Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge EDWARDS.
Aрpellant’s aunt, Arlena Mackey, died on December 9, 1986, while in the care of D.C. General Hospital (“D.C. General”). Neither D.C. General nor St. Elizabeth’s Hospital (“SEH”), the federal mental health institution at which Mackey had resided between 1964 and 1986, informed appellant that her aunt had passed away until six weeks after the date of death. Appellant Barbara Mack-ey sued the District of Columbia and the United States for intentional infliction of emotional distress; 1 negligent infliction of emotional distress; and negligent interference with appellant’s right to possession of, and right to bury or otherwise dispose of, Mackey’s body.
Appellant’s claims against the District of Columbia were tried to a jury and her claims against the United States were simultaneously tried to the District Court. The jury returned a verdict in appellant’s favor, awarding her $25,000 in damages. The trial court thereafter granted a motion by the District of Columbia for judgment as a matter of law and set aside the jury’s verdict. Mackey v. United, States, No. 89-2984, slip op. (D.D.C. Apr. 23, 1992) (“Mem"), reprinted in Plaintiffs Appendix (“App.”) 30. However, the District Court found the United States liable for negligently interfering with Barbara Mackey’s right tо possession of her aunt’s body, and awarded appellant a $10,000 judgment. The trial court refused to award further damages on appellant’s claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress, finding the evidence on this claim insufficient and *828 uncorroborated. Mackey v. United States, No. 89-2984, slip op. (D.D.C. Feb. 10, 1992) (“Mem.”), reprinted in App. 19.
Because we find that appellant offered sufficient evidence at trial from which a reasonable juror cоuld have found negligence, we reinstate the jury’s verdict against the District of Columbia. However, we affirm the District Court’s refusal to award further damages against the United States on the claim of negligent infliction of emotional distress. The trial court correctly concluded that, on this record, District of Columbia law does not allow a presumption of damages for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
I. BACKGROUND
Mackey was a resident and patient at SEH from 1964 until late 1986. On November 28, 1986, Mackey was transferred to D.C. General where she remained a patient until her death on December 9, 1986. It was undisputed at trial that neither SEH nor D.C. General notified appellant (or any other relative) of Mackey’s transfer to D.C. General, оf her critical condition while at D.C. General or of her death. Without the knowledge or consent of any family member, D.C. General released Mackey’s remains for burial in a pauper’s grave on December 19, 1986. Appellant learned of her aunt’s death in a January 21, 1987 letter from SEH concerning funds remaining in Mackey’s account.
As Mackey’s primary care provider, SEH was responsible for furnishing D.C. General with vital information about the patient. To this end, SEH provided D.C. General with a copy of Mackey’s “face sheet.” This document, which is usually kept at the top of a patient’s records on the hospital ward, is supposed to contain the most current, accurate information on a patient, inсluding the name, address and telephone number of the patient’s next of kin. Trial Transcript (“Tr.”) at 3A-38, reprinted in Plaintiffs Supplemental Appendix (“S.A.”) 74. It was established at trial that, in November 1986, SEH provided D.C. General with a face sheet listing brother Julian Mackey (appellant’s father) and nephew Robert Mackey (appellant’s brother) as Arlena Mackey’s next of kin. Julian Mackey had died in 1983, a fact which was reflected in other SEH records, but which somehow never was corrected on the face sheet. Robert Mackey’s address and phone number were correct.
The evidence at trial established that once Mackey was transferred to D.C. General, it was that hospital’s duty to apprise next of kin of Mackey’s condition and death. Saverio Fantasia, a SEH administrator, testified that such duty was both a basic matter of hospital policy, see Tr. at 4A-23, and the subject of contractual agreement between SEH and D.C. General. That contract provided in pertinent part:
3.a. The Contractor [D.C. General] shall notify SEH and the next of kin immediately following the death of SEH pаtients in the contract facility, b. ... SEH will cooperate fully in notifying relatives to expedite removal of the remains as soon as possible after death.
Plaintiffs Exhibit 28, reprinted in S.A. 132.
Dr. Carl Green, the physician responsible for Mackey’s care during her final stay at D.C. General, testified that, given Mackey’s critical condition and the need to perform emergency medical procedures, extensive and continuous efforts should have been made to contact Mackey’s next of kin. See Tr. at 3A-7, 3A-23-24. Dr. Green did not specifically remember Mackey nor any particular efforts to contact her family, but based his testimony on her medical records and on general hospital procedures. However, Mackey’s medical records contained only the following notations reflecting efforts to contact a relative: (1) a note from a social service investigator on the second day of admission; (2) a second note from the social services worker dated December 4 mentioning an unspecified “plan” to try to reach relatives; (3) a resident’s note reflecting calls placed to Julian and Robert Mackey; and (4) a call to SEH on December 8. Tr. at 3A-12-13, 3A-16. In response to questioning by appellant’s counsel, Dr. Green conceded that, in order to protect the hospital and staff from the potential adverse legal consequences of engaging in procedures without consent, it was “vеry important” to document *829 efforts to reach a patient’s family. Tr. at 3A-26.
Dr. Green also testified that there would have been “daily calls” to SEH to apprise them of Mackey’s critical condition and of D.C. General’s inability to contact her family. Tr. at 3A-10. Mr. Fantasia cast doubt on this assertion, however, testifying that SEH was not notified of Mackey’s six life-threatening “code blue” episodes “until well after the dеath occurred.” Tr. at 4A-29. Moreover, the sole documented phone call to SEH was placed at 10:00 p.m. on December 8, the eve of Mackey’s death. Mackey suffered a “code blue” and was resuscitated, after which the intern noted the following on her medical records:
Attempted to contact the family and also Saint Elizabeth’s. The person who answered at Saint Elizabeth’s [was] not aware of their [sic] being a patient at D.C. General by that name. Nephew’s phone number in New York, no answer. Brother’s number in North Carolina, wrong number.
Tr. at 3A-17-18. Dr. Green testified that, in connection with calls to SEH, it was not unusual during a late-night phone call to reach someone who was unfamiliar with the patient; Dr. Green said that if “vital infоrmation” was needed from SEH, it was understood that calls should be placed during the day. Tr. at 3A-41.
While it was undisputed that appellant’s name appeared nowhere in D.C. General’s records, there was clear evidence that SEH possessed appellant’s name and correct address and telephone number, even though she was never listed оn Mackey’s face sheet or formally designated next of kin. Mr. Fantasia identified a number of documents from SEH’s files demonstrating that SEH was aware of appellant’s existence as early as 1983, including: (1) a letter to appellant from a SEH social worker, dated February 28, 1983, concerning Mackey’s transfer to Georgetown University Hospital (“Georgetown”) for surgery; (2) two Georgetown forms, dated March 3 and March 9, 1983, indicating that appellant had given telephonic consent to surgery for her aunt; (3) a letter to appellant, dated January 21, 1987, concerning funds remaining in Mackey’s account after her death; and (4) an undated correspondence list containing appellant’s name, address, phone number and relationship to Mackey. Tr. at 3A-46, 4A-21-22, 4A-33-34. Appellant testified that her home address and telephone number had not changed since 1978. Finally, Jeffrey Cheng, another SEH administrator, identified a SEH Death Report, prepared on December 20, 1986, which named appellant as Mackey’s “nearest surviving relative” and listed her correct address. Tr. at 19.
II. Disoussion
A. District Cоurt’s Grant of Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law
1. Standard of Review
In reviewing the trial court’s order granting the District of Columbia’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, we evaluate
de novo
whether appellant proffered
“sufficient evidence
upon which a jury could properly base a verdict” in her favor.
Richardson v. Richardson-Merrell, Inc.,
*830 2. The Merits
On the record before us, we think it clear that appеllant was Mackey’s legal next of kin. As such, she had an actionable right to possession of Mackey’s body. In
Steagall v. Doctors Hospital, Inc.,
The controlling principle is that there exists in our law a right to possess, preserve and bury, or otherwise to dispose of, a dead body; that the right belongs to the surviving spouse, if any ... and, if none such, then to the next of kin in the order of their relation to the dеcedent; and that violation of that right is a tort.
Id. at 353. 2 D.C. General’s failure to timely notify appellant of her aunt’s death entitles appellant, under Steagall, to bring the instant claim for negligent interference with her right to possession of Mackey’s body.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to appellant, there can be little doubt that a reasonable juror could have concluded that D.C. General did not exercise reasonable efforts to contact Mackey’s next of kin.
See Morrison v. MacNamara,
In our view, the reasonableness of D.C. General’s efforts in this case reduces to its contacts (or lack thereof) with SEH. As a matter of common sense, a reаsonable juror could conclude that SEH, Mackey’s caretaker of 22 years, was the primary source of information about next of kin to which D.C. General should have turned. Yet, D.C. General’s records document only one telephone call to SEH, placed the night before Mack-ey’s death — a call in which an unidentified person at SEH disclaimed any knowledge whatsoever of Arlena Mackey. Because this person clearly was uninformed and because D.C. General neither obtained the information it sought about Mackey nor relayed her dire condition in this phone call, a reasonable juror easily could have concluded that D.C. General should have made a follow-up call to SEH the next day. Dr. Green himself conceded that if D.C. General wanted to convey any “vital information” about a patient, calls to SEH were best placed during daytime hours.
In granting appellee’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, the District Court exonerated D.C. General on the grounds that it was “completely dependent” on SEH for information abоut Mackey and that SEH negligently provided D.C. General with information that D.C. General “had no way of knowing ... was inaccurate.” April 23, 1992 Mem. at 2-3, reprinted in App. 31-32. We believe a reasonable juror could have reached an entirely different conclusion from the evidence. First, the intern’s December 8 file note reveals that D.C. General did know that Julian Mackey’s phone number, as provided by SEH, was inaccurate. Second, D.C. General’s “dependence” on SEH counsels that, if anything, D.C. General should have made concerted, aggressive efforts to learn more from SEH when the contacts on the face sheet led nowhere after 11 days of supposedly continued calling.
A reasonable juror could have concluded thаt, had D.C. General called SEH on De *831 cember 9 and informed them of Mackey’s death, SEH would have located appellant’s name in its files. The evidence showed that, on that date, appellant’s name appeared in at least four places in SEH’s files. The evidence also indicated that SEH had no trouble finding appellant’s name when it was needed; e.g., appellant was listed on the Death Report prepared on December 20, 1986, and on the account closing letter dated January 21,1987. Furthermore, while the evidence suggests that SEH was negligent in preparing the face sheet, it does not suggest SEH was uncooperative or that it would not, upon learning of Mackey’s death, have fulfilled its contractual obligation to assist D.C. General in locating next of kin. Thus, a juror could conclude that it was patently unreasonable for D.C. General not to have turned to SEH when Mackey, a 22-year resident of that institution, fell critically ill and died and no family member had been contacted.
In short, there is no basis upon which this case could have been taken from the jury on a motion for judgment as a matter of law. The evidence was not so “one-sided” that reasonable jurors could not disagree on a verdict in favor of D.C. General. The judgment of the District Court on this point was in error and must therefore be reversed.
B. Presumption of Damages for Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress
The District Court found SEH negligent in failing to notify appellant of her aunt’s death, and awarded a $10,000 judgment against the United States. The court determined, however, that appellant had not substantiated her claim of emotional distress and therefore refused to award additional damages for negligent infliction of emotional distress. See February 10, 1992 Mem. at 7, reprinted in App. 25. Although appellant concedes, as she must, that neither we nor the D.C. Court of Appeals has ever held that plaintiffs are entitled to a presumption of damages for mental anguish wrought by the negligent mishandling of a corpse, see Brief of Appellant at 26, she urges us to hold that such a presumption is justified. We refuse to do so.
The District of Columbia’s recovery rule for negligently inflicted emotional distress is as clear as it is stringent, аnd it does not afford appellant the relief she seeks. To be compensable, emotional distress must “result[] from a direct physical injury.”
District of Columbia v. McNeill,
The
Williams
еxception plainly does not avail appellant, for the “zone of danger” construct is meaningless on the facts of this case. SEH’s negligent failure to timely notify appellant of her aunt’s death or to preserve Mackey’s body for appellant to dispose of as she wished did not endanger anyone’s physical well-being. In other words, the hospital’s conduct did not cause appellant to fear for her own safety, as the rule requires.
Cf. Cauman v. George Washington Univ.,
Moreover, the D.C. Court of Appeals has decisively expressed its hostility to broadening thе scope of the Williams rule. In Cauman, supra, the court rejected a similar plea that Williams be extended to cover appellants’ claim for wrongful birth. There, the court reiterated that strong public policy considerations counsel against imposing “virtually infinite liability” for negligent conduct, and declared that further changes in the law were better left to legislative action. Cauman, at 1107. Cauman indisputably fore *832 closes appellant’s claim for additional damages.
III. ConClusion
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorаble to appellant, we conclude that a reasonable juror could have found D.C. General negligent in failing to notify appellant of her aunt’s death. We therefore reverse the District Court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law for the District of Columbia and reinstate the jury’s verdict. Because D.C. law does not provide for a presumption of damages for negligently inflicted emotional distress unless the claimant was in a zone of physical danger, we affirm the District Court’s refusal to award appellant such damages against the United States.
So ordered.
Notes
. At the close of plaintiffs case-in-chief, the District Judge dismissed this claim, finding that no evidence had been presented to support it. Appellant does not challenge that ruling.
. Citing
District of Columbia v. Smith,
