liability insurance covering Virginia-based motor vehicles,” noted in
Smith,
Furthermore, we are not satisfied that the considerations which prompted the adoption of the intra-family immunity rule in the first place have become “outdated, highly questionable and unpersuasive” 7 in all instances. When applied in negligence cases similar to Gretakis, Brumfield, and Wright, the rule may still work to maintain peace and tranquility within the family unit.
The “doctrine of stare decisis is more than a mere cliche” in Virginia; it “plays a significant role in the orderly administration of justice by assuring consistent, predictable, and balanced application of legal principles.”
Selected Risks Ins. Co.
v.
Dean,
We are not inclined, however, to respond favorably to the defendant’s urging that we refuse to alter the rule in any way. Rather, we think the proper course is to recognize an exception to the rule of intra-family immunity when, as alleged here, a child’s death results from the intentional act of a parent.
As noted supra, no Virginia case has ever applied the rule of intra-family immunity to an intentional tort committed by a parent against a child. Therefore, to recognize an exception with respect to an intentional tort by a parent resulting in the death of a child would neither disturb established precedent nor offend principles of stare decisis.
Furthermore, such an exception would be supported by logic and common sense. The factors which prompted adoption of intra-family immunity in the first place are totally irrelevant when considered in the context of the death of a child caused by the intentional act of a parent. Indeed, such an act defeats the very purpose of the immunity rule. Paraphrasing the opinion of the Supreme Court of Oregon in
*183
Cowgill v. Boock,
Finally, we do not overlook the defendant’s argument based upon Hewellette v. George, supra, that “[t]he state, through its criminal laws, will give the minor child protection from parental violence and wrong-doing, and this is all the child can be heard to demand.” However, while enforcement of the criminal laws may serve the public interest in protecting children from parental violence, such enforcement does not serve to redress the loss suffered by the survivors of a child whose death results from the intentional act of a parent. They have the right to demand more. Furthermore, to allow recovery against the parent here may also serve as a deterrent against similar conduct by other parents.
For these reasons, we refuse to abrogate the rule of intra-family immunity completely. Accordingly, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment to the extent it sustained the plea of intra-family immunity with respect to the defendant’s alleged negligence. However, we will reverse the judgment to the extent it failed to recognize an exception to the rule of intra-family immunity that would have allowed recovery against the defendant for the death of his unemancipated child as a result of his allegedly intentional act, and we will remand the case for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Notes
The defendant states on brief that he has been convicted of second-degree murder as a result of Justin’s death and is serving time in the penitentiary.
Hebel
v.
Hebel,
Brunner v. Hutchinson Div., Lear-Siegler, Inc.,
In the official Mississippi reporter,
In
Glaskox v.
Glaskox,
Kirchner
v.
Crystal,
