179 S.E. 604 | W. Va. | 1935
On this certification there is presented for review the order of the circuit court of Marion County overruling the demurrer to the declaration and sustaining demurrers to the two pleas in abatement.
The action is by a husband against his wife to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been received by him, in a road accident, while a passenger in an automobile owned by his wife, and being operated by her on the Lee Highway, in De Kalb County, Alabama. The injuries are attributed to her negligent driving. The wife resides in Washington, D.C., the husband in said county of Marion, where this action was brought and she was served with process.
The first plea in abatement challenges the jurisdiction of the trial court. A right of action to recover damages for a tort is transitory, and, as a general rule, may be maintained wherever the alleged wrongdoer may be found. 5 Ruling Case Law, page 1035; Owen v. Power Co.,
By the second plea in abatement, there is brought in question the right of a spouse to maintain in this jurisdiction an action of tort against his or her consort. Since it appears from the face of the declaration that the parties to the action are husband and wife, respectively, there arises on the demurrer to the declaration the same question that is presented by the second plea.
In Alabama, where the cause of action arose, one spouse may maintain an action of tort against the other. Johnson v.Johnson,
The common law is the basis of the jurisprudence of this state. Constitution of West Virginia, Article VIII, section 21. Its principles are controlling, save as changed by statute. Under the common law, one spouse can not maintain against the other an action for damages for personal injuries arising within the period of the marriage. 30 Corpus Juris, page 954; Madden on Domestic Relations, page 220; Strom v. Strom,
"A married woman may sue or be sued alone in any court of law or chancery in this State that may have jurisdiction of the subject matter, the same in all cases as if she were a single woman, and her husband shall not be joined with her in any case unless, for reasons other than the marital relation, it is proper or necessary, because of his interest or liability, to make him a party. In no case need a married woman, because of being such, prosecute or defend by guardian or next friend."
It is urged that the provision that a married woman may sue or be sued "the same in all cases as if she were a single woman" is of sufficient breadth to include actions between husbands and wives. That result would be possible only if great liberality of construction were proper to be applied. But such would not be the correct manner of approach. There is a fundamental rule that statutes in derogation of the common law are to be strictly construed. Kellar v. James,
In changing certain common law provisions in respect of the rights of married women, the legislature has been specific and unequivocal. For example: a married woman may become a business partner with any person "including her husband." Code, 48-3-18. She shall be liable for her tortious acts, and her husband shall not be liable therefor unless he instigated them. Code, 48-3-20. These departures from the common law are clear and specific. It is but reasonable to assume that if the legislature had intended to change the common law so that husbands and wives could maintain tort actions against each other, the expression of that intent would have been explicit, as in the two departures instanced. Evidently the purpose of the act was not to authorize damage actions between spouses, but to make it possible for a married woman *191 to sue, or be sued by, a third person, without her husband's being joined with her as plaintiff or defendant, as was required by the common law.
In Thompson v. Thompson,
A radical departure from the common law, such as the authorization of damage actions between spouses, should be given birth only through unequivocal legislative enactment.Thompson v. Thompson, supra. A change like that should not come about through judicial interpretation of a statutory provision, which indicates legislative intent to deal with matters other than those arising between husband and wife. Therefore we consider that the common law rule precluding personal tort actions between husband and wife has not been abrogated in this state.
Notwithstanding, under comity, courts may give recognition to a right originating in another state and founded on the law thereof, though that law does not harmonize with the law of the forum (Minor, Conflict of Laws, sec. 196; Dulin v. McCaw,
"The (public) policy of a state or nation must be determined by its Constitution, laws, and judicial decisions, not by the varying opinions of lawyers or judges as to the demands or interest of the public." Southern Pacific Co. v. Dusablon,
Since under both constitutional provision (West Virginia Constitution, Article VIII, section 21) and legislative enactment (Code,
The Alabama rule, permitting a husband or wife to sue the other for damages for personal injuries, not only is at variance with and in contravention of the common law, but is out of harmony with pronounced public policy of this state. We have no case presenting the precise question here under consideration, but we have a closely analogous case,Securo v. Securo,
It has been suggested that the common law rule precluding such actions is grounded on the legal fiction of the unity of husband and wife. Perhaps that fiction played its part, but we are impressed, as was the Michigan court in theBandfield case, that the rule is founded in wisdom; and, whatever may have been the original theory of the rule, in our judgment the fullness of time has justified its existence. Considering the fact that the legislature has made material changes in the common law rights and liabilities of married women, its failure to authorize tort actions between them and their husbands is strongly indicative of legislative approval of and satisfaction with the common law rule.
In the light of these principles, we conclude that defendant's second plea in abatement presented a complete defense to the action, and that the demurrer to said plea should have been overruled. By the same standards, the demurrer to the declaration should have been sustained and the action dismissed.
For the reasons set forth, we sustain the demurrer to the declaration and dismiss the action.
Reversed and dismissed. *194