In this appeal, we must decide if a minor child has actionable claims against a parent for loss of consortium, loss of support, and infliction of emotional distress from witnessing fatal injuries suffered by the parent, as a result of the parent’s negligent operation of a motor vehicle. We conclude the claims are not actionable and affirm the district court.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Sasha Clark was a passenger in a motor vehicle operated by her mother, Kimberly Rice, in Marion, Iowa, on October 21, 1996. Sasha was nine years of age at the time. Kimberly drove the vehicle from a road into an intersection of a highway, and into the path of a truck traveling along the
At the time of the accident, Sasha was an insured party under two separate policies of insurance. One policy was with IMT Insurance Company and was owned by Sasha’s father, Matthew Clark. The other policy was with Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Company and was owned by Kimberly. Matthew and Kimberly were divorced. Both policies contained uninsured and underinsured protection.
On October 20, 1998, Matthew brought an action on behalf of Sasha against the administrator of Kimberly’s estate. He claimed Kimberly was negligent in the operation of the vehicle, which resulted in damages to Sasha. In addition to damages for personal injury, Matthew sought to recover damages for Sasha’s loss of consortium and loss of support caused by her mother’s death. Matthew also sought recovery from IMT and Farm Bureau based on the uninsured and underinsured provisions of the insurance policies.
Matthew voluntarily dismissed the claim against IMT Insurance Company. The IMT policy contained an anti-stacking provision. Farm Bureau then filed a motion to strike the claims for loss of consortium and loss of support. Farm Bureau claimed the child had no legally recognizable claim against a parent for loss of consortium and support resulting from the death or injury to that parent. The district court granted the motion and dismissed the claims for loss of consortium and loss of support. Matthew sought interlocutory review, which we denied.
On March 26, 1999, Matthew filed an amended petition to assert a separate cause of action for severe emotional distress suffered by Sasha as a result of witnessing the fatal consequences of the accident on Kimberly. In response to a motion to adjudicate law points filed by Farm Bureau, the district court dismissed the claim. The district court granted the amendment to the petition but determined Sasha had no independent claim for emotional distress as a bystander to the accident as a matter of law.
The parties then submitted the negligence claim to the district court based on stipulated liability and damages. These damages included medical expenses, loss of use of body and mind, scarring and disfigurement, mental anguish, and pain and suffering.
On April 10, 2001, the district court entered judgment. Matthew subsequently filed a notice of appeal of those claims dismissed by the district court prior to the judgment.
On appeal, Matthew claims Sasha had a legally recognizable independent claim for severe emotional distress suffered as a witness to the injuries and death of her mother, and the district court improperly dismissed the action. He also claims the district court erred in dismissing Sasha’s claims for loss of consortium and loss of support.
II. Standard of Review.
Our standard of review is for correction of errors at law. Iowa R.App. P. 6.4.
III. Claim for Emotional Distress.
It is a general rule in this state, with recognized exceptions, that there can be no recovery for emotional distress “absent intentional conduct by a defendant or some physical injury to the plaintiff.”
Mills v. Guthrie County Rural Elec. Coop. Ass'n,
Yet, like most other jurisdictions, we have refused to recognize an independent claim for emotional distress based on negligence without some physical harm.
See Doe,
The first exception involves bystander liability based on the breach of a duty of care by the defendant not to cause emotional distress to those who witness conduct that causes serious harm to a close relative.
Barnhill v. Davis,
1. The bystander was located near the scene of the accident.
2. The emotional distress resulted from a direct emotional impact from the sensory and contemporaneous observance of the accident, as contrasted with learning of the accident from others after its occurrence.
3. The bystander and the victim were husband and wife or related within the second degree of consanguinity or affinity-
4. A reasonable person in the position of the bystander would believe, and the bystander did believe, that the direct victim of the accident would be seriously injured or killed.
5. The emotional distress to the bystander must be serious.
Id. at 108.
A second exception has been carved out for direct victims of emotional
Matthew asserts he alleged an actionable claim on behalf of Sasha for her emotional distress under these governing principles for three reasons: (1) she sustained physical injury; (2) she was a bystander to her mother’s death; and (3) the parent-child relationship. Thus, he claims her physical injuries brought her within the general rule permitting recovery for emotional distress, and her status as a bystander and her parent-child relationship brought her within the exceptions to the rule.
1. Physical Injury.
As part of the negligence claim against Kimberly, the petition alleged Sasha suffered physical injuries from the accident. This allegation supports recovery for emotional distress.
See Roling v. Daily,
When a negligence claim establishes physical injury, a separate claim for emotional distress is subsumed in the underlying negligence claim.
Richards v. Town of Eliot,
2. Bystander Liability.
The bystander exception to the rule against recovery for emotional distress without physical injury was specifically created to permit a plaintiff who is closely related to a victim of a serious injury to recover from the defendant who negligently inflicted the injury for the emotional distress suffered as a result of witnessing the victim’s injury.
See Barnhill,
We refuse to extend the bystander exception beyond its intended scope and design. This exception was created to permit recovery for emotional distress for those who witness injury inflicted on the direct victim of a negligent act, and it imposes special limitations to recovery under such circumstances. The duty of care to support the claim is derivative of the general duty of care owed to the direct victim and extends to bystanders based on the foreseeability of emotional harm to bystanders under certain circumstances and conditions. We recognize the emotional injury to a bystander is separate from the underlying injury to the direct victim.
Pekin Ins. Co. v. Hugh,
In this case, Matthew brought the claim for emotional distress on behalf of Sasha as a direct victim of her mother’s negligent conduct. Thus, any recovery requires a separate and independent duty of care owed to Sasha by her mother not to negligently inflict emotional distress. There must be “a duty owed by the specific defendant to the specific plaintiff.”
Robinson v. United States,
3. Direct Victim.
Our cases have pinpointed the source of the duty of care to support a claim by a direct victim for recovery of emotional distress from negligent conduct of a defendant to be the relationship be
When the defendant owes an independent duty of care to the plaintiff, there is no risk of unlimited liability to an unlimited number of people. Liability turns solely on the relationships accepted by the defendant, usually under a contractual arrangement. Consequently, the duty extends only to those for whom the contract was made. When the defendant contracts to provide services for childbirth, he is on notice that negligent acts will likely cause emotional harm.
Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 312, at 849.
Liability for emotional distress is imposed for negligence independent of intent or physical injury when the act negligently performed is “ ‘so coupled with matters of mental concern or solicitude, or with feelings of the party to whom the duty is owed, that a breach of that duty will necessarily or reasonably result in mental anguish or suffering.’ ”
Oswald,
There is no doubt that the relationship between a parent and a child can be exceptionally close and deeply emotional. Moreover, it is the type of relationship that would understandably produce emotional distress if one of the parties to the relationship witnessed serious injury or death to the other. Nevertheless, it is not a relationship that is contractual in nature. Additionally, the act performed in the course of the relationship at issue in this case, the operation of a motor vehicle, is not so coupled with matters of mental concern that the breach of the duty of care in performing the act will necessarily or reasonably result in emotional distress. The claimed emotional distress is simply “too far removed from the defendants] negligent conduct” to support the imposition of a duty of care to avoid inflicting emotional distress.
Lawrence,
We refuse to recognize an independent duty of care on a parent to avoid inflicting emotional distress on a passenger child in a motor vehicle for witnessing injuries inflicted on the parent as the result of negligence in the operation of the
IV. Loss of Consortium and Support.
We have not previously considered whether a child has an actionable claim of loss of consortium and support against a parent. This is because parental immunity has existed throughout most of the development of our law to immunize parents from any tort claims by children. However, we partially abrogated the immunity doctrine in 1981, and no longer recognize parental immunity as a bar to an action by an unemancipated child against a parent for damages caused by the negligence of the parent.
Turner v. Turner,
We recognize a child has a cause of action for loss of parental consortium and support for the death or injury of a parent by a third party.
Audubon-Exira Ready Mix, Inc. v. Illinois Cent. Gulf R.R.,
In this case, Matthew seeks consortium and support as a part of the damages in the child’s direct negligence claim against the estate of her mother. He seeks to extend the law of consortium and support to recognize an independent claim directly against the parent.
In
McIntosh v. Barr,
we determined that a wife did not have a direct claim against the husband for loss of consortium due to an injury to the husband caused by the husband’s own negligence.
McIntosh v. Barr,
Y. Conclusion.
We conclude the district court properly dismissed the claims for loss of consortium, loss of support, and negligent infliction of emotional distress.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Other jurisdictions have recognized that the duty may also be assumed by the defendant or imposed as a matter of law, as well as arise out of a relationship.
Marlene F. v. Affiliated Psychiatric Med. Clinic, Inc.,
. This requirement may be avoided if the child establishes it is impossible, impractical, or not in the child's best interest for the parent to maintain the action.
Nelson v. Ludovissy,
