Jodene and Michael Santana sued Zilog, Inc., Jodene’s employer, claiming that Jodene was exposed to dangerous chemicals on the job that caused her to miscarry six times from 1988 to 1993. They asserted wrongful death claims in Idaho state court for the deaths of their unborn fetuses, allegedly due to Zilog’s negligence, failure to warn, and battery. Zilog, a California corporation, removed the ease to federal court. The district court granted Zilog’s Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, concluding that under Idaho law no cause of action exists for wrongful death of a nonviable fetus. The Santanas filed a timely appeal. The district court had diversity jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm.
I
In August 1988 Jodene Santana began working at Zilog’s Nampa, Idaho facility in the computer chip fabrication area, known as “the Fab.” At the time she started her job at Zilog, Mrs. Santana was the mother of three children, and she and her husband planned to have a fourth child. Between August 1988 and March 1993, while employed by Zilog, Mrs. Santana conceived six
The longest of the six terminated pregnancies lasted seventeen weeks, which is not a long enough period of gestation for any of the fetuses to have been viable.
The Santanas allege that while she worked in the Fab, Mrs. Santana was exposed to dangerous chemicals, which Zilog knew, or should have known, could adversely affect her reproductive health and the health of her fetuses. In their complaint, they assert wrongful death claims for the six miscarried fetuses, based on causes of action for negligence, failure to warn, and battery. Zilog submitted two Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss claiming that Idaho recognizes no cause of action for nonviable fetuses, and alternatively, that Idaho’s Worker’s Compensation scheme preempts any wrongful death claim in this case. The district court granted the first motion and denied the second motion as moot. Santana v. Zilog, Inc.,
II
A dismissal for failure to state a claim pursuant to Federal Rule of CM Procedure 12(b)(6) is a ruling on a question of law that is reviewed de novo. Stone v. Travelers Corp.,
The only question on appeal is whether Idaho’s wrongful death statute, Idaho Code § 5-311, supports a cause of action for the six nonviable fetuses Mrs. Santana miscarried while working at Zilog. We hold that it does not.
Idaho’s wrongful death statute provides:
When the death of a person is caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another, his or her heirs or personal representatives on their behalf may maintain an action for damages against the person causing the death, or in case of the death of such wrongdoer, against the personal representative of such wrongdoer, whether the wrongdoer dies before or after the death of the person injured.
Idaho Code § 5-311 (emphasis added). The Idaho Supreme Court has held that the term “person” in this statute includes a fetus that has developed to the stage of viability, which means that it has the ability to survive outside the mother’s womb. Volk v. Baldazo,
In the absence of state supreme court precedent, federal courts exercising diversity jurisdiction may look to “other state-court decisions, well-reasoned decisions from other jurisdictions, and any other available authority” to determine how the state court would resolve the issue. Burns v. International Ins. Co.,
A
Although most states allow tort recovery for prenatal injury to children eventually bom alive, they are split upon whether to permit recovery for wrongful death of a fetus in útero. Still, the vast majority of states allows recovery if the fetus has reached the stage of viability. See Farley v. Sartin,
By contrast, of those jurisdictions that have considered whether their wrongful death statutes similarly permit recovery for death of a nonviable fetus, all but a few have refused to recognize such a cause of action.
The cases expressing the majority view cite a variety of rationales for drawing the line at viability. Many courts use viability as a condition precedent for recovery because until that point the fetus is not capable of sustaining an independent, separate existence from its mother. See, e.g., Humes,
Some courts have also pointed out that “the uncertainty of whether a pregnancy will
Perhaps the most frequent rationale courts give for refusing recovery for nonviable fetuses is that such an expansion of liability is better left to the state’s legislature. From their inception, wrongful death statutes expanded tort liability beyond that recognized at common law. W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on Torts § 127, at 945 (5th Ed.1984) (noting that under the common law a tort victim’s family could not recover if the victim died of his injuries). The later trend extending tort law to include prenatal injuries expanded potential liability even more. But without clear legislative direction, most courts have refused to further extend liability to cover previable fetuses. E.g., Thibert,
Courts in five states have recognized this cause of action pursuant to express legislative enactments defining the stage at which fetal rights attach. See, e.g., Porter v. Lassiter,
The West Virginia Supreme Court is the only court to recognize a cause of action for a nonviable fetus without action by the state legislature. See Farley v. Sartin,
The court’s primary argument is that there is no legitimate reason to distinguish between viable and nonviable fetuses in the wrongful death context. The court suggests that viability is an artificial distinction in this context, that focuses too much on the status of the life that has been wrongfully terminated, and too little on the wrongful conduct that caused the death. Id.
The majority cases addressed these same issues, but most of them ultimately made a policy decision to leave further extension of tort liability to the legislature. Although the Farley opinion is well-reasoned and thoughtful, it does not undermine the equally well-reasoned majority view, but simply adopts an alternate interpretation. It is our task to predict which alternative the Idaho courts would choose when interpreting Idaho’s wrongful death statute and its case law regarding fetal rights.
B
Upon reviewing Idaho’s case law and statutes, we find nothing to suggest that the Idaho courts would be likely to follow the minority view expressed solely by West Virginia. Without more clear direction, we are inclined to follow the majority cases, and to decline the appellants’ invitation to judicially extend Idaho’s tort law to cover the wrongful death of a nonviable fetus.
Idaho has no statutes similar to those of Georgia, Louisiana, Illinois, Missouri and South Dakota,
Appellants also point out that the Volk court supported its interpretation of the wrongful death statute by noting that the statute serves two policies: “first of which is to provide damages to those parties authorized to bring wrongful death actions, and the second of which is to deter wrongful conduct through the imposition of civil liability.” Volk,
Finally, appellants advance two additional arguments in support of their claim that Idaho law manifests an intent to protect the unborn from the moment of conception. First, appellants claim that because the Idaho Supreme Court recognized a parent’s cause of action for wrongful birth, but rejected a child’s cause of action for wrongful life,
Second, appellants argue that Idaho’s death penalty statute expresses a clear state policy to protect unborn fetuses without regard to viability, because it prohibits execution of a pregnant woman. Idaho Code §§ 19-2713 and 2714. These statutes simply have no bearing on whether a nonviable fetus is a “person” under the wrongful death statute. Even if the state refuses to recognize a nonviable fetus as a “person” in one context, that does not mean that it is a nonentity entitled to no protection under the law. Idaho’s death penalty statute merely indicates that the State seeks not to punish the fetus for the crimes of its mother.
In the end, we are left with the task of predicting what Idaho’s response to this case would be. The Idaho courts have given no clear indication, but they have followed the majority trend in two cases involving fetal rights. See Volk,
Ill
The underlying question in all of these cases is at what point a fetus becomes a “person.” This poses an obvious moral and philosophical dilemma that cannot be easily solved with logic. Although viability may be a somewhat arbitrary distinction in the wrongful death context, it does provide a logical point at which to halt further judicial extension of the cause of action. Any further expansion of potential liability seems most properly left to the Idaho legislature, as the majority of cases suggests. We therefore
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In their complaint, appellants note that Mrs. Santana was granted leaves of absence from her job, upon her physician's request, soon after she became pregnant the third, fourth, and fifth times, but she still miscarried. ER Tab 1, Exhibit A to Notice of Removal.
. Courts have placed viability at about week 23 to 24 of gestation. See, e.g., Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,
. At the current time, fifteen jurisdictions have rejected a cause of action for nonviable fetuses, even though they have recognized a cause of action for viable fetuses. In addition, nine jurisdictions do not allow wrongful death causes of action for any fetus, regardless of viability. See Farley,
. Some courts have suggested that Roe v. Wade,
. The most analogous statute would be Idaho Code § 32-102, which provides that "[a] child conceived, but not yet bom, is to be deemed an existing person so far as may be necessary for its interests, in the event of its subsequent birth.” However, the court in Volk expressly held that Section 32-102's definition of "person” does not apply to Idaho’s wrongful death statute. Volk,
. Before the amendment, the wrongful death cause of action was defined by two statutes: Idaho Code §§ 5-310 and 5-311. These statutes were amended in 1984, and now only section 5-311 applies to wrongful death. The amendments did not change the cause of action in any way relevant to this appeal. See the district court’s opinion for the text of the original statutes,
. “Wrongful birth is a cause of action in the family of an infant, which imposes liability on a defendant for damages and expenses incurred by the parents of a child bom with birth defects when, but for the negligence of the defendant, the child would not have been conceived or carried to term.” Blake,
