This matter concerns a personal injury action that was instituted on August 21, 2000. Corrine Biercevicz, the plaintiff, brings this uninsured motorist action against the defendant, Liberty Mutual Insurance *176 Company, asserting, inter alia, a claim for “[b]ystander [e]motional [distress” in the second count of her sеcond revised complaint (complaint) dated October 6, 2004. The plaintiff claims damages for witnessing the death of her fiance, Scott Piscitelli. On November 1, 2004, the defendant filed amotion to strike the plaintiffs second count, claiming that the count was legally insufficient to establish a claim for bystander emotional distress wherein the injured victim was described as the plaintiffs fiance. On November 12, 2004, the plaintiff filed a brief in opposition to the defendant’s motion, and the matter was argued before the court on November 22, 2004.
I
DISCUSSION
‘“The purpose of a motion to strike is to test the legal sufficiency of the allegations of a pleading; it admits all facts well pleaded. . . . The role of the trial court [is] to examine the [complaint], construed in favor of the [plaintiff], to determine whether the [plаintiff has] stated a legally sufficient cause of action.’ ” (Citation omitted.)
Napoletano
v.
CIGNA Healthcare of Connecticut, Inc.,
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the complaint alleges that she and her fiance were passengers in a vehicle that was struck by an uninsured motorist. She alleges further that the collision was the fault of the uninsured operator and, as a result of the collision, she sustained personal injuries. In the second count of the complaint she alleges that her fiance suffered serious injuries in the accident, which subsequently resulted in his death. Shе alleges further *177 that she sustained serious emotional injury witnessing the injuries to her fiance.
In
Clohessy
v.
Bachelor,
In Clohessy, the Supreme Court held that the parent and sibling of a child killed in an accident could bring an action for bystander emotional distress. Id., 56-57. The court left for another day the question of what other relationships might also qualify. The issue before the court in the present action is whether the status of being a fiance is sufficient to meet the “closely related” requirement of Clohessy. The defendant does not question the existence of the other three Clohessy elements in this action.
The defendant argues that the requirement that one be “closely related” means that one who does not have a relationshiр by blood or marriage to the injury victim may not recover for emotional distress. It claims that those who are engaged to be married are not “related,”
*178
and, as a result, that relationship does not qualify as one that will support a bystander emotional distress claim. The defendant notes that since
Clohessy,
neither our Supreme Court nor the Appellate Court have addressed the issue of what “other relationships” may qualify as being “closely related” so as to support a cause of action for bystander emotional distress. In support of its position, the defendant cites numerous out-of-state decisions in which parties have been denied the right to sue for bystander emotional distress unless they were related by blood or marriage. It is interesting to note that in
Clohessy,
our Supreme Court cited and relied on
Thing
v.
La Chusa,
Thus, the California Supreme Court reaffirmed in
Thing
its earlier ruling in
Elden
v.
Sheldon,
The defendant does acknowledge that there is a conflict in authority on this issue throughout the country. It cites two Connecticut Superior Court cases that have allowеd the doctrine to extend to couples who are engaged, where it has been alleged that they are cohabiting. See
Izquierdo
v.
Ricitelli,
Superior Court, judicial district of New London, Docket No. 566731 (March 15, 2004) (
*180
The plaintiff urges the court to adopt the reasoning of
Izquierdo
and
Miller.
In addition, she cites
Dunphy
v.
Gregor,
This court is persuaded by the reasoning of the dissent in
Dunphy.
As noted there; see
Dunphy
v.
Gregor,
supra,
Justice Garibaldi, in her dissent in Dunphy, opined that “[d]rawing the line at marriage conforms to the general expectation of society as reflected in the statutes . . . that spouses should be treated differently *181 than unmarried cohabitants.” Id., 120 (Garibaldi, J., dissenting). Indeed, as in New Jersey, Connecticut does not recognize common-law marriage. Engaged couples are not recognized for the purposes of workers’ compensation, social security benefits, welfare or inheritance by intestate succession. It is also noted that Connecticut would not allow an unmarried person to sue for loss of consortium, whether or not that person cohabited with the injured party. Justice Garibaldi reasoned that the majority in Dunphy had adopted an unworkable and ultimately unwise standard. Id., 122. She then suggested: “The majority’s decision will open the door to more bystander claims because many people live together in ‘significant other’ relationships. The inquiry into whether abystander has the requisite ‘close, substantial, and enduring relationship’ will require the courts and defendants tо delve into the intimate details of claimants’ lives. The proofs will undoubtedly deal with a couple’s sexual fidelity, their commitment to one another measured in time intervals, their economic interconnectedness and interdependence, not to mention thеir estate plans. . . . The end result will be that courts will be forced to evaluate all sorts of personal relationships and necessarily assign to them a rank in some large hierarchy. Ranking relationships is not our role.” (Citations omitted.) Id., 122-23.
Clohessy
recognized that limits had to be еstablished in circumscribing the class of people who could sue for bystander emotional distress. The court stated: “[I]t would be an entirely unreasonable burden on all human activity if the defendant who has endangered one person were to be compelled to pay for the lacerated feelings of every other person disturbed by reason of it, including every bystander shocked at an accident, and every distant relative of the person injured, as well as all his friends. . . . With these considerations in mind,
*182
and borrowing from the experience of other jurisdictions, we agree that specific limitations must be imposed upon the reasonable foreseeability rule. We recognize that those limitations, albeit somewhat arbitrary, are necessary in order not to leave the liability of a negligent defendant open to undue extension by the verdict of sympathetic juries, who under our system must define and apply any general rule to the facts of the case before them.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Clohessy
v.
Bachelor,
supra,
A cause of action for bystander emotional distress has been characterized by our Supreme Court as a form of third party liability.
Mendillo
v.
Board of Education,
Mendillo is instructive, by way of analogy, as an indication of the concern of our Supreme Court with the *183 expansion of any third party liability. If the court is unwilling to expand liability to children in a loss of consortium situation, it is difficult to imagine that the same court would allow expansion of liability to engaged couples who are not cohabiting.
II
CONCLUSION
On the basis of the foregoing, and the guidance of the Supreme Court in the cаses cited, the court finds here that a claim for bystander emotional distress does not extend to a claim made by the plaintiff fiancee of the decedent, because she cannot satisfy the “closely related” requirement. It is necessary to set this limitation to avoid countless other litigants and extend liability on the part of negligent defendants. The extension of class would also result in an unworkable decision and unwarranted intrusion into the private lives of litigants. The defendant’s motion to strike the second count of the complaint, therefore, is granted.
