This appeal involves the ustice. which was applied to this case and which prevented appellant Wayne Spears from suing his ex-wife, appellee Barbara Spears, for negligence. Wayne Spears claims on appeal that (a) the parental immunity doctrine is unconstitutional, (b) the doctrine discriminates against an innocent class of people, and (c) the doctrine violates freedom to contract and public policy. Given the facts of this case and the legal arguments made, we decline to overrule the parental immunity doctrine and affirm the order of the trial court.
On April 11, 1998, Rebekah Spears, age 15, was killed in a car wreck in Jefferson County. Her mother, Barbara Spears, was driving the car in which Rebekah, a passenger, was killed. As a result, Wayne Spears brought a wrongful death action for negligence against Barbara Spears. He sued individually; as parent, guardian, and next friend of his minor child, Reuben Spears; and as the administrator of the estate of Rebekah Spears. He asked for $1,200,000 in damages for her negligence and also sought punitive damages for willful and wanton conduct. He further sought a declaratory judgment to declare the parental immunity doctrine unconstitutional as applied to the minor children in this case.
Barbara Spears answered and pled that the claims in the complaint were barred by parental immunity, that the complaint failed to state a claim for willful and wanton conduct, that the request for punitive damages violated the Arkansas Constitution, and that Wayne Spears was attempting to inject issues of contract into a tort action. She also filed a motion to dismiss the complaint and asserted that no facts were set out in the complaint to sustain a claim of willful and wanton behavior for punitive damages and that the parental immunity doctrine foreclosed a cause of action in negligence. Thе trial court entered an order granting the motion to dismiss.
Wayne Spears first contends in his appeal that the trial court erred in dismissing his negligence cause of action beсause the doctrine of parental immunity is unconstitutional. He specifically urges that the doctrine violates the constitutional rights of unemancipated minors to equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. To support his contention, he mounts a legion of arguments.
First, he points out generally that the parental immunity doctrine is slowly eroding in this country and that the trend is toward partial abrogation of the principle. He observes that in connection with this trend, the doctrine of spousal immunity for unintentional torts was abrogated in Arkansas in 1957. See Leach v. Leach,
We initially review the development of the pаrental immunity doctrine in this state. In 1938, this court first addressed the matter of parental immunity when an involuntary tort was involved. See Rambo v. Rambo,
In 1980, we held that an unemancipated minor may not hold a parent or a person standing in locо parentis hable for an involuntary tort committed against him. See Thomas v. Inmon,
In Attwood v. Estate of Attwood,
In Carpenter v. Bishop,
Most recently, we upheld the doctrine of parental immunity in Robinson v. Robinson,
We are aware that while some jurisdictions like Arkansas have retained the parental immunity doctrine, othеr jurisdictions have either abandoned the doctrine totally or recognized a variety of exceptions to it. See, generally, Romualdo P. Eclavea, Annotation, Liability of Parent for Injury to Unemancipated Child Caused by Parent’s Negligence - Modern Cases,
This court has in the past announced its willingness to revisit and reexamine our hоldings on a given issue. See, e.g, Dawson v. Gerritson,
Wayne Spears raises two other points for appeal, neither of which we are able to address. The first is that by preventing minors from bringing suits against family members and their liability carriers, this court has unreasonably discriminated against those minors. Second, he contends that the family member exclusion violates the freedom to contract and thе public policy behind mandatory liability coverage. See Ark. Code Ann. § 23-89-202 (Repl. 1992). He presents, however, no convincing argument or authority for these propositions but only rаises them as conclusory points. We will not address issues on appeal that are not appropriately developed. See Ellis v. Price,
Affirmed.
