ORDER
Joseph Barnes, an Illinois prisoner, thought he had hepatitis and wanted to be tested. He made several requests and filed several grievances at the prison. All were denied. One of his grievances was denied by Dr. Jovita Anyanwu, the prison’s acting medical director. Believing that denial caused him emotional distress, Barnes sued the doctor for negligent infliction of emotional distress. The district court granted summary judgment for the doctor, concluding that because the emotional distress did not accompany any physical impact Barnes could not prevail. Because in three previous cases we have upheld the reasoning used by the district court and we find no reason to break from that reasoning, we affirm.
I.
In August 1999, Joseph Barnes was concerned that he had contracted hepatitis, and he wanted to be tested. Several times he asked the nurses and doctors at the prison to test him, but his requests were denied; he then filed several grievances. In response to one of the grievances, Dr. Anyanwu, a medical supervisor at the prison, denied Barnes’s grievance and told him to follow the proper sick-call procedures.
After repeatedly seeking and being denied a hepatitis test, Barnes filed suit under § 1983 for deliberate indifference against the warden, a nurse, and another doctor at the prison, but not against Any-
The district court initially dismissed the suit for Barnes’s failure to exhaust his administrative remedies, but on appeal we reversed and remanded it for further proceedings. Barnes v. Briley,
Anyanwu moved for summary judgment on both claims. Barnes conceded that he could not recover on his deliberate indifference claim, but contested summary judgment on the state-law claim. Barnes did not allege that the Anyanwu ever performed a botched medical procedure, just that Anyanwu denied his grievance and told him to follow the sick-call procedures. Relying on our precedent, the district court granted summary judgment for Anyanwu. It held that because Illinois requires direct victims to establish an impact, i.e., “a contemporaneous physical injury or impact” in these cases, Barnes cannot recover.
On appeal, Barnes argues that Illinois courts have interpreted the “impact rule” inconsistently and, given the nature of doctor-patient relationships, that we should carve out an exception to it for medical malpractice cases. In the alternative, he asks that we certify the question to the Illinois Supreme Court.
II.
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Knight v. Wiseman,
As an initial matter, it is questionable whether this is a medical malpractice case. In Illinois to recover in a medical malpractice case, a plaintiff must prove a duty owed by the defendant physician, a breach of that duty, an injury proximately caused by the breach, and resultant damages. Smith v. Pavlovich,
Under the rubric in Rickey, bystanders don’t have to suffer a physical impact or injury at the time of the negligent act, but they must have been in such proximity to the accident that there was a high risk and fear of physical impact to them. Id. And — and this is an important “and”— bystanders must show a “physical injury or illness as a result of the emotional distress caused by the defendant’s negligence.” Id. The decision in Rickey did not discard the impact rule for direct victims of negligent infliction of emotional distress. It only concerned bystanders. Hayes,
Barnes argues that nine years later the Illinois Supreme Court in Corgan v. Muehling,
The court held that the higher burden established in Rickey for bystander cases — that the plaintiff allege a “physical injury or illness as a result of the emotional distress caused by the defendant’s negligence” — did not apply in direct victim cases. Id.,
Consistent with this understanding of Corgan and Illinois tort law, we have held on three separate occasions that the impact rule applies to direct victims: Kapoulas v. Williams Ins. Agency,
Barnes seizes on this inconsistency and argues that it portends either the abolition of the rule by the Illinois Supreme Court or the Court’s recognition of an exception for medical malpractice cases. Under Erie our job is to predict how a state’s highest court will decide a question of state law. Pisciotta,
Indeed, a persuasive argument for finding that the impact rule has been abolished by the Illinois Supreme Court is in Pasquale v. Speed Products Engineering,
And there is no indication from case law or any general trend in Illinois that suggests the Illinois Supreme Court would hold that the impact rule does not apply in medical malpractice cases. Along with the lack of evidence that such an exception would be recognized, that is a pure policy decision; the Illinois legislature or the Illinois Supreme Court can make that decision, but it should not be made by our court. Alper v. Altheimer & Gray,
As a final measure, Barnes asks that we certify the question to the Illinois Supreme Court to determine whether the direct impact rule applies in medical malpractice cases. One of the reasons that we certify questions to state supreme courts is
III.
Therefore, we reaffirm our holding that under Illinois law, a direct victim of negligent infliction of emotional distress must establish a contemporaneous physical injury or impact. This includes cases of medical malpractice. And we deny Barnes’s motion to certify the question to the Illinois Supreme Court. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
