Armand Villaret, a thirteen-year-old boy, was injured on December 20, 1946, when the automobile in which he was riding, operated by his mother, Mrs. Abigail H. Villaret, collided with another car on a highway in Maryland. Acting by his next friend, Armand sued his mother in the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia for damages in the sum of $10,000. He joined the other driver, one Carroll Ruhl, as a defendant, and alleged his injury was caused by the negligence of either Mrs. Villaret or Ruhl, or by the negligence of both. It was stipulated that Mrs. Villaret had liability insurance in a sum equal to the recovery sought. Her motion to dismiss the complaint as failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted was denied by the District Court. We granted a special appeal from that ruling.
There is thus presented the question whether an unemancipated minor child may sue his parent for a tortious act. A second question is whether the fact that the parent is protected by public liability insurance affects the answer to the first.
The ancient common law did not, it appears, expressly deny to a child a right of action against a parent for personal injury negligently inflicted 1 . But since 1891 there has grown up in this country a mass of authority holding that such a suit is against public policy and cannot be maintained. 2 Criticism of the rule has been voiced, and it has been said to be inapplicable where the parent has liability insurance, on the theory that, the suit being in practical effect against the insurer instead of the parent, it cannot disturb family unity and discipline. 3 Such decisions remain relatively *678 rare, however, and it continues to be the almost unanimous judicial opinion that an u'nemancipated child may not maintain an action against a parent for a personal tort. Nor does the existence of liability insurance give rise to or permit such a right of action, in the view of several courts to which the question has been presented, 4 although there is authority to the contrary. 5
Whether a child may maintain an action such as this has not been decided in the District of Columbia. But in the present case it is neither necessary nor proper for us to analyze the authorities, weigh the' problem and announce a rule. Our task is only to see whether Armand Villaret has the right under Maryland law to bring this suit against his mother, since the existence of the right depends upon the law of the place where the accident occurred. 6
There is in Maryland no statutory authorization of the right of action asserted by the appellee. The precise question here presented has not been passed on by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, but holdings of that court on kindred questions clearly indicate its accord with the overwhelmingly prevalent rule that public policy forbids such suits.
The case of Schneider v. Schneider, 1930,
As the Maryland court thus holds that a mother may not sue her infant son for injuries caused by his negligent operation of an automobile in which she was a passenger, it would be illogical to suppose its holding would be different were it confronted with the converse of the situation. Indeed, the seeming approval with which the Court of Appeals of Maryland referred, in the language just quoted, to the established principle that a minor child cannot maintain a tort action against a parent, clearly indicates that, upon occasion, the general rule would be adopted.
Appellee says, however, the rule against such actions ceases when the reason for it has disappeared. This suit cannot disturb family harmony or diminish parental authority, he asserts, because Mrs. Villaret’s liability insurance will prevent her from suffering financial loss should a judgment be entered against her.
The existence of liability insurance ought not to create a cause of action where none exists otherwise. A policy of *679 such insurance protects against claims legally asserted, but does not itself produce liability. Such policies frequently contain a provision requiring the insured to cooperate in the defense of any action brought against him. Compliance with such a requirement might readily produce the domestic disharmony to avoid which the rule was formulated. Moreover, to permit the maintenance of a suit such as this because the parent has liability insurance would tend to encourage collusive fraud between the child and parent in order to recover against the insurer.
There is no doubt as to the attitude of the Court of Appeals of Maryland on the effect of liability insurance in such situations, for it said in Schneider v. Schneider, supra,
Under what we consider to be the law of Maryland, Armand Villaret’s complaint did not state a claim against his mother upon which relief could be granted. Her motion to dismiss should have been granted.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Dunlap v. Dunlap, 1930,
The earliest case is Hewlett v. George, 1891,
Dunlap v. Dunlap, supra.
Elias v. Collins,
Dunlap v Dunlap, supra.
Giddings v. Zellan, 1947, 82 U.S.App. D.C. 92,
