Rohm v. Stroud

Bronson, J.

Defendants appeal from a judgment entered by the trial court sitting without a jury in which plaintiff was awarded a verdict of $23,869, including $8,400 for the parents’ investment in the life of Cheryl D. Rohm, deceased. Suit was commenced under the Michigan wrongful death statute. MOLA § 600.2922 (Stat Ann 1971 Cum Supp § 27 A-.2922).

On appeal, the sole question raised is whether the trial court properly included the $8,400 for “the investment in the child’s life”. This amount represented the estimated cost of raising the child from birth until the time of death. Defendants agree that the figure is fair and reasonable, if such amounts are properly payable under the death act *259and consistent with Breckon v. Franklin Fuel Company (1970), 383 Mich 251.

Breckon limited Wycko v. Cnodtke (1960), 361 Mich 331, only to the extent that Wycko appeared to authorize recovery for loss of companionship or grief endured by the surviving dependents.1 Since the cost of birth, food, clothes, medicine, education, and shelter are all factors to be considered in determining pecuniary loss, and since the $8,400 “investment in the child’s life” represented the estimated cost of these factors, the trial court properly included the $8,400 “investment in the child’s life” in the judgment award. See Benson v. Watson (1970), 26 Mich App 142, 146 ;2 Haupt v. Tale Rubber Company (1970), 29 Mich App 225, 229.3

Affirmed.

The following quotation from Wycko was unaffected by the Breckon decision:

“The pecuniary value of a human life is a compound of many elements. The use of material analogies may be helpful and inoffensive. Just as with respect to a manufacturing plant, or industrial machine, value involves the costs of acquisition emplacement, upkeep, maintenance service, repair, and renovation, so, in our context, we must consider the expenses of birth, of food, of clothing, of medicines, of instruction, of nurture and shelter.” 361 Mich at 339.

Our decision was reversed and remanded for the reason that defendant failed to raise the issue in the trial court and thereby preserve the question for appellate review. See Benson v. Watson (1971), 384 Mich 804. The reversal would not appear to go to our construction of Breckon, supra, but rather its application absent an objection.

Leave to appeal granted (1971), 384 Mich 813.