380 A.2d 1353 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1977
The second count of the plaintiffs' complaint is brought by William P. Simon, administrator of the estate of Anna Simon. It alleges a cause of action for personal injuries to the intestate, resulting in her death, which is claimed to have been caused by the defendant's negligence. Those injuries are stated to have been sustained by the decedent en ventre sa mere on September 6, 1975, when her mother, in the fourth month of pregnancy, was injured while a passenger in an automobile that was struck by the defendant's car. As a consequence of this collision, the mother suffered from intermittent vaginal bleeding and a premature rupture of her membranes, causing the spontaneous birth, on November 6, 1975, of the decedent. On behalf of Anna Simon, her administrator alleges that as a result of the defendant's negligence she (1) was born prematurely; (2) suffered acute respiratory distress; (3) endured pain and other suffering; and (4) received a profound shock to her nervous system, and other unknown injuries, all of which caused, contributed to and resulted in her death on November 7, 1975.
The defendant has demurred to this count of the plaintiffs' complaint on the ground that the decedent's mother was in the fourth month of pregnancy at the time of the accident and "no cause of action lies in this state for a non-viable fetus."
This precise question has never before been presented to the Connecticut courts. Although there has been no ruling from the Connecticut Supreme Court relating to a claim for injury even to a viable fetus, that is, one capable of living outside the mother's womb, the Superior Court has in four reported cases allowed an action against a negligent wrongdoer for injuries in this later stage of pregnancy. In so doing it departed from its 1947 holding *141
in Squillo v. New Haven,
The Superior Court has, since 1955, followed this trend. The precedent was first set in Tursi v. NewEngland Windsor Co.,
The swing initiated by Bonbrest v. Kotz, supra, has not, at least with respect to prenatal injuries suffered by children subsequently born alive, been limited to cases of injuries during viability. "Rather, the rule allowing a cause of action has frequently been extended to injuries incurred at any period of gestation." 62 Am. Jur.2d 614, Prenatal Injuries, § 2. In cases of injury to a nonviable fetus, the trend to recovery by a child surviving birth usually has been a two-step progression in the jurisdiction.
The enlarged right of recovery for fetal injuries began in New York. In Woods v. Lancet,
A precedent was then established for recovery by a child for prenatal injuries received while a nonviable fetus. Other jurisdictions have uniformly *143
followed this and successive authorities emanating from it, establishing by their progressive multiplicity a ruling principle of law. In 1956, the Supreme Court of Georgia was the first to follow this new legal path in Hornbuckle v. Plantation PipeLine Co.,
The Supreme Court of New Jersey next added its support to this new right of recovery in Smith
v. Brennan,
Acknowledging that Smith v. Brennan, supra, "is a compendium of the present stance of the law," the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania relied upon it to allow a minor child a right of action for injuries inflicted when a fetus of one month. Sinkler v.Kneale,
Of particular importance is this change of direction as it is reflected in the later decisions of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts concerning the right to recover for prenatal injuries. Its historical precedent in Dietrich v. Inhabitantsof Northampton, supra, denying that recovery, was followed in subsequent cases on the basis of stare decisis. See Cavanaugh v. First National StoresInc.,
The well-established trend in support of a right of recovery by or behalf of a child born alive for prenatal injuries inflicted at any time of the pregnancy has continued unbroken to the present time. In each reported case the cited authorities in support of this extension of recovery have grown by accumulation. The Supreme Court of Michigan, in 1971, allowed an action by a child for prenatal injuries suffered during the fourth month of pregnancy.Womack v. Buchhorn,
Most recently Florida joined the parade of precedents.Day v. Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
The law of negligence is primarily common law, whose great virtue is its adaptability to the conditions and needs of changing times. Smith v. Brennan,
supra, 362. Negligence is common law, and the common law has been molded and changed and brought up to date in many other cases. Womack
v. Buchhorn,
The demurrer of the defendant to the second count of the plaintiffs' complaint is, accordingly overruled.