(dissenting). Until recently, Michigan law imposed no liability for prenatal *305injuries. Newman v Detroit, 281 Mich 60; 274 NW 710 (1937). Nor could there be an action under the state’s wrongful death act for the negligent termination of prenatal existence. Powers v Troy, 380 Mich 160; 156 NW2d 530 (1968). In 1971, the Michigan Supreme Court overruled both Newman and Powers. Womack v Buchhorn, 384 Mich 718; 187 NW2d 218 (1971), allowed the maintenance of a common law negligence action on behalf of a minor for prenatal brain injuries suffered during the fourth month of pregnancy. O’Neill v Morse, 385 Mich 130; 188 NW2d 785 (1971), read "person” in Michigan’s wrongful death statute, MCLA 600.2922; MSA 27A.2922, to include an unborn child.
The majority draws limits on these recent decisions, limits which I am certain are unjustified. In Womack v Buchhorn, supra, the Michigan Supreme Court joined the majority of American jurisdictions that allow a person to recover for prenatal injuries. The plaintiff in Womack was not viable at the time of the injury, but, as far as the opinion indicates, this presented no problem for the Court.
Womack was a common law action for prenatal injuries, brought by a child who survived his injuries. Before us now is a statutory action for wrongful death. But the actions are related. O’Neill v Morse, supra, and the language of our wrongful death statute shows the relationship. The first section of the statute, MCLA 600.2922; MSA 27A.2922, reads:
"(1) Whenever the death of a person or injuries resulting in death shall be caused by wrongful act, neglect or default, and the act, neglect or default is such as would, if death had not ensued, have entitled the party injured to maintain an action and recover *306damages, in respect thereof, then and in every such case, the person who, or the corporation which would have been liable, if death had not ensued, shall be liable to an action for damages, notwithstanding the death of the person injured, and although the death shall have been caused under such circumstances as amount in law to felony. All actions for such death, or injuries resulting in death, shall be brought only under this section.” (Emphasis added.)
The Supreme Court in O’Neill declared that the purpose of the statute was "to provide an action for wrongful death whenever, if death had not ensued, there would have been an action for damages”, 385 Mich at 133. Since Womack had recognized the right of a child to sue for prenatal injuries, there was no basis to deny a right of action for the wrongful death of an unborn child who, if his death had not ensued, would have had an action for damages. If Womack, where the plaintiff was not viable at the time of his injury, led the Supreme Court in O’Neill to read "person” in the wrongful death statute to include the unborn, why has the majority here read the same word, in the same statute, as excluding the unborn prior to viability?
Mr. Justice Holmes, sitting then on the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, authored the first American opinion on tort liability for prenatal injuries in Dietrich v Inhabitants of Northampton, 138 Mass 14 (1884). A woman, four to five months pregnant, fell upon a defective highway and suffered a miscarriage. The premature infant died within minutes of birth. The administrator of his estate brought an action, but the court would not allow it. Holmes questioned whether a duty could be owed "to one not yet in being”, and stated that "as the unborn child was a part of the mother *307at the time of the injury, any damage to it which was not too remote to be recovered for at all was recoverable by her”. 138 Mass at 16-17.
Though Dietrich has been effectively overruled, see Keyes v Construction Service, Inc, 340 Mass 633; 165 NE2d 912 (1960), it continues to affect decisions. The viability "requirement” can be traced to an early attempt by an Illinois judge to avoid the unacceptable result found in Dietrich. In Allaire v St. Luke’s Hospital, 184 Ill 359; 56 NE 638, 48 LRA 225 (1900), the Illinois Supreme Court, relying on Dietrich, refused to allow an action for prenatal injuries. Justice Boggs dissented. Holmes in Dietrich and the majority in Allaire thought that no duty could be owed an unborn child, who was only part of the mother until birth. Justice Boggs attacked this position with the concept of viability:
" 'Medical science and skill and experience have demonstrated that at a period of gestation in advance of the period of parturition the foetus is capable of independent and separate life, and that though within the body of the mother it is not merely a part of her body, for her body may die in all of its parts and the child remain alive and capable of maintaining life when separated from the dead body of the mother.’ ”
This provided a means by which to avoid the undeniably harsh results that occur when the legal existence of a fetus is denied.
However, the influence of Boggs’ dissent was not felt for some time. In 1923, a Louisiana court used analogies drawn from that state’s civil code to allow recovery for the wrongful death of a child who died, soon after birth, from prenatal injuries. Cooper v Blanck, 39 So 2d 352 (La App, 1923).
Though the decision was rendered in 1923, it *308was not published until 1949; by then a few common law jurisdictions recognized an action for prenatal injuries. Bonbrest v Kotz, 65 F Supp 138 (D DC, 1946), Williams v Marion Rapid Transit, Inc, 152 Ohio St 114; 87 NE2d 334; 10 ALR2d 1051 (1949). Both Bonbrest and Williams were actions brought by children after their birth who were viable at the time of their injury, and this was emphasized in both cases and used as a means of distinguishing Dietrich. Williams quoted Justice Boggs’ dissent in Allaire in support of its emphasis on viability. The Federal Court and the Ohio court both pointed out that, for the law of property, the separate existence of a child did not begin only at birth. Why, they questioned, should tort law view birth as crucial?
For a time, courts continued to emphasize viability when children brought actions for prenatal injuries. See, e.g., Mallison v Pomeroy, 205 Or 690; 291 P2d 225 (1955), Damasiewicz v Gorsuch, 197 Md 417; 79 A2d 550 (1951) (concurring opinion), Tursi v New England Windsor Co, 19 Conn Supp 242; 111 A2d 14 (1955), Keyes v Construction Service, Inc, 340 Mass 633; 165 NE2d 912 (1960). It was not long, however, before a majority of courts refused to consider viability at the time of injury to be of any importance in an action for prenatal injuries brought by a child born alive. Medical authorities did not support the proposition that viability signaled separate existence, and restricting recovery to only those viable at the time of their injury would lead to unjustifiably harsh results. See, e.g, Bennett v Hymers, 101 NH 483; 147 A2d 108 (1958), Smith v Brennan, 31 NJ 353; 157 A2d 497 (1960), Daley v Meier, 33 Ill App 2d 218; 178 NE2d 691 (1961), Sylvia v Gobeille, 101 RI 76; 220 A2d 222 (1966). Commentators seem pleased with the rejection of viability as a crucial *309factor in actions to recover for prenatal injuries, and critical of those jurisdictions where viability is still emphasized. See Prosser, Law of Torts (4th ed), § 55, p 337, Gordon, The Unborn Plaintiff, 63 Mich L Rev 579 (1965), Note, The Impact of Medical Knowledge on the Law Relating to Prenatal Injuries, 110 U of Pa L Rev 554 (1962), Note, Prenatal Injuries and Wrongful Death; 18 Vand L Rev 847 (1965).
It is true that a few jurisdictions have held that an action for the wrongful death of a nonviable fetus cannot be maintained. Three of the jurisdictions mentioned in footnote 5 of the majority’s opinion have expressly held that there is no action for the death of a nonviable fetus. Alaska: Mace v Jung, 210 F Supp 706 (D Alas, 1962) (but citing no Alaska cases so holding); New Hampshire: Poliquin v MacDonald, 101 NH 104; 135 A2d 249 (1957); Illinois: Rapp v Hiemenz, 107 Ill App 2d 382; 246 NE2d 77 (1969).
The same footnote refers to the Iowa case of McKillip v Zimmerman, 191 NW2d 706 (Iowa, 1971), which involved a nonviable fetus. The court, ruling that a wrongful death action could not be maintained, refused to base its decision on viability. The court stated:
"We are not persuaded the case at bar should be decided on the viability theory. It has been severely criticized as unsound by legal commentators.” 191 NW2d at 708.
Birth, the court thought, was a prerequisite for maintaining a wrongful death action.
Birth is the line discoverable from the cases on wrongful death. Where the action has been denied, the majority of courts have been unwilling to find *310that someone not yet born could be covered by a wrongful death statute. Compare Torigian v Watertown News Co, Inc, 352 Mass 446; 225 NE2d 926 (1967) (nonviable at time of injury, survived 2-1/2 hours after premature birth) with Leccese v McDonough, 361 Mass 64; 279 NE2d 339 (1972) (viable at time of injury, stillborn). See, Lawrence v Craven Tire Co, 210 Va 138; 169 SE2d 440 (1969), Stokes v Liberty Mutual Ins Co, 213 So 2d 695 (Fla, 1968), Kilmer v Hicks, 22 Ariz App 552; 529 P2d 706 (1975), Bayer v Suttle, 23 Cal App 3d 361; 100 Cal Reptr 212 (1972), Endresz v Friedberg, 24 NY2d 478; 301 NYS2d 65; 248 NE2d 901 (1969). Other cases can be found at 15 ALR3d 992, 999. Numerous other jurisdictions, including Michigan, have allowed actions for the wrongful death of a fetus. Though a Georgia court has allowed recovery for the death of a nonviable fetus, Porter v Lassiter, 91 Ga App 712; 87 SE2d 100 (1955), most courts allowing recovery have noted that the case before them involved the death of a viable fetus. See cases at 15 ALR3d 992, 995. But the scarcity of cases holding that viability is essential, and the large number of courts that have refused to allow a wrongful death action even when the fetus was viable, lead to the conclusion that talk of viability in this context is an unfortunate remnant of the early attempts to avoid Dietrich.
The Supreme Court of New Jersey fully appreciates the historical role emphasis on viability played. In Smith v Brennan, 31 NJ 353; 157 A2d 497, 504-505 (1960), the court stated:
"Although the viability distinction has no real justification, it is explainable historically. The Dietrich case announced a theory that an unborn child was part of its mother. The first dissent from this proposition, by Justice Boggs in the Allaire case pointed out that an *311unborn child who could sustain life apart from its mother could not be considered part of her. The logical appeal of Justice Boggs’ approach, coupled with the understandable conservatism of the earlier courts who broke with the Dietrich theory, resulted in a rule of recovery limited by the viability distinction. But the usefulness of that distinction has disappeared with the modern repudiation of the Dietrich theory. And since it has no cogent medical reason to support it, and no relevancy to the harm resulting from prenatal injury, we do not believe that it has any place in the determination of the question of liability for wrongful conduct.”
"The primary dispute [in wrongful death actions], of course, centers on the relevancy of birth.” Gordon, The Unborn Plaintiff, 63 Mich L Rev 579, 593 (1965). In the dispute, the Michigan Supreme Court has sided with those courts that have allowed wrongful death action even if there has been no birth. "The phenomenon of birth is an arbitrary point from which to measure life.” O’Neill v Morse, supra, 385 Mich at 136.
The majority admits that "much of the language in O’Neill is ambiguous as regards viability”. I thing that O’Neill shows that just as birth is deemed irrelevant, so should viability. I recognize that it was not a necessary implication of Womack v Buchhorn, supra, that fetuses be included in the wrongful death act. But since the Supreme Court in O’Neill has viewed Womack as expanding the definition of "person” in the wrongful death act to include the unborn, surely "person” must include the entity involved in Womack, a nonviable fetus.
In O’Neill, the Supreme Court took note of the public policy to protect the property right of the unborn. It was pointed out that there is statutory, authority for the appointment of guardians ad litem for unborn persons. MCLA 600.2045; MSA 27A.2045. The analogy from the protection of the *312unborn’s rights in property law to a "protection” in tort law is not a neat one when there has been no birth. In property law, the rights of the unborn are inchoate; prior to birth property rights are imperfect and vanish if there is no birth. Nevertheless, O’Neill made the analogy, and I see no reason to limit it. Since inchoate property rights may arise at any time prior to birth, why limit to a certain prenatal period, as the majority does, this "analogous” tort right?
The narrow question this case presents is how broad is the word "person” in our state’s wrongful death act. The constitutional question decided in Roe v Wade, 410 US 113; 93 S Ct 705; 35 L Ed 2d 147 (1973), is unconnected to the statutory question at hand. In Roe, the Supreme Court considered how "important interests in safeguarding death, in maintaining medical standards, and in protecting potential life” restricted the privacy rights of a pregnant woman. 410 US at 154; 93 S Ct at 727; 35 L Ed 2d at 177. The balancing of the state’s interest in regulating abortion with the right of privacy led to the Court’s decision that state interference in the abortion decision is sometimes impermissible. But the case at hand presents none of the interests found crucial in Roe. We are not concerned with the right of a mother to freely terminate her pregnancy at a certain stage. Rather we have the case of a wrongful and unwanted termination. Certainly a tortfeasor cannot invoke the mother’s privacy rights to defend his wrongdoing. Nor is the issue of whether a fetus is a person within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment presented. If it were, Roe would settle the issue. But nothing in Roe precludes this Court from ruling that a fetus, viable or not, is a person within the meaning of our state’s wrongful death act. Since the case before us presents an issue *313extremely dissimilar to that decided in Roe, I fail to see why the majority turned to that case for support.
The Michigan Supreme Court has given Roe a more restrictive reading. In Larkin v Wayne Prosecutor, 389 Mich 533; 208 NW2d 176 (1973), one of the issues presented was whether Roe rendered MCLA 750.322; MSA 28.554, assaultive abortion, invalid. The challenged statute reads:
"The wilful killing of an unborn quick child by any injury to the mother of such child, which would be murder if it resulted in the death of such mother, shall be deemed manslaughter.”
The Court pointed out that the statute "is related only peripherally to the issues decided in Roe v Wade and Doe v Bolton [410 US 179; 93 S Ct 739; 35 L Ed 2d 201 (1973)].” 389 Mich at 539. The statute was not found to be unconstitutional, even though Roe recognized that the constitutional right of privacy would sometimes prohibit a state from preventing a mother from aborting an unborn quick child. The challenged statute, as the Court read it, prohibited abortions caused by felonious assault upon the mother. Larkin perceived that Roe said nothing about pregnancies terminated by a felonious assault; there is no reason not to believe that Roe similarly had nothing to say about pregnancies terminated by tortious infliction of injury on the mother.
If "The phenomenon of birth is an arbitrary point from which to measure life”, O’Neill, 385 Mich at 136, isn’t the majority’s emphasis on viability in defining "person” equally arbitrary?
My position, that a nonviable fetus should be considered a person under the wrongful death act, *314is not "judicial legislation”. The "judicial legislation” argument that influenced the Supreme Court in Powers v Troy, supra, was rejected in O’Neill. "Yet it is doubtful that the 19th century legislatures that first passed the death statutes in this country envisioned either nonviable or viable fetuses as being within their terms; if relief is to be granted for prenatal or neonatal death at all, it should extend to both types of cases.” Note, 110 U Pa L Rev 554, 562-563. In light of O’Neill, the majority’s fear of "judicial legislation” is imaginary.
I would remand for the plaintiff to put forth his proofs.