This is a civil action instituted October 22, 1969 in the Court of Common Pleas of Kanawha County, West Virginia, in which the plaintiffs, Sharon Kay Wallace, Tamera Genife Wallace, Edwin Dwayn Wallace, Brice Lionel Wallace and Tabbie Renae Wallace, infants under the age of twenty-one years, who sue by their next friend and mother, Opal Wallace, seek a recovery from the defendant, Mamie Shaffer Wallace, in the sum of $25,000.00 for each plaintiff or the total amount of $125,000.00 for the loss of the love, affection, protection, support and care of their father, Brady Wallace, caused by the wrongful conduct of the defendant.
By order entered August 25, 1970 the Court of Common Pleas sustained the defendant’s motion to dismiss and dismissed the action on the stated ground that the action for alienation of affections was abolished by Chapter 101, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1969, Section 2a, Article 3, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, as amended, effective March 6, 1969, and also denied the motion of the plaintiffs to set aside the judgment and to award the plaintiffs a new trial, and filed a written opinion which is made a part of the record.
Upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, by final judgment rendered December 11, 1970, that court sustained the foregoing statute, denied the relief prayed for by the plaintiffs and affirmed as plainly right the judgment of dismissal rendered by the Court of Common Pleas and also filed a written opinion which is made a part of the record.
Upon the application of the plaintiffs this Court granted this appeal February 15, 1971.
According to the allegations of the complaint, the parents of the plaintiffs, Brady Wallace and Opal Wallace, were married during the period 1947 to January 20, 1969 when the wife and their mother, Opal Wallace, obtained a divorce from their father, Brady Wallace, because of his *571 association with the defendant. Prior to his association with the defendant, Brady Wallace was a good and dutiful father, provided the children with a good home, supported them adequately and gave them his love and affection. About three years before the institution of this proceeding the defendant became infatuated with their father, bestowed favors upon him, took him into her home and her business and caused him to abandon the plaintiffs and to fail and refuse to give them the care, attention, love and affection which he had formerly bestowed upon them. The wrongful conduct of the defendant continued until their mother obtained a divorce from their father after which the defendant married their father and is now living with him as his wife.
The legal questions to be determined upon this appeal are (1) whether, regardless of the foregoing statute, the plaintiffs as minor children have a cause of action against the defendant for the alienation of affections of their father; and (2) whether the statute, effective March 6, 1969, before the institution of this action on October 22, 1969, is a valid statute and operates to abolish an action for breach of promise to marry and an action for alienation of affections, and defeats the claim of the plaintiffs.
The statute, Section 2a, Article 3, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, as amended, effective March 6, 1969, provides that “Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, no civil action shall lie or be maintained in this State for breach of promise to marry or for alienation of affections, unless such civil action was instituted prior to the effective date of this section.” Neither of the foregoing questions has been previously decided by this Court and each of them is a question of first impression in this State.
In the jurisdictions in which the first question has been considered and determined there is a conflict in the decisions as to whether a minor child has a cause of action against a third person who causes the alienation of affections of his parent from him and causes the parent to desert the family or to neglect his family duties. In *572 Illinois, Michigan, and Minnesota state or federal court decisions recognize and uphold a cause of action by an infant child for alienation of affections of the parent of such child by a third person and the decisions in those jurisdictions represent the minority rule. In at least thirteen jurisdictions, however, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, District of Columbia, Kansas, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Wisconsin the court decisions refuse to recognize and uphold but instead deny the right to maintain an action by an infant child for alienation of affections of his parent by a third person.
In
Daily
v.
Parker,
In
Johnson
v.
Luhman,
In
Heck
v.
Schupp,
In
Russick
v.
Hicks,
(W.D. and S.D. Mich.)
In
Miller
v.
Monsen,
In the Daily and Johnson cases which are cited and relied upon by the plaintiffs in this proceeding in support of their claim of a cause of action against the defendant, the courts consider lack of precedent and law making by judicial decisions which has been characterized as judicial empiricism and were of opinion that lack of precedent was not a conclusive reason for denying right of action of a minor child for alienation of affections of the parent by a third person and approved, as proper, judicial law making of a cause of action of a minor child for alienation of affections of the parent by a third person in the absence of precedent for such cause of action.
Decisions in cases in thirteen jurisdictions which represent the contrary majority view and constitute the weight of authority, deny any cause of action of a minor child to recover damages from a person who disrupts family ties by enticing a parent away from the home and deprives the infant of the affection and care of his parent.
Lucas
v.
Bishop,
In the cases just cited the courts advance various reasons for denying a cause of action of a minor child against a third person for alienation of love and affection of a parent in the absence of a statute authorizing such cause of action.
In
Gibson
v.
Johnston,
“The maxim, ‘Ubi Jus, ibi remedium’, liberally translated, declares that a legal wrong is the resultant of the violation of a legal right, for which the law provides a remedy. A wrong not within the scope of the law of a given jurisdiction, either from the standpoint of the common law, or when not prescribed by statute, cannot be regarded as a legal wrong.
“The duty of the parent to support, educate and protect the child was given recognition under the common law, but the reciprocal rights of the child in relation to his interest in the society and affection of the parent, were not recognized under the common law as construed and applied in this state, except as may be modified by statute. It follows that a child does not *576 have a right of action for an injury which he has sustained in his relation with his parents, proximately caused by the negligent act of a third person.”
In
Kane
v.
Quigley,
“Such an action is not known at common law.
“At common law, the benefits and duties accruing as a result of the family relationship are deemed to be social rather than legal.
“Some jurisdictions allow such a cause of action on the theory that the common law is sufficiently flexible to be adaptable to modern concepts of family obligations. This is the minority view. * * *.
“A child may indeed expect that his parent will have affection for him. This may be a moral obligation, but no legal obligation exists. The sole legal obligation imposed upon the parent is that of support. * * *.
“Several reasons have been advanced as justifying the refusal to allow recovery by children, i.e., that this invades the province of the Legislature, that there is a danger of multiplicity of suits, that there is a possibility of fraud, and that it would place the love and affection of the parent on a commercial basis. * * *.
“There is no legal right in a child to maintain such an action for alienation of affections since that cause of action is based upon the right of consortium.”
In
Nelson
v.
Richwagen,
*577 “At common law it is held that one spouse may maintain an action against a third person for procuring and enticing the other spouse to desert the plaintiff, and thus causing the deprivation of the plaintiff’s right of consortium. * * *.
“In our opinion, however, the relation of parent and child is not analogous to the relation of husband and wife, in respect to the 'existence of a cause of action against a third person. One spouse has a right to the personal presence and care of the other. It is not enough that he or she furnish care for the other through the agency of other persons. Desertion alone, without more, is a matrimonial wrong. But a minor child has no legal right to the personal presence or care of a parent. If the parent provides support and care while absent from the child, the law is satisfied. So far as the parent is bound to support the child the parent may be compelled to do so by other proceedings. * * *.
“On the whole, we are inclined to join the weight of authority in holding that the child in the present case has no right of action. * * See also
Henson v. Thomas,
Of course the parent is required to support a minor child in this jurisdiction but the right of such child to support is not involved in this action.
In
Gleitz
v.
Gleitz,
“Concededly no such action was known to the common law, and there is in Ohio no statutory authority for the maintenance of such an action. * * *.
*578 “Much has been said and written concerning ‘judicial empiricism’ or the right of courts to legislate. However, the members of this court are of the opinion that the right to create new legal rights and remedies is by the supreme law of our state, vested in the legislative bodies and not in the courts; and we do not feel constrained to encroach upon the prerogatives of the legislative branch of the government.
“We recognize that there are divergent lines of authority upon the question under consideration. However, we think the weight of authority and reason requires adherence by us to the rule announced in Nelson v. Richwagen, Mass.,95 N.E.2d 545 .”
In
Whitcomb
v.
Huffington,
From the foregoing it is clear that at common law there is no right or cause of action in favor of an infant *579 child against a third person for depriving the child of the love, care and affection of his parent and no statute of this State authorizes such right or cause of action. This Court, therefore, holds that at common law there is no right or cause of action in favor of a minor child, against a third person for causing the alienation of affections of his parent and that, in the absence of a statute authorizing such action, no such cause of action exists in this jurisdiction. Such cause of action should be created, if at all, by statute and not by judicial decision.
There is no merit in the contention of the plaintiffs that the statute, Section 2a, Article 3, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, as amended, is invalid as violative of Article III, Section 17 of the Constitution of this State. That provision has no application to an action for alienation of affections or an action for breach of promise to marry for such actions do not affect or relate to an injury to any person in his person, property or reputation. The statute does not affect or extinguish any legal right or cause of action of a minor child. Instead, the statute abolishes the common law action of breach of promise to marry and the common law action of alienation of affections in favor of one spouse for the loss of the affections of the other spouse which arises from the marital relationship and involves and is based upon the right of consortium.
Young
v.
Young,
In the Taylor case the opinion contains these statements: “since 1935 at least twelve states, including our neighbors Massachusetts and New York, have by statute taken away the right of a husband or wife to bring an action for alienation of affections.” and that such action by them “suggests widespread appreciation of the fact that thie social advantages of granting the right claimed would be outweighed by the disadvantages. * * *. The refusal by the court to grant it does not violate article first, § 12, of the Connecticut constitution, guaranteeing redress ‘for an injury done’ to the plaintiff for ‘injury’ as there used means a legal injury, that is, one violative of established law of which a court can properly take cognizance.”
In
Rotwein
v.
Gersten,
Article VIII, Section 21, of the Constitution of this State provides in part that “Such parts of the common law, and of the laws of this State as are in force when this article goes into operation, and are not repugnant thereto, shall be and continue the law of the State until altered or repealed by the legislature.”
*581
In the opinion in
State
v.
The Farmers Coal Company,
In
The State Road Commission of West Virginia
v.
The County Court of Kanawha County,
From the foregoing authorities it is clear and this Court bolds that Section 2a, Article 3, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, as amended, which provides that no civil action shall lie or be maintained in this State for breach of promise to marry or for alienation of affections unless suoh action was instituted prior to the effective date of the statute, is constitutional and valid.
Though Section 2a, Article 3, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, as amended, does not apply to or affect the alleged cause of action of the plaintiffs as minor children for alienation of affections of their parent as hereinbefore indicated and dealt with in this opinion, this Court has considered and determined the question of the validity of that statute because the Court of Common Pleas and the Circuit Court denied the claim of the plaintiffs for the stated reason that their asserted cause of action was abolished by the statute and the constitutionality of the statute is raised and its validity is challenged in this proceeding.
The judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Kana-wha County and the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County are affirmed.
Affirmed.
