Dubay v. Irish

542 A.2d 711, 207 Conn. 518, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 17, 1988
Docket13239
StatusPublished
Cited by406 cases

This text of 542 A.2d 711 (Dubay v. Irish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubay v. Irish, 542 A.2d 711, 207 Conn. 518, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 125 (Colo. 1988).

Opinion

Callahan, J.

The plaintiff, Kevin G. Dubay, as conservator of the estate of Elizabeth Irish, filed the instant appeal from the judgment of the trial court, Noren, J., rendered in favor of the defendant, Inasita Irish, the mother of the plaintiff’s incompetent. The trial court granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, ruling that the first count of the plaintiff’s amended complaint, sounding in negligence, was barred by the doctrine of parental immunity, and that the second count, sounding in wilful, wanton and/or reckless conduct, was barred by the statute of limitations. On appeal, the plaintiff raises the following issues: (1) whether the parental immunity doctrine bars the maintenance of a tort action against a parent by an unemancipated child who comes of age prior to filing the action; (2) whether the doctrine of parental immunity is a bar in a case where a parent is covered by liability insurance; (3) whether the parental immunity [520]*520doctrine violates article first, §§10 and 20 of the Connecticut constitution; and (4) whether the allegations of wilful, wanton and/or reckless conduct set forth in the second count of the amended complaint assert a new cause of action so as to be barred by the statute of limitations. We find no error.

The relevant facts are not in dispute. On March 11, 1983, Elizabeth Irish (hereinafter Elizabeth), the seventeen and one-half year old daughter of the defendant, stayed home from school complaining of an upset stomach. Prior to leaving for work that day, the defendant looked in on Elizabeth and found her sleeping. Thereafter, the defendant went to work and afterward did her grocery shopping before returning home at approximately 8 p.m. Elizabeth greeted the defendant on her return and took a container of yogurt from the groceries the defendant had purchased. Subsequently, Elizabeth refused to eat her dinner and at approximately 9:15 p.m., the defendant heard her daughter vomiting. While attempting to render aid, the defendant learned that Elizabeth had ingested a large number of pills of assorted prescription medications. The medications had been prescribed to the defendant for her asthma, high blood pressure, muscle spasms and back pains. In an attempt to induce her to eject the pills from her stomach, the defendant and another of her daughters placed Elizabeth in a shower and forced her to drink coffee. Those efforts having proved futile, at approximately 1 a.m., the defendant took Elizabeth, who was conscious and coherent, to Mount Sinai Hospital. About four hours elapsed between the time the defendant first discovered Elizabeth had ingested medication and was ill and the time the defendant took Elizabeth to the hospital.

While at Mount Sinai Hospital, Elizabeth began to experience convulsions and, subsequently, went into a coma. Thereafter, she remained unresponsive to stimuli [521]*521for two weeks and was required to be maintained on a respirator for six days. As an apparent result of the drug ingestion, Elizabeth suffers from organic brain damage with a significant degree of mental retardation.1

The medications taken by Elizabeth had been kept by the defendant in their individual containers inside a plastic bag in a cabinet above a broom closet in the kitchen. The defendant had moved the medications to the kitchen cabinet from a dresser near her bed approximately six weeks before the incident in question because she was concerned that her prescriptions were “too exposed to everyone,” including her young grandchildren and Elizabeth. The defendant testified that she could reach her medications in the kitchen cabinet only with the aid of a step stool.

After having been appointed Elizabeth’s conservator on February 19,1985, the plaintiff filed this action on February 22, 1985, by which time Elizabeth had reached the age of eighteen. The original single count complaint alleged that the defendant had negligently and carelessly caused Elizabeth to suffer organic brain damage and to become mentally retarded in that: “(a) she maintained within the family premises large quantities of dangerous drugs, when she knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s Incapable’s suicidal tendencies and of the likelihood that the Plaintiff’s Incapable would consume said drugs;2 (b) she failed to hide [522]*522or secure from the Plaintiff’s Incapable aforesaid dangerous drugs, when she knew or should have known of the Plaintiff’s Incapable’s likelihood to consume them; (c) she failed to warn or otherwise instruct the Plaintiff’s Incapable not to consume said drugs; and (d) she failed to determine in a prompt and timely fashion that the Plaintiff’s Incapable had consumed said drugs and failed, therefore, to obtain for her prompt and timely medical care.” The defendant moved to strike the original complaint on the ground that the action was barred by the doctrine of parental immunity. The trial court, Purtill, J., agreed and granted the defendant’s motion to strike. Thereafter, the plaintiff filed the present two count amended complaint sounding in negligence and wilful, reckless and/or wanton conduct.3 The defendant then moved for summary judgment and argued that the first count was barred by the doctrine of parental immunity, and that the second count was barred by the statute of limitations because it set forth a new cause of action, filed more than two years after the incident, which did not relate back to the filing of the initial complaint. In the alternative, the defendant argued that, even if it were assumed that the second count related back to the original complaint and was timely, the plaintiff had presented no facts or evidence to demonstrate that the defendant’s conduct was wilful, wanton and/or reckless. The trial court, Noren, J., granted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment and rendered judgment thereon for the defendant. We find no error.

I

The first claim raised by the plaintiff is that the doctrine of parental immunity bars the initiation of suit [523]*523by only an unemancipated minor, and thus, the doctrine is not applicable here because Elizabeth had become emancipated prior to the filing of this action. We disagree.

The parental immunity doctrine bars an unemancipated minor from suing his or her parent for injuries caused by the negligence of that parent. Dzenutis v. Dzenutis, 200 Conn. 290, 293, 512 A.2d 130 (1986); Ooms v. Ooms, 164 Conn. 48, 51, 316 A.2d 783 (1972). Under this doctrine “a parent is not liable civilly to his child for personal injury inflicted during [the child’s]minority . . . .” (Emphasis added.)Mesite v. Kirchenstein, 109 Conn. 77, 82-83, 145 A. 753 (1929). Thus, to determine the applicability of the parental immunity doctrine, the age of the child at the time the injury is inflicted governs and not the age of the child at the time the action is filed. “Contrary to the contention of the plaintiff, her emancipation subsequent to her injury gives her no additional right to maintain this action. Her right to sue must exist at the time of the injury and her subsequent emancipation is of no consequence. ‘An emancipated child cannot maintain an action against his parent for a tort committed before emancipation if at the time of the wrong the action was not maintainable.’ 59 Am. Jur. 2d, Parent and Child, § 157. . . .” Lee v. Comer, 159 W. Va. 585, 587-88, 224 S.E.2d 721 (1976); see also London Guarantee & Accident Co. v. Smith, 242 Minn.

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Bluebook (online)
542 A.2d 711, 207 Conn. 518, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubay-v-irish-conn-1988.