OPINION
delivered the opinion of the Court, in which all Justices join.
In this case we must decide whether Article 16, Section 26 of the Texas Constitution creates an independent cause of action for punitive damages where no cause of action for compensatory damages otherwise exists. Because the Workers’ Compensation Act bars Regina Fuller’s cause of action for compensatory damages, and because we find that Article 16, Section 26 was not intended to abrogate the common law requirement of “actual damages,” we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment that Fuller take nothing.
Regina Fuller sued Travelers Indemnity Company of Illinois and Travelers Insurance Company (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Travelers”), claiming that their gross negligence proximately caused the death of her father. She alleged that her father, while employed at American Petrofina, was exposed to assorted polynuclear, aromatic hydrocarbons which caused his death from adenocarcinoma. Travelers was the compensation carrier for American Petrofina during the relevant time period. As part of its program of insurance, Travelers performed safety audits and industrial hygiene surveys at the refinery where Fuller’s father was employed. Fuller contends that Travelers was negligent and grossly negligent in failing to alleviate the health and safety hazards at the refinery and in failing to warn her father of their existence.
Travelers moved for summary judgment, contending that it was immune from such suits under the Texas Workers Compensation Act. Fuller opposed the summary judgment contending that the Texas Constitution creates a cause of action for punitive damages which does not depend upon her right to compensatory relief, and therefore, the Workers’ Compensation Act was unconstitutional to the extent that it limited her right to punitive damages. She further maintained that the provision limiting her right to pursue a wrongful death recovery violates the Open Courts Provision in Article 1, Section 13 of the Texas Constitution.
The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Travelers. On rehearing, with one justice dissenting, the court of appeals reversed, holding that our constitution creates a cause of action for punitive damages which is in no way dependent upon Fuller’s entitlement to compensatory relief.
I.
The former Workers’ Compensation Act, which governs this dispute, provided, in relevant part:
The Association, its agent, servant or employee, shall have no liability with respect to any accident based on the allegation that such accident was caused or could *850 have been prevented by a program, inspection, or other activity or service undertaken by the association for the prevention of accidents in connection -with operations of its subscriber; provided, however, this immunity shall not affect the liability of the association for compensation or as otherwise provided in this law.
See Acts 1968, 58th Leg., p. 1132, ch. 437, § 1, repealed by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., 2nd C.S., ch. 1, § 16.01(7) to (9). 1 Fuller argues that the Texas Constitution, on its face, provides for a punitive damages cause of action. The disputed provision reads:
Every person, corporation, or company, that may commit a homicide, through wilful act, or omission, or gross neglect, shall be responsible, in exemplary damages, to the surviving husband, widow, heirs of his or her body, or such of them as there may be, without regard to any criminal proceeding that may or may not be had in relation to the homicide.
Tex. Const, art. XVI, § 26 (Vernon 1993). Juxtaposing this provision with the Workers’ Compensation Act, Fuller argues that the legislature is powerless to impair her punitive recovery. We disagree.
We must first note that when the legislature acts, we presume that it has acted constitutionally.
Spring Branch Ind. Sch. Dist. v. Stamos,
In 1840, the Republic of Texas adopted the common law as its rules of decision.
See Grigsby v. Reib,
At the time of this initial adoption it was well established at common law that there was no cause of action for wrongful death.
See Russell v. Ingersoll-Rand Co.,
In 1846, England abolished the common law bar against wrongful death actions with the adoption of Lord Campbell’s Act. Texas soon followed with its own wrongful death act, similar in many respects to its English counterpart.
See
Act approved Feb. 2, 1860, 8th Leg., R.S., ch. 35, § 1, 1860 Tex.Gen. Laws 32, 4 H. Gammel, Laws of Texas 1394 (1898);
Hendrix v. Walton,
In
Ritz v. City of Austin,
Our courts have repeatedly held that no recovery can be had for exemplary damages unless the facts are such as warrant a recovery for actual damages.... The purpose of this constitutional provision was simply to create a remedy that did not exist at common law. The fact that exemplary damages are recoverable by force of this constitutional provision does not place the right upon a more certain basis or higher plane than exists in those cases in which such character of damages is recoverable at common law.
Id.
at 1031 (emphasis added).
3
Thus, the reason for adoption of the constitutional pro
*852
vision was to allow for exemplary damages
under the Wrongful Death Act
because of an early interpretation that such damages were not authorized by the Act.
See Hofer v. Lavender,
The manifest purpose of the language of this constitutional provision is to
expressly
resolve common law and statutory ambiguity.
4
Fuller’s proposed interpretation would have us read the constitution to allow punitive damages without regard to whether the heirs have suffered a compensable injury. This would effectively add,
by inference,
a clause to our constitution allowing the punishment of a party from whom the plaintiff is not entitled to extract compensation. We decline to do so for several reasons. First, such a clause would be inconsistent with the long settled rule that a plaintiff must show himself entitled to compensatory relief before punitive damages are recoverable.
See, e.g., Wright v. Gifford-Hill & Co.,
II
Fuller lastly argues that Travelers’ immunity under the Workers’ Compensation Act violates the Texas Open Courts Provision. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 13 (Vernon 1984). We disagree.
Generally speaking, the Open Courts Provision restricts the legislature’s ability to withdraw all legal remedies from one having a cause of action well established and well defined in the common law.
See Lebohm v. City of Galveston,
Because the Workers’ Compensation Act bars Fuller’s cause of action for compensatory damages, and because Article 16, Section 26 guarantees the remedy of punitive damages only when a wrongful death beneficiary otherwise possesses a cause of action for compensatory relief, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment that Fuller take nothing.
Notes
. The current Workers' Compensation Act similarly provides:
An insurance company, the agent, servant, or employee of the insurance company, or a safety consultant who performs a safety consultation ... has no liability for an accident based on an allegation that the accident was caused or could have been prevented by a program, inspection, or other activity or service undertaken by the insurance company for the prevention of accidents in connection with the operations of the employers.
See Tex.Labor Code Ann. § 411.003(a) (Vernon Supp.1995).
. One authority even claimed that, at common law, exemplary damages were not recoverable when the offense was criminal. See G. Field, Field on Damages § 89 (1878).
. The
Ritz
court is not alone in holding that Article 16, Section 26 did not change the common law actual damages requirement.
See, e.g., Suber v. Ohio Medical Products, Inc.,
Two of our older cases contain language to the effect that the legislature is without power to abrogate a claimant's wrongful death punitive damages recovery by statute.
See Fort Worth Elevators Co. v. Russell,
Fuller also relies on language in
Paradissis v. Royal Indemnity Co.,
. As previously stated, this provision is unique to our state constitution. See 2 G. Braden, The Constitution of the State of Texas: An Annotated and Comparative Analysis, Art. XVI, § 26 at 757 (1977). "Unique” is perhaps the kindest epithet one could cast at a constitutional provision the sole purpose of which is to change “judge-made" law. Said one commentator:
In acting from noblest motives to provide for exemplary damages in a wrongful death suit, because damages were not allowed by the courts and the statute was ambiguous, the Convention of 1875 unintentionally limited the power of future legislatures to expand the class of those entitled to damages. The result is an anomaly. The intentional or grossly negligent killing of a parent may be punished and deterred by awarding exemplary damages to his or her surviving children, but not vice versa.
The law of torts, recovery for wrongful death, entitlement to exemplary damages, etc., should be left to the legislature and courts to develop. The inclusion of narrow rules on these topics in the constitution too frequently results in the imposition of unintended limitations on the power of the legislature and courts to do justice.
Id. at 757-58.
. The history of. punitive damages also reveals that the early courts considered the remedy a part of the jury’s discretion to punish an offender who had injured the plaintiff in some aggravated fashion. The early judges gave the jury discretion to inflate a
general
damage award where the plaintiff's injury, though comparatively small, was inflicted in a manner which the law sought to prevent.
See, e.g., Huckle v. Money,
