In this сase a six year old girl, a passenger in an automobile being driven by her father, with whom she was in a normal parent-child relationship, was injured in a collision with an automobile alleged to have been negligently operated by an employee of the United States acting within the scope of his employment. The infant, by her father and next friend, and the father individually, sued the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act, the infant for damages for her injuries, and the father for his expenses rеsulting therefrom. The government filed an answer and a counterclaim against the father, alleging negligence on his part, and claiming contribution from him “for his pro rаta share of any sums which may be adjudged to be due the (infant) plaintiff”. The father seeks dismissal of the counterclaim on the ground that under the Maryland law an infant cannot sue her father for negligence, and, therefore, the government does not have a right of contribution.
Liability of the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Aсt is to be determined by the standards and tests of the law of the place where the act or omission occurred, in this case the State of Maryland. 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1346(b), 2674; D’Anna v. United Stаtes, 4 Cir.,
Such cases as Di Benedictis v. United States, D.C.W.D.Pa.,
As in diversity cases involving similar quеstions, we must “apply the substantive law of the state and the procedural law of the federal courts”. Gray v. Hartford Accident
&
Indemnity Co., D.C.W.D.La.,
In Maryland there is no common law right of contribution among joint tort feasors. Baltimore & O. R. Co. v. Howard County,
“We think these provisions (sections 22a and 27a of Article 50) mаke it clear that the Act is only applicable to a situation where there is a common liability to an injured person in tort. Such liability may be joint or several, but there can be no contribution where the injured person has no right of action against the third-party defendant. The right of contribution is a derivative right and not a new cause of action.”
The Schriefer case was an action under Art. 101, § 72 (now sec. 59) of the Maryland Code, where the defendant was attempting to bring in the employer as a third party defendant. Chief Judge Niles, in the Court of Common Pleas, applied the same rule where a defendant in an automobile case sought tо bring in as a third party defendant the plaintiff’s husband, the driver of the car in which she was riding. Eisner v. Saxon, Daily Record, March 14, 1955. So did Judge Frank in Kovitz v. Neumann, Daily Record, April 24, 1942, and the Cоurt of Appeals for the District of Columbia in Yellow Cab Co. of D. C. v. Dreslin,
The Court of Appeals of Maryland has never passed flatly on the question whether an unemаneipated infant can sue his parent for damages for the parent’s negligence in the operation of an automobile, but it has recognized the gеneral rule that such an action cannot be maintained. I have never heard of such an action being filed in Maryland, although I am told that a motion to bring in an allegedly negligent father as a third party defendant in an automobile case is pending in Howard County.
There is one case in the District of Columbia, Villaret v. Villaret, 83 U.S. App.D.C. 311,
“* * * 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.”
In Schneider v. Schneider,
In Yost v. Yost,
In Mahnke v. Moore,
“It is conceded, of course, that parental authority should be maintained. It is also conceded that a child should forego any recovery of damages if such recovery would unduly impair discipline and destroy the harmony of the family. * * * But when * * * the parent is guilty of acts which show complete аbandonment of the parental relation, the rule giving him immunity *53 from suit by the child, on the ground that discipline should be maintained in the home, cannot logically be applied, for when he is guilty of such acts he forfeits his parental authority and privileges, including his immunity from suit. Justice demands that a minor child shall have a right of action against a parent for injuries resulting from cruel and inhuman treatment or for malicious and wanton wrongs.”
Thus, in the most recent case, the Court of Appeals of Maryland recognizеd the rule of immunity and based the exception to it on narrow grounds. See the full note in
Article 75, section 60, of the Annotated Code of Maryland, 1951 Ed., authorizes the “next friend”, who shall have brought any suit at law for the benefit of an infant, to compromise and settle said suit and the cause of action, but provides that whenever such “next friend” shall not be a parent of the infant or a person standing in loco parentis, the consent of such parent or other person shall first be had and obtained. Where a father has not abandoned the parental relation, he would be on both sides оf the fence in an action for negligence brought against him by his infant child. A similar anomaly was noted by the court in the Schneider case, supra.
I conclude, as did thе Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in Villaret v. Villaret, supra, that under the Maryland law an infant cannot sue her parent for injuries sustained in an automobilе accident. Therefore, under the Maryland law, the government is not entitled to contribution from the father in this case; and, since the Maryland law governs the question of liability for contribution, as distinguished from any procedural questions, the government’s counterclaim against the father for contribution must be and it is hereby dismissed.
