After Mrs. Peters delivered a stillborn child at Elbert Memorial Hospital, she and her husband, residents of South Carolina, filed suit against the hospital authority and various medical personnel in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia, seeking to recover damages for, among other things, prenatal injuries allegedly inflicted upon the fetus by the defendants, as well as for the pain and suffering of the fetus. Applying Georgia law to the diversity action (see 28 USC § 1652), the district court dismissed the claims the Peterses brought as the representatives of the stillborn child, ruling that Georgia law did not recognize the causes of action they were asserting. When the Peterses appealed the district court’s order to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, that court determined that the dispositive question of law had not been resolved in any Georgia state court, and certified the following question to this court for resolution:
Can a parent state a cause of action on behalf of a stillborn child for damages arising from prenatal injuries to the child? In essence, does a stillborn child have a right to recover for injuries sustained while inside the womb?
We answer the question in the negative.
*488 1. OCGA § 51-1-9 authorizes “[e]very person” against whom a tort is committed to recover therefor, and OCGA § 9-2-41 provides that a cause of action for the recovery of damages for personal injury is not abated by the death of a party. Invoking § 9-2-41, the Peterses wish to pursue, as the representatives of the stillborn child, causes of action which they contend the stillborn child was entitled to pursue under § 51-1-9. The heart of the Peterses’ position is that the stillborn child had a cause of action against the alleged tortfeasors, despite not having been born alive. The question before us is whether live birth is a necessary prerequisite to the maintenance of an action by the victim of a tort.
Since 1951, Georgia law has recognized that a child born after sustaining a tortious prenatal injury may bring an action to recover damages for the injury sustained.
Tucker v. Howard L. Carmichael & Sons,
2. Appellants contend that our holding requiring a live birth in order for the child to bring a tort action violates the equal protection clause of the state and federal constitutions. We agree with the district court’s analysis of the issue: the allegedly discriminatory practice is rationally related to a legitimate governmental purpose — a limitation on who is entitled to bring a tort action is an attempt to provide solid ground in the quagmire surrounding fetal injury. See Hornbuckle v. Plantation Pipe Line Co., supra at 506 (Duckworth, C. J., concurring specially): “We have the law confused too much already.”
Certified question answered in the negative.
