This action of tort for wrongful death under Gr. L. c. 229, § 2 (as amended through St. 1962, c. 306, *447 § 1), 1 by the administrator of the estate of Rhonda Torigian is in two counts. Count 1 is against George L. Juliano, the operator, and count 2 is against Watertown News Co., Inc., the owner of a motor vehicle which on January 2,1964, due to negligence struck a motor vehicle operated by Barbara Torigian, who was then three and one-half months pregnant with the plaintiff’s intestate. The child was not then viable. On March 13,1964, the plaintiff’s intestate was born and lived about two and one-half hours. There was medical testimony that the accident of January 2 was the adequate cause of the premature birth, and that the cause of death was prematurity. At the close of the evidence the trial judge directed verdicts for the defendants. The plaintiff excepted.
The ground of the judge’s action was not expressed, but, as the arguments before us indicate, it must have been that there cannot be recovery for prenatal injury to a nonviable fetus even where a living child is born.
In
Dietrich
v.
Northampton,
In
Keyes
v.
Construction Serv. Inc.
In the case at bar, where the fetus was not viable, we must decide whether there is a sound distinction from the situation where the fetus is viable. A viable fetus has been defined as one so far formed and developed that if then born it would be capable of living. Keyes v. Construction Serv. Inc., supra, 637. Poliquin v. MacDonald, 101 N. H. 104, 107.
In the vast majority of cases where the present issue has arisen, recovery has been allowed.
Hornbuckle
v.
Plantation Pipe Line Co.
The grounds which have been most frequently urged against allowing recovery are lack of precedent, the avoidance of speculation or conjecture, and the encouragement of fictitious claims. There is no longer lack of precedent. The advancement of medical science should take care of most of these arguments. The element of speculation is not present to any greater extent than in the usual tort
*449
claim where medical evidence is offered and the issue of causation must be weighed with great care.
Woods
v.
Lancet,
We are not impressed with the soundness of the arguments against recovery. They should not prevail against logic and justice. We hold that the plaintiff’s intestate was a “person” within the meaning of G. L. c. 229, § 2, as amended. Exceptions sustained.
Notes
“A- person who (1) by his negligence canses the death of a person in the exercise of due care, or (2) by wilful, wanton or reckless act causes the death of a person under such circumstances that the deceased could have recovered damages for personal injuries if . . . death had not resulted . . . shall be liable in damages . . .. ”
