Shawndee and Sharette THIROUX, Minors, By and Through Their Legal Guardian, Vanessa E. Santa CRUZ
v.
Jason W. AUSTIN, a Minor, By and Through His Legal Guardian and Next Friend, Nettie ARCENEAUX.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1041 Robert H. Tyler, V. Denise Lee, Biloxi, Attorneys for Appellants.
H.M. Yoste, Jr., Biloxi, Russell S. Gill, Gulfport, Attorneys for Appellees.
EN BANC.
WALLER, Justice, for the Court:
STATEMENT OF THE CASE AND FACTS
¶ 1. Jason W. Austin was tried, convicted, and sentenced for the murder of William Albert Thiroux, Jr., who left no surviving spouse, and was survived by two minor children, who were also his sole heirs at law. The legal guardian of the two minor children filed the instant wrongful death action almost three and a half years after the death of their father. The trial judge dismissed the action on Austin's M.R.C.P. 12(c) motion, finding that the minor savings clause did not toll the statute of limitation for a wrongful death action. We reverse and remand.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 2. This Court employs a de novo standard of review for dismissals of actions on the pleadings pursuant to M.R.C.P. 12. See Young v. State,
STATEMENT OF THE LAW
¶ 3. In Arender v. Smith County Hosp.,
¶ 4. We note that the parties in this case have concluded that the applicable statute of limitation is that found in Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (1995), the general three-year statute of limitation applied to "all claims for which no other period of limitations is prescribed." However, a wrongful death action, since it is predicated on an underlying tort, is limited by the statute of limitation applicable to the tort resulting in the wrongful death. In this case, the underlying tort is one of assault and battery (murder), which cause is limited to a one-year period. Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-35 (1995); see Veselits ex rel. Cruthirds v. Veselits,
¶ 5. We reverse the trial court's judgment which dismissed this action, and we remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 6. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
PRATHER, C.J., PITTMAN, P.J., BANKS, SMITH, MILLS AND COBB, JJ., CONCUR. McRAE, J., SPECIALLY CONCURS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION JOINED BY SULLIVAN, P.J.
McRAE, Justice, specially concurring.
¶ 7. Because I agree that the savings clause applies to toll the running of the statute of limitations, I concur in this Court's judgment to reverse and remand. However, the majority opinion does not go far enough to protect the rights of minors, wrongful death beneficiaries and to give guidance to the litigants. While it is true that the wrongful death statute (Miss.Code Ann. § 11-7-13) requires one suit, this is merely a procedural matter. The defendant should not be required to defend numerous suits; neither should minors be required to give up their right to sue or lose their claim because some adult is either ignorant or refuses to bring a lawsuit for and on behalf of all other heirs. Arender v. Smith County Hosp.,
¶ 8. Today's majority decision takes a step forward in protecting the rights of minors by holding that the savings clause tolls the statute of limitations for wrongful death actions. However, just as quickly as it takes "the step," it takes another backwards by not overruling Arender.
¶ 9. Without the majority clearly addressing the issue, a problem will continue to exist when there is an ex-spouse, son or daughter of a decedent from another marriage living in another state who has little contact with the present family minors and fails to bring a timely lawsuit. The claim for loss of love, society, companionship and support which belongs to the individual minor is forever lost. The procedure is to bring it in one lawsuit.
¶ 10. By not overruling Arender, no guidance is given to minors, nor is the constitutional right that we said must exist in Mississippi State Bar Ass'n v. Moyo,
"The court will not and cannot permit the rights of an infant to be prejudiced by any waiver, or omission or neglect or design of a guardian, or of any other person, so far as within the power of the court to prevent or correct." Moyo,525 So.2d at 1293 (quoting Union Chevrolet Co. v. Arrington,162 Miss. 816 , 826-827,138 So. 593 , 595 (1932)).
¶ 11. We are stripping minors of their constitutional right to "due process of law" *1043 merely because they are not aware of what other heirs will or won't do. If injury is done to a minor's person, as in this case, by the loss of a relative's companionship and financial support (both of which are invaluable to a minor's development into an adult), then the aggrieved minor should be allowed to seek remedy when that minor has the requisite capacity to do so. Minors, like everyone else in this state, deserve the chance to exercise the right to remedy. They suffer under a disability declared by law.
¶ 12. The Majority concedes that the Arender erroneously relied on the case of Foster v. Yazoo & M.V.R. Co.,
¶ 13. Other jurisdictions have addressed this question.[3] Consideration has been given to those minors who still suffer from disabilities but who are impeded upon by the fact that there is an adult heir who, for whatever reason, did not bring the lawsuit for and on behalf of all.
¶ 14. Oklahoma, for example, holds that the child may bring the suit. See Brookshire v. Burkhart,
¶ 15. The prevailing rule appears to be similar to that of Oklahoma:
"Perhaps the rule which is best supported by the authorities is that if the right is joint and several the disability of one will save him but will not avail another who is not under disability, and that if the right is joint so that the suit *1044 cannot be brought except by the parties jointly, then the rights of all are saved if any are under disability; ..."
54 C.J.S. Limitations of Actions § 110, at 149 (1987). The statute runs as against those not under disability but not as to the others. We should follow the lead of other states and allow the child to bring the wrongful death suit for and on behalf of all heirs except those non-disabled heirs who are precluded for failure to timely bring suit.
¶ 16. Since the time of Price v. Crone,
SULLIVAN, P.J., JOINS THIS OPINION.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Foster interpreted the case of Louisville & N. Railroad Co. v. Sanders,
[2] If the minor's constitutional right to redress were not so protected, the minor would be unduly harmed. It is conceivable and likely that a minor may be subject to a scenario in which the wrongfully deceased adult leaves a majority child from the first marriage and the minor from the second marriage such that the majority child fails to bring suit, the statute runs on the first child's majority, and the minor child is unwittingly deprived of the right to sue.
[3] Some examples of other jurisdictions that follow this rule are exemplified in the following cases: Chastang v. Washington Lumber & Turpentine Co.,
