Thomas Sullivan, plaintiff ad litem, appeals the dismissal of his first amended petition for damages resulting from the death of Mary Catherine McCarty. We affirm and find that plaintiff’s claim fails because decedent’s estate is not a "person entitled to share in the proceeds of such action” under the wrongful death statute, §§ 537.080 to 537.100, RSMo. 1
*512 I.
In reviewing the circuit court’s dismissal of a petition, the Court determines if the facts pleaded and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom state any ground for relief. We treat the facts averred as true and construe the aver-ments liberally and favorably to the plaintiff. A petition will not be dismissed for failure to state a claim if it asserts any set of facts which, if proved, would entitle the plaintiff to relief.
Martin v. City of Washington,
Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the petition establishes that on June 27, 1990, decedent Mary Catherine McCarty was walking on the public sidewalk across defendant Susan H. Carlisle’s driveway when she was run over by a car driven by defendant. She suffered numerous severe injuries, which led to her death seventeen days later. Decedent was not survived by any spouse, child, parent, sibling, or their descendants, and in fact appears to have no living kin. Her will devises her property to charitable organizations.
Plaintiff, the personal representative of decedent’s estate, was appointed plaintiff ad litem on his own motion for the purpose of instituting this action on behalf of the estate. His petition seeks damages for decedent’s injuries and suffering prior to her death, hospital and medical expenses, and funeral expenses incurred by the estate. Additional damages are sought for the loss of accumulations that decedent would have made to her estate had she lived out her life expectancy. Plaintiff asks that the proceeds of this action be distributed according to decedent’s will or, alternatively, “according to the laws of descent” as provided in § 537.095.
Defendant filed a motion to strike the appointment of the plaintiff ad litem and to dismiss the petition. The court sustained the motion to dismiss, holding that there is no person capable of bringing an action for wrongful death under § 537.080 or entitled to share in the proceeds of such an action under § 537.095. The court also ruled that the statutes make no provision for a decedent’s estate to recover the proceeds of a wrongful death action. This appeal followed.
II.
Wrongful death is a statutory cause of action.
Powell v. American Motors Corp.,
In relevant part, § 537.080.1 defines who may bring a wrongful death action as follows:
(3) If there be no persons in class (1) [spouse, children or their lineal descendants, or parents] or (2) [siblings or their descendants] entitled to bring the action, then by a plaintiff ad litem. Such plaintiff ad litem shall be appointed by the court having jurisdiction over the action for damages provided in this section uyon ayylication of some yerson entitled to share in the yroceeds of such action. Such plaintiff ad litem shall be some suitable person competent to prosecute such action and whose ayyointment is requested on behalf of those yersons entitled to share in the yroceeds of such action_ (Emphasis added.)
The persons entitled to share in the proceeds recovered by the plaintiff ad litem are determined by § 537.095.2, which states:
When any settlement is made, or recovery had, by any plaintiff ad litem, the yersons entitled to share in the yro-ceeds thereof shall be determined ac *513 cording to the laws of descent, and any settlement or recovery by such plaintiff ad litem shall likewise be distributed according to the laws of descent unless special circumstances indicate that such a distribution would be inequitable, in which case the court shall apportion the settlement or recovery in proportion to the losses suffered by each person or party entitled to share in the proceeds _ (Emphasis added.)
Plaintiff’s first point asserts that the estate of decedent is, in effect, a “person” entitled to share in the proceeds of an action for her wrongful death and to request the appointment of a plaintiff ad litem to prosecute the action on its behalf. But the statute restricts class (3) residual beneficiaries to those persons who may take under the laws of descent.
§537.095.
The word “descent” refers to hereditary succession by intestacy and not to devise by will.
Cook v. Daniels,
Numerous Missouri decisions are in accord. Our courts have consistently denied a cause of action for wrongful death to the decedent’s estate, even when there is no surviving heir.
See Pittock v. Gardner,
The wrongful death action was designed to compensate specifically designated relatives for the loss of the decedent’s economic support.
See Troll,
From the adoption in 1855 of our earliest wrongful death statute
3
until 1979, Missouri had a classic “Lord Campbell” type of action. Recovery was limited to the reasonably ascertainable pecuniary losses suffered by the statutory beneficiaries because of the death.
See O’Grady v. Brown,
In 1979, the General Assembly substantially altered our wrongful death statute by expanding the range of recoverable damages. In addition to pecuniary losses suffered because of the death, beneficiaries may now recover funeral expenses and “the reasonable value of the services, consortium, companionship, comfort, instruction, guidance, counsel, training, and support” of the deceased. They may also recover the damages incurred by the deceased between the time of injury and the time of death.
§ 537.090.
These changes resulted in a combined “death and survival” statute.
6
Powell,
But nothing in the 1979 amendment extends the cause of action to the decedent’s estate. The statute still directs that the residual beneficiaries be determined “according to the laws of descent,” as it has since 1907.
§ 537.095.2.
Recovery is still denied for certain significant types of damages caused by the death itself
to the deceased,
such as the loss of future earnings and deprivation of the pleasures of life.
Powell,
III.
Nonetheless, plaintiff urges that our statute is no longer to be considered as restricting the rights of parties damaged by the wrongful death of another, citing this Court’s abandonment of the rule of strict construction in
O’Grady.
The manifest purpose of our statute is clearly to provide, for a limited class of plaintiffs, compensation for the loss of the ‘companionship, comfort, instruction, guidance, counsel, ... and support’ of one who would have been alive but for the defendants’ wrong.
Id.
at 908 (emphasis added);
accord Powell,
Moreover, no recovery by the estate can fulfill the “manifest purpose” of the wrongful death statute cited above. The statute is primarily intended to compensate bereaved survivors for the loss of the decedent’s companionship and support. An incorporeal entity is not capable of sustaining that kind of loss.
Plaintiff correctly points out that this Court has discerned two additional objectives behind the statute: “to ensure that tortfeasors pay for the consequences of their actions, and generally to deter harmful conduct which might lead to death.”
O’Grady,
There are sound policy reasons for deferring to the General Assembly under these circumstances. The decision to recognize a new cause of action “carries with it a vast array of ancillary issues as to how these ... claims will proceed.”
Powell,
These unresolved issues underscore the wisdom of declining to expand the range of potential wrongful death beneficiaries to include the estate of the decedent. 8 We reiterate our recent comment in Powell:
Embarking into a new area of litigation such as this lends itself better to prospective legislative enactment than to the case-by-case, issue-by-issue approach that this Court would be required to undertake if these causes of action were to be recognized by common law decision.
Plaintiff also cites the statement in
O’Grady
“that a cause of action for wrongful death will lie whenever the person injured would have been entitled to recover from the defendant
but for
the fact that the injury resulted in death.”
Id.
In addition, plaintiff asserts that under the provisions of our probate code, the wrongful death claim vested in decedent’s personal representative at her death. But a wrongful death claim does not belong to the deceased.
O’Grady,
IV.
Plaintiff's second point contends that, in the absence of any surviving relatives, decedent’s estate has a common law
*516
right to recover damages for her death that is not nullified by the statute. This contention has been consistently rejected in our past decisions.
See, e.g., Powell,
Plaintiff cites
Moragne v. State Marine Lines, Inc.,
It has always been the duty of the common-law court to perceive the impact of major legislative innovations and to interweave the new legislative policies with the inherited body of common-law principles — many of them deriving from earlier legislative exertions.
Id.
at 392,
Plaintiff also asserts that a common law cause of action is authorized under the Second Restatement of Torts. But the Restatement describes the purpose of this right as follows:
When recognized, this common law right has been utilized to fill in unintended gaps in present statutes or to allow ameliorating common law principles to apply.
Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 925(k). As our previous discussion makes clear, the failure to provide a right of action to the estate is not an “unintended gap” in our statute, but rather has been the policy of this state from the beginning. Either the gap was intended or, if the state is ultimately found to be the taker of last resort, no gap exists.
Finally, plaintiff has not presented sufficient reasons for invoking this Court’s equitable powers and “allowing] ameliorating common law principles to apply.” Whatever the potential shortcomings in our present statute, plaintiff has not shown that any interested person has thereby been unjustly deprived of a remedy. That crucial factor distinguishes this case from others such as
Holt v. Burlington Northern R.R.,
in which the equitably adopted son of the deceased was permitted to maintain an action for her death, even though there was no decree of adoption at the time of the accident.
Finding no error, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment of dismissal.
Notes
. All references are to RSMo 1986 except § 537.-080, RSMo Supp.1992.
.Named after Lord Campbell’s Act, the first statute to partially abrogate the English common law rule against tort recovery for wrongful death. 9 & 10 Viet., c. 93 (1846).
. R.S. 1855, pp. 647-9, Ch. 51, §§ 2-4.
. Id. p. 648, § 2.
. Laws 1907, p. 252.
. The words “survival” or "survivorship" are used here to describe certain types of damages available under the wrongful death statute. This statute should not be confused with the so-called "survival statutes,” which ensure that preexisting claims will not abate upon the death of the plaintiff or defendant. See §§ 537.010, 537.-020, 537.021.
. They could also be met if the state is the taker of last resort. See n. 8.
. Missouri's descent and distribution statute lists the state as the taker of property by escheat if no other person is entitled to inherit.
§ 474.-010.4.
This raises the question of whether the State of Missouri is a beneficiary under the wrongful death statute.
See Jacobs
v.
Leggett,
. That question was answered affirmatively.
