Therese M. THILL, Appellant,
v.
MODERN ERECTING COMPANY; Johnson, Drake & Piper, Inc.; J. L. Shiely Company and Jesco, Inc., Respondents.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
*867 DeParcq, Anderson & Perl, and Richard G. Hunegs, Minneapolis, for appellant.
Faegre & Benson, Wright Brooks and Paul J. McGough, Minneapolis, for Modern Erecting Co.
Kain & Kressel, Minneapolis, for Johnson, Drake, etc.
Robb, Robb & Van Eps, Minneapolis, for Shiely.
Hoppe & Healy, Minneapolis, for Jesco.
OPINION
PETERSON, Justice.
Plaintiff, Therese M. Thill, whose husband, Edward L. Thill, sustained personal injuries in an industrial accident, appeals from a summary judgment dismissing her claim for loss of consortium against these corporate defendants: Johnson, Drake & Piper, Inc. (Johnson); Modern Erecting Company (Modern); Jesco, Inc. (Jesco); and J. L. Shiely Company (Shiely).
Edward Thill was injured when a truck crane moving a bucketload of ready-mixed concrete at a construction site tipped over on him, rendering him a permanent paraplegic. In his own action, commenced against the four defendants in 1960, a jury by special verdict found Johnson and Modern causally negligent but found Jesco and Shiely not negligent. The special verdict returned against Johnson and Modern was $642,000. The trial court conditionally reduced that award to $375,000, which Edward accepted. A cross-claim of Johnson against Modern and Jesco for indemnity was at the same time denied. Upon the appeal of Johnson and Modern from an order denying their alternative motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, we affirmed. Thill v. Modern Erecting Co.,
1. The basic issue in this case is whether we should adhere to the rule, otherwise rightly applied by the trial court, that a wife has no action for her own loss of consortium as a result of negligent injury to her husband. Eschenbach v. Benjamin,
"Consortium," as a general description, represents reciprocal rights inherent in the marital relationship of husband and wife, including such undefined elements as comfort, companionship, and commitment to the *868 needs of each other.[2] Its "predominant element," however, as more specifically described by plaintiff's counsel, is "the loss of sexual relationship," presumably including frustration of man's primal drive of reproduction. The predominance of this element tends both to exclude claims asserted by children for injury to a parent and to avoid excessive appeal to sentimentality. The marital relationship is a wholeness, so, except only as we have emphasized a specific facet of it, attempts otherwise to single out its elements for the assessment of damages would be inappropriate.
We have, since the Eschenbach case was decided in 1935, held that "neither wife nor children have a cause of action for an injury inflicted upon the husband and father, that right being strictly limited to the injured party."
The Eschenbach rule accorded with the virtually unanimous rule in other jurisdictions at the time, but since then there has developed a marked division of authority. Starting in 1950 with Hitaffer v. Argonne Co.,
The rule that we establish today is that the wife of a husband injured as the direct result of the negligence of another shall have a right of action against that same person for her loss of consortium, subject to these essential conditions: (a) Because we hold her right of action to be a derivative right, she may recover only if her husband recovers from the same defendant;[7] (b) because we deem it an indispensable safeguard against the danger of double recovery, she will have her cause of action only if it is joined for trial with the husband's own action against the same defendant; and (c) because the wife's action for lost consortium is so much based upon impairment of marital relationship, were it to continue in the future, any award for her loss of consortium shall be joined in judgment with that of her husband, except only if she shall specifically declare to the jury her insistence for judgment in her own name alone.[8]
The concept of joinder of the two actions, as a safeguard against double damages, is not original but was at least inferentially suggested by counsel for plaintiff, with the support of these recent cases: Fitzgerald v. Meissner & Hicks, Inc.,
Eschenbach v. Benjamin, supra, is overruled to the extent only that it is inconsistent with this opinion.[9]
2. Today's decision is prospective and is applicable only with regard to personal injuries sustained from and after this date, except that it shall additionally apply to the instant case.[10] Application of the decision to the instant case is not without difficulty, of course, because it is impossible to join the wife's action with that of her husband's. We hold, therefore, that plaintiff may proceed to trial upon her separate cause of action without necessity of joinder, but that it is incumbent upon the trial court to afford defendants the substitute safeguard of evidentiary rulings and instructions to the jury. The trial court must determine and disclose to the jury what claims were made by Edward L. Thill in the trial of his action against the same defendants and the amount recovered by him in his action, as reduced by its post-trial order. The jury should, in that connection, be instructed that they should make an award to her only for such damage as the evidence now adduced will sustain over and above that necessarily considered by the jury in her husband's prior action for his own loss.
3. We hold, for the purposes of the instant case and in the interest of justice, that both plaintiff and defendants are collaterally estopped against litigating any issue of liability,[11] within the broad test of Bernhard v. Bank of America Nat. Trust & Sav. Assn.,
We hold, therefore, that defendant Johnson and defendant Modern are each bound by the final judgment of their liability to plaintiff's husband and direct that summary judgment as to liability only shall be entered against each of them and in favor of plaintiff. We hold, for the reasons stated, that this plaintiff is bound by the final judgment of nonliability as to defendant Shiely and as to defendant Jesco and direct that summary judgment be entered in favor of these two defendants and against plaintiff.
Reversed and remanded.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Edward is 40 years of age, and Therese is 31. They have five children, all under the age of seven years at the time of the accident in 1960.
[2] Mr. Justice Keating has described "consortium" in Millington v. Southeastern Elev. Co.,
[3] Mo. P. Transp. Co. v. Miller,
[4] West v. City of San Diego,
[5] Smith v. United Const. Workers, District 50,
[6] Leffler v. Wiley,
[7] This, of course, means that the tortfeasor was negligent and the husband was free from contributory negligence. Any refinement of this rule in terms of comparative negligence must await future adjudication.
[8] This condition (c) shall not, however, preclude submission of the wife's loss of consortium and the husband's loss of consortium separately to the jury upon interrogatories or special verdict, as a means of judicial restraint upon duplication of damages. The trial court, indeed, should carefully caution the jury that any loss to the wife of her husband's material support is fully compensated by any award to him for impairment of his lost earnings and that the burden of his disability upon her performance of her normal services to him may be compensated to one but not to both.
[9] Our decision does not overrule our decisions in either Hartman v. Cold Spring Granite Co.,
[10] This limitation upon prospective application is dictated by the decisions in Spanel v. Mounds View School Dist. No. 621,
[11] The issue, we acknowledge, has not squarely been raised upon this appeal. The trial judge did make a hypothetical response as to the ruling he would make if this court were to reverse and remand the case for trial and, in so doing, the court indicated that it would apply the principles of collateral estoppel to defendants Johnson and Modern but not to defendants Shiely and Jesco. Although that hypothetical ruling is not in any sense an appealable order, the obvious risk of extended trial and subsequent appeal is such as to warrant our consideration of the issue so inescapably involved. See, Minn.St. 605.05 of the Civil Appeal Code. See, also, McCormack v. Hankscraft Co.,
