Hеnry M. Pickle and Bertha E. Pickle, originally named as plaintiffs herein, were the grandfather and grandmother of Vernon Owen Pickle, an infant. They had legally adopted the child upon his abandonment by his mother. Several years later, the mother, enlisting the services of the defendant, a county Sheriff, caused the child to be abducted from the possession of his foster parents. The defendant, employing violence and exhibiting a reckless defiance of the rights of the lawful custodians, actively aided in procuring the abduction. The child, who was then five and one-half years *476 of age, was given over by the defendant into the possession of the mother. This action was thereupon brought to recover damages from the defendant for the injuries inflicted upon the foster parents by the abduction. On the trial the action was dismissed as to Bеrtha Pickle, the grandmother, and permitted to continue in the name of Henry M. Pickle, the grandfather and foster, father, as the sole plaintiff. In estimating damages the jury were permitted to consider the wounded feelings of the foster father, and to impose punitive damages uрon the defendant.
An action of trespass for the abduction of a child was originally maintainable by a father where the child abducted was the son and heir, and not otherwise.
(Barham
v.
Dennis,
2 Cro. Eliz. 770.) This was
“
by reason the marriage of his heir belongs to the father, but not of any other his sons or daughters; ” and, althоugh it had been adjudged that the writ of trespass lay
“
for a parrot, a popinjay, a thrush, and, as
The principle that the abduction of a child, not the heir, or not capable of rendering service, was a wrong for which the law furnished no civil remedy, was not adopted without protest, nor has it reсeived unqualified approval. Thus in
Barham
v.
Dennis (supra)
Glanville uttered a strong dissent, saying: “ For the father hath an interest in every of his children to educate them, and to provide for them; and he hath his comfort by them; wherefore it is not reasonable that any should take them from him, and to do him such an injury, but that hе should have his remedy to punish it.” Blackstone was of the opinion that for the abduction of a child, other than the heir, a father might maintain an action, stating that such a wrong was “ remediable by writ of
ravishment
or action of
trespass vi et armis, de filio, vel filia, rapto vel abducto;
in the same manner as thе husband may have it, on account of the abduction of his wife.” (Bl. Comm. 140.) Judge Cooley, referring to the holdings in
Barham
v.
Dennis
and
Hall
v.
Hollander,
has remarked: “This sometimes leads to results which are extraordinary, for it seems to follow, as a necessary consequence, that if the child, from want of maturity or other cause, is incapable of rendering service, the parent can suffer no pecuniary injury, and therefore can maintain no action when the child is abducted or injured.” (Cooley on Torts, p. 481.) Judge Cowen, referring to the English rule that, for the consequences of an injury to an immature child, no remedy runs to the father, has said that he should regard it as quite questionable whether such a principle prevailed in this State.
(Hartfield
v.
Roper,
It is undoubtedly true that the gravamen of an action brought by a parent for the seduction of a daughter is loss of service.
(Moran
v.
Dawes,
Returning to the subject of abduction, we find no decisions by the courts of this country holding that, in actions to recover damages for the abduction of a child, the parent must allege and prove, as a condition of his recovery, a loss of the services of the child. It is true that the Supreme Court of New Jersey, in the case of
Magee
v.
Holland
(27 N. J. L. 86), expressed the opinion
*480
that it was the “ established law ” that loss of service must be shown. That case involved the abduction of three children of the ages from three to six. Notwithstanding the opinion expressed by the court, as to the general principle underlying all such cases, the court held that the jury was entitled to infer a loss of service, despite the tender ages of the children abducted. So far as the law of this country has become “ established ” by the decisions of its courts, it would seem that the general principle is contrary to that stated in the New Jersey case. In South Carolina it has been held that the action is maintainable without proof or allegation of loss of service.
(Kirkpatrick
v.
Lockhart,
1 Bre. Law [S. C.] [1807], p. 654.) The court there said:
“
The true ground of action is the outrage and deprivation; the injury the father sustains in the loss of his child; the insult offered to his feelings; the heart-rending agony he must suffer in the destruction of his dearest hopes, and the irreparable loss of that comfort and society which may be the only solace of his declining age.” In North Carolina the same holding was made in
Howell
v.
Howell
(
The cases of
Dennis
v.
Clark
(
“ So late as Barham, v. Dennis, Cro. Eliz. 770, a father had no remedy for the abduction of any of his children but the heir at law; at this day, by means of a servitude almost fictitious, power is put into bis hands to redress almost every injury that may be done to them.”
In the absence of any New York authority upon the *482 subject; in the default of any decision to the contrary in the courts of our sister States; in view of the anomalies concededly presented in the holdings in the analogous cases of seduction; we are disposed to hold broadly, as havе the courts of North and South Carolina, that in actions for the abduction of immature children from the custody of their lawful custodians, parents or foster parents, no loss of service need be alleged or proven; that for the direct injury done, a direct recovery may be had without resort to the fiction that a loss of service has been occasioned. It would be a reproach to our legal system if, for the abduction of a child in arms, no remedy ran to its parent, although “ for a parrot, a popinjay, a thrush ” and even “ for a dog ” an ample remedy is furnished to their custodian for the loss of their possession.
It is true that for a loss of service resulting from a physical injury to a child, other than through seduction, neither damages for wounded feelings nor punitive damages may be awarded to a parent.
(Whitney
v.
Hitchcock,
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Pound, Crane, Lehman, O’Brien and Hubbs, JJ., concur; Cardozo, Ch. J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.
