MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER
This matter came on regularly for hearing on September 8, 1986, on defendant Kennecott Corporation’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. Plaintiffs were represented by Ann Wasserman, defendant was represented by James M. Elegante, and third-party defendant Stockmar Industries Intermountain, Inc., was represented by Dennis Ferguson. Plaintiffs and defendant submitted memorandums of law and the court heard oral argument, after which the court took the matter under advisement. The court now being fully advised, sets forth its Memorandum Decision and Order.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On March 5, 1985, plaintiff, Gerry C. Wollam was in the employ of Stockmar Industries Intermountain, Inc., in the capacity of construction worker and insulation installer. On that date he was on the roof of the Anode Building installing preshaped insulation on steam pipes. Defendant Kennecott Corporation owns and operates the Anode Building. Plaintiff alleges that defendant negligently attempted to cover a hole in the roof of the Anode Building with a loosely fitted sheet of fiberglass. Plaintiff further alleges that as a result of de *161 fendant’s negligence he fell through the hole to the ground twenty-five feet below, thereby sustaining severe injuries including paralysis of his lower extremities.
Plaintiff, Julie Wollam, wife of Gerry C. Wollam, alleges that she suffered injuries that are distinct and additional to those suffered by her husband. In plaintiffs’ second cause of action, Julie Wollam alleges that defendant’s negligence “will continue to cause her unhappiness, interference with her right to consortium and sexual enjoyment, and prevent her from having the full and complete married life to which she is entitled.”
As a third distinct cause of action, plaintiff Julie Wollam brings an action on behalf of her infant son, Justin Wollam, to recover for loss to the “full companionship, care, nurture, assistance and society of his father ... to which Justin is entitled____”
LEGAL ANALYSIS
Defendant has brought a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment contending that plaintiffs’ second and third causes of action are in the nature of consortium and that under Utah law no recovery is permitted for loss of consortium. Plaintiffs argue that the Utah Supreme Court has not directly or definitively decided the question. It is urged that the Utah court has merely cited, without comment, an opinion by this court which interpreted Utah law as not recognizing loss of consortium, and thus this court is free to remedy the prior “bad” law. After considering the cases cited by the parties and other relevant authority, this court holds that under Utah law neither a spouse nor a child of an injured party may recover for loss of consortium.
In February 1967, federal district court Judge A. Sherman Christensen, in
Black v. United States,
A wife may receive the wages for her personal labor, maintain an action therefor in her own name and hold the same in her own right, and may prosecute and defend all actions for the preservation and protection of her rights and property as if unmarried. There shall be no right of recovery by the husband on account of personal injury or wrong to his wife, or for expenses connected therewith, but the wife may recover against a third person for such injury or wrong as if unmarried, and such recovery shall include expenses of medical treatment and other expenses paid or assumed by the husband.
Utah Code Ann. § 30-2-4 (1984) (emphasis added). The statute, along with similar statutes in many states, was passed in the latter half of the nineteenth century with the clear purpose of removing the obstacles to a married woman suing and being sued. Nevertheless, as Judge Christensen recognized, the statute left unanswered the critical question:
[It is] unanswered whether in stripping the husband of any right of recovery “for personal injuries sustained by the wife arising out of the tort of the third person,” the statute leaves him a right to recover “for” consequential damages or expenses sustained “by himself arising out of the tort of a third person.”
The central question in this case is whether under Utah law a spouse may recover for his or her own consequential damages in connection with tortious injury to a spouse. Couched in the form urged by plaintiff, the question is whether the Utah Supreme Court has adopted and would follow Judge Christensen’s opinion in Black.
The first reported Utah Supreme Court case to mention “loss of consortium” in a context similar to this case
1
was
Williams v. Lloyd,
Another Utah case which deals with “loss of consortium” is
Corbridge v. M. Morrin and Son, Inc.,
Defendant quotes
Tjas v. Proctor,
In
Ellis v. Hathaway,
*163 The wife has no basis for her action. At common law she could not sue for loss of consortium, and under the Married Women’s Act no cause of action was given to her for negligent injury to her husband. Our statute [Utah Code Ann. § 30-2-4] placed husband and wife on an equal basis by saying: “... There shall be no right of recovery by the husband on account of personal injury or wrong to his wife, ...”
Id.
Plaintiff attempts to distinguish
Ellis
on the basis that the court did not expressly state that the damage to the spouse seeking consortium was that spouse’s
own injury.
However, the court in
Ellis
expressly dealt with the type of injury alleged here. The ambiguity of
Tjas
and
Corbridge
is not present. Plaintiff nevertheless argues that the Utah court’s short-shrift analysis does not denote a conscious holding that a spouse may not recover for his or her own lost companionship and affection. Although the Utah Supreme Court did not analyze at length the policy behind not allowing recovery for lost companionship, love and affection, we find no basis for plaintiff’s assertion that there is “some assurance” that the Utah court will reverse itself.
See Meredith v. Winter Haven,
No authority has been brought to the attention of this court wherein the Utah Supreme Court has dealt with loss of consortium by the child of an injured party. However, counsel for plaintiff acknowledged in oral argument that there is little theoretical basis for distinguishing between claims for consortium by a spouse and a child. Accordingly, the Ellis case appears to bar such claims by Justine Wollam, the child of the injured party. Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is granted, and plaintiffs’ second and third claims for relief are hereby dismissed. 3
This Memorandum Decision and Order will suffice as the court’s final action on these motions; no further Order need be prepared by counsel.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The court is excluding claims for wrongful death or alienation of affection in which loss of consortium may be a part of the relief sought.
.
See Gillespie v. Southern Utah State College,
. Defendant in its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment seeks a ruling by the court that Julie Wollam and Justine Wollam may not recover for emotional distress. Counsel for plaintiff represented at oral argument that plaintiff’s claims do not request recovery for emotional distress. In any event, because the court has dismissed plaintiffs second and third claims for relief it is unnecessary to rule on that portion of defendant’s motion.
