486 N.E.2d 1173 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1984
On March 16, 1983, plaintiff-appellant, Bernice Taylor, filed a complaint against defendant-appellee, the Black Decker Manufacturing Company (hereinafter "Black Decker"), in the Court of Common Pleas of Warren County. The complaint alleged that on July 15, 1974, appellant's decedent, John Eugene Taylor, was operating a shrub and hedge trimmer manufactured by appellee. While operating the trimmer, the metal housing of the handle became electrically *187 charged, thereby electrocuting appellant's decedent. The complaint further alleged that the appellant, who is the Administratrix of the Estate of John Eugene Taylor, was bringing the action for her own benefit and for the benefit of Taylor's natural daughter, Katherine Taylor. The wrongful death action was predicated upon four theories of liability: (1) negligence in the design, engineering and manufacture of the trimmer; (2) defects which rendered the trimmer unreasonably dangerous; (3) failure of appellee to warn of the trimmer's dangerous condition; and (4) breach of implied warranty.
Appellee filed an answer to the complaint, and on August 22, 1983, also filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Specifically, appellee argued that the wrongful death action had not been commenced within the two-year period required by R.C.
In a decision dated October 21, 1983, the trial court determined that there was no common-law wrongful death remedy recognized in Ohio. Instead, a wrongful death cause of action existed solely by virtue of statute. The court further held that the two-year limitation set forth in the Ohio wrongful death statute was a precondition to the very existence of the cause of action. Since the restriction was not in the nature of a statute of limitations, the fact that one of the beneficiaries named in the complaint was a minor did not toll the running of the two-year period.
A judgment entry granting appellee's motion to dismiss was filed on November 14, 1983. A timely appeal was taken and appellant asserts one assignment of error which alleges that the trial court erred in sustaining appellee's motion to dismiss the complaint.
The sole issue presented for review in this case is whether R.C.
R.C.
"Unless otherwise specially provided in sections
An action for wrongful death is required to be commenced within two years after a decedent's death. R.C.
Both parties have extensively cited case law from other jurisdictions in support of their respective positions. Appellant most notably relies on those cases which have adopted the position established in Moragne v. States Marine Lines, Inc.
(1970),
In asking us to adopt the view expressed in Moragne, supra, and those jurisdictions which have adopted the view expressed therein, appellant is asking us to ignore the precedents established by other Ohio courts in regards to this particular issue. Ohio courts have long held that the recovery of damages for wrongful death is a right which was not recognized at common law. Sabol v. Pekoc (1947),
Without the underlying common-law basis, the right to sue for wrongful death is a statutorily created right. Sabol, supra;Rubeck, supra. In Collins v. Yanity (1968),
"* * * an action for wrongful death is brought pursuant to * * * Sections
On the basis of their position that a wrongful death action is one which is statutorily created, without any origins in the common law, the courts have further held that the limitations period set forth within R.C.
In relying on the Ohio cases cited above, recent decisions in the federal courts have also held that the two-year period is a restriction qualifying the right of action and not a time limit on the remedy. Bazdar v. Koppers Co., Inc. (N.D. Ohio 1981),
In Rubeck, supra, at 22, the Supreme Court held that the rights conferred by the wrongful death statute were also accompanied by the limitations imposed by the statute. In that case, the court held that one such limitation imposed by the statute was the type of damages to be awarded. Based on the limitations set forth in the statute, the court held that the wrongful death statute did not recognize the recovery of punitive damages. In a similar manner, R.C.
As previously mentioned, an amended version of R.C.
We therefore refuse to abrogate the precedent established by Ohio case law which has long held that a right of action for wrongful death is a statutorily created right and that the time limitation imposed by the statute is a restriction which qualifies the right of the action *190
rather than a time limitation on the remedy. Accordingly, we hold that the two-year limitation set forth in R.C.
Judgment affirmed.
HENDRICKSON, P.J., and KOEHLER, J., concur.