[¶ 1] Plaintiff Richard Bourgeois appeals from a summary judgment entered in the Superior Court (Kennebec County,
Marden, J.)
in favor of defendants, Great Northern Nekoosa Corporation (Great Northern) and Colwell Construction Company (Colwell). Bourgeois brought an action for negligent infliction of emotional distress, and the court ruled that the defendants had no legal duty to protect him. Bourgeois asks us to overturn our decision in
Michaud v. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp.,
[¶ 2] This litigation arises out of the same incident that gave rise to
Michaud,
thus, except for the following, the facts of the two cases are identical.
Michaud,
[¶3] Bourgeois filed the present complaint for negligent infliction of emotional distress, alleging that Great Northern and Colwell each owed him a duty of care to protect him from psychic injury. He claimed no physical injury. Both defendants filed motions for summary judgment. In granting the motions, the court concluded as a matter of law that Bourgeois was not within the protected class of indirect victims, and the defendants did not owe Bourgeois an independent duty of care as a rescuer or as an invitee. Bourgeois now appeals from that decision.
Discussion
[¶ 4] Bourgeois urges us to overturn our decision in
Michaud v. Great Northern Nekoosa Corp.,
We have never adopted the rescue doctrine .... Were we to adopt it, this would not end any analysis in the present case. Even if the rescue doctrine gives rise to an independent duty of care owed to the rescuer and emotional distress is a foreseeable result of the defendants’ negligence, “policy considerations may dictate a cause of action should not be sanctioned no matter how foreseeable the risk.” Cameron v. Pepin,610 A.2d 279 , 282 (Me.1992). In claims for the negligent infliction of emotional distress, we must avoid inappropriately shifting the risk of loss and assigning liability disproportionate to culpability. We do not minimize the heroic and selfless acts of a rescuer, but such a person is not *371 a “direct victim" pursuant to Maine law. To create a special exception for a rescuer in the context of a claim for emotional distress would expand liability out of proportion with culpability. See Cameron v. Pepin,610 A.2d 279 , 282 (Me.1992).
Michaud,
[¶ 5]
Stare decisis
embodies the important social policy of continuity in the law by providing for consistency and uniformity of decisions.
See Shaw v. Jendzejec,
a deliberate or solemn decision of a court, after argument on a question of law fairly arising in the case, the disposition of which is necessary to the determination of the case, is an authority or binding precedent in the same court and in other courts of equal or lower rank, in subsequent cases where the very point is again in controversy.
Myrick v. James,
[¶ 6] Although Bourgeois disagrees with our conclusion in
Michaud,
that decision was the product of deliberate and solemn analysis. In deciding whether to recognize the rescue doctrine in a case involving purely psychic injuries, we carefully considered valid precedent and weighed the competing policy issues raised by the parties.
See Michaud,
[¶ 7] Bourgeois also attempts to distinguish this case from Michaud. He argues that Great Northern and Colwell had a duty to protect him from psychic injury because he was an invitee. According to Bourgeois, the chaos he found upon arriving at the accident scene and the horrifying nature of the accident created a dangerous condition which constituted a breach of the duty to keep the land in safe condition.
[118] This case cannot be distinguished from
Michaud.
Bourgeois’s status as an invitee is inseparable from his status as a rescuer. Consequently, he, like Michaud, does not qualify as a direct victim of the alleged negligence.
Michaud,
The entry is
Judgment affirmed.
