Lead Opinion
A mother was in the hospital waiting area when her daughter died. The mother sued a number of medical care providers for wrongful death and medical malpractice, as well as for the emotional distress she suffered upon seeing her daughter's body. The superior court dismissed the mother's claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress, reasoning that the tort was not viable absent evidence that the plaintiff contemporaneously understood that her loved one's death had been negligently caused. The mother petitioned for review of this order; we granted review.
We conclude that under our case law, a viable bystander claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress does not depend on the plaintiff's contemporaneous realization that the injuries she observes were negligently caused. We therefore reverse the superior court's grant of summary judgment.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
One morning in March 2011, Nixola Doan went to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital with her adult daughter, Tristana, who was coughing and having trouble breathing. Doan stayed with Tristana for much of the day. Around 7:00 p.m. Tristana's condition worsened, and Doan was "ushered ... out" of the room while Tristana was intubated. Doan remained in the waiting area and did not see Tristana again until approximately the time of her death at 11:41 p.m.,
In 2013 Doan, as the personal representative of Tristana's estate, filed suit against a number of medical care providers, alleging medical malpractice and wrongful death. Doan also brought her own claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress (NIED). Several of the defendants (collectively "the doctors") moved for summary judgment on the NIED claim, arguing that it was legally untenable without evidence that Doan understood, while Tristana was undergoing care, that her caregivers were acting negligently.
The superior court granted summary judgment and dismissed the NIED claim, concluding that Doan failed to satisfy a requirement of the tort that she have "a contemporaneous understanding of the cause of Tristana's death." (Emphasis in original.) Doan sought reconsideration, which the court denied. Doan filed a petition asking us to review the dismissal of her NIED claim; we granted her petition.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo.
IV. DISCUSSION
In its decision on summary judgment, the superior court concluded that "[i]nherent in [Alaska's] cases [allowing recovery for NIED] is the contemporaneous comprehension of the cause of the injury"; the court held, therefore, that "in a medical malpractice case, the plaintiff must have a contemporaneous understanding that the cause of the injury is the result of the malpractice." The court acknowledged this effect of its ruling:
[B]ystanders may validly assert bystander NIED claims for blatant medical errors obvious to laypersons, such as negligently amputating a healthy limb or neglecting to care for a patient whose symptoms obviously require immediate attention. But where the causation is beyond the understanding of the lay bystander an NIED claim is not available.
The doctors argue that the superior court correctly stated Alaska law: "As a matter of law, [Doan] cannot recover on [an] NIED bystander claim unless she contemporaneously comprehended that allegedly negligent medical treatment was causing injury to her daughter."
That an injured victim, in order to recover, must contemporaneously comprehend that her injuries were negligently caused is not a usual requirement of a negligence claim. Indeed, tort victims may not know or even suspect that their injuries were negligently caused until they have had some time to investigate; our tort law has long recognized this.
We first recognized the NIED cause of action in 1986 in Tommy's Elbow Room, Inc. v. Kavorkian ( Kavorkian III ).
Accepting the viability of NIED claims under Alaska law, we looked to the guidelines set out by the California Supreme Court in Dillon v. Legg :
(1) Whether plaintiff was located near the scene of the accident as contrasted with one who was a distance away from it. (2) Whether the shock resulted from a direct emotional impact upon plaintiff from the sensory and contemporaneous observance of the accident, as contrasted with learning of the accident from others after its occurrence. (3) Whether plaintiff and the victim were closely related, as contrasted with anabsence of any relationship or the presence of only a distant relationship. 12
We declined, however, to interpret Dillon as imposing a "rigid requirement of sensory and contemporaneous observance of the accident," instead requiring only "the reasonable foreseeability that the plaintiff-witness would suffer emotional harm."
A year later, in Croft ex rel. Croft v. Wicker , we reiterated our rejection of the "strict application of the Dillon guidelines" under which it is "necessary for the plaintiff to have witnessed the tortious event."
[C]oncededly the Crofts did not sensorily and contemporaneously observe the incident of sexual assault alleged here. Our discussion of Kavorkian and the other cases cited makes clear, however, that it is the reasonable foreseeability to the defendant of harm to the plaintiff that generates the defendant's duty to exercise reasonable care.[18 ]
Because "the Crofts were in close proximity to Wicker and Sarah when the alleged incident occurred," because "[t]hey observed her extreme distress just after the alleged assault occurred," and because there was some question as to whether it was "reasonably foreseeable to Wicker that Sarah's parents would be in close proximity and therefore harmed by his actions," the Crofts' claim was sufficiently pleaded to go to the jury.
In this case, in a clarifying order on reconsideration, the superior court focused on a sentence in Mattingly v. Sheldon Jackson College , in which we said that "the shock [must] result more or less contemporaneously with the plaintiff's learning of the nature of the victim's injury."
Mattingly concerned the collapse of a trench in which Mattingly's son had been working.
We reaffirmed this interpretation of the NIED claim in Beck v. State, Department of Transportation & Public Facilities , in which we declined to follow the California Supreme Court's tightening of the Dillon test.
The State in Beck urged us to follow the approach taken by the California Supreme Court in Thing v. La Chusa .
that one who is thrust, either voluntarily or involuntarily, into such dramatic events and who makes a sudden sensory observation of the traumatic injuries of a close relative in the immediate aftermath of the event which produced them is no less entitled to assert a claim for his or her emotional injuries than one who actually witnessed the event.[33 ]
Because in Beck the mother's "emotional shock resulted from her observation of her daughter's traumatic injuries during the continuous
None of these formative cases- Kavorkian III , Croft , Mattingly , or Beck -supports the rule the doctors propose here: that Doan "cannot recover on [an] NIED bystander claim unless she contemporaneously comprehended that allegedly negligent medical treatment was causing injury to her daughter." The father in Kavorkian III brought a dram shop action against the bar that had served alcohol to the driver who allegedly caused the accident.
It is the emotional impact of the injury that the NIED tort is intended to address. To require that an emotionally distressed plaintiff also recognize negligence as it is occurring is asking too much. As noted above, negligence is not always obvious; a conclusion that someone was negligent often follows the acquisition of facts not readily apparent from the scene itself, e.g., that one driver was under the influence of alcohol, that he was negligently served at a bar, that the roadway was poorly maintained, or that a vehicle's brakes failed. Requiring a contemporaneous perception of negligence adds an element of caprice that has no relationship to the harm suffered. When confronted with a sudden, terrible injury to a loved one, one plaintiff might retain the clarity of mind necessary to judge the reasonableness of the tortfeasor's actions, while another plaintiff might be overwhelmed by the trauma or consumed by concern for the loved one. Under the doctors' proposed rule the first plaintiff will recover but the second will not. Recovery may also depend on the plaintiff's level of sophistication, particularly in the area of medical malpractice (as the superior court recognized in limiting recovery to "blatant medical errors obvious to laypersons"). A physician who recognizes negligence in the care of a loved one may recover, whereas a layperson who suffers the same emotional hurt but lacks a medical education has no remedy. And the rule raises difficult questions of how closely the plaintiff's perception
The doctors contend that this court "has never permitted recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress in favor of a non-patient against a medical provider for treatment provided to a family member/patient," but the cases they cite do not preclude such a recovery. In Chizmar v. Mackie , which the doctors cite for the proposition that NIED claims cannot be based on "foreseeability alone," we held that "a plaintiff's right to recover emotional damages caused by mere negligence should be limited to those cases where the defendant owes the plaintiff a preexisting duty."
The doctors also cite M.A. v. United States , in which we determined, on a certified question from the federal court, that a mother did not have an NIED claim arising from a doctor's negligent failure to diagnose the pregnancy of her minor daughter.
[The mother] was not in close proximity to [the daughter], either at the time of the alleged misdiagnosis or when [the daughter] subsequently learned of her pregnancy; [the mother's] eventual "shock," if any, does not appear to have occurred contemporaneously with her daughter's discovery of the injury; and there is no indication that the immediate "shock" came in response to the alleged injury-the lateness of the pregnancy's discovery-rather than to discovery of the pregnancy itself.[44 ]
Here, on the other hand, taking Doan's allegations as true,
The doctors contend that Doan's NIED claim not only is barred by our existing case
We conclude, in sum, that a bystander's claim for NIED remains as it was explained in Kavorkian III , Croft , Mattingly , and Beck :
Where, as here, the plaintiff experiences shock as the result of a sudden sensory observation of a loved one's serious injuries during an uninterrupted flow of events following "closely on the heels of the accident," such emotional injury is foreseeable and the plaintiff is entitled to assert a claim for NIED.47
The test contains no requirement that the plaintiff contemporaneously comprehend that the loved one's injuries were negligently caused. Doan's complaint stated a claim for relief under a bystander theory of recovery for NIED, and the claim should have survived summary judgment.
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the entry of summary judgment against Doan on her claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress and REMAND the case to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
Whether Tristana died shortly before or shortly after Doan last entered the room is unclear from our record but not material to our decision.
Harrell v. Calvin ,
Id. at 1185-86 (quoting Palmer v. Borg-Warner Corp. ,
Dixon v. Dixon ,
See Yurioff v. Am. Honda Motor Co. ,
See Beck v. State, Dep't of Transp. & Pub. Facilities ,
Kavorkian v. Tommy's Elbow Room, Inc. (Kavorkian I ),
Kavorkian III ,
Id .
Id. at 109-10.
Id. at 108.
Thing ,
Beck ,
Beck ,
Assume, for example, that the plaintiff perceives that a nurse is providing negligent care when the nurse is actually following the negligent instructions of a supervisor. May the plaintiff recover for NIED even though she misidentified the negligent actor? If the plaintiff perceives one actor's negligence but later learns that others were negligent as well, are her emotional distress damages prorated to reflect only the negligence she contemporaneously recognized? May the plaintiff recover if the evidence shows negligence but not as the plaintiff contemporaneously perceived it (e.g., she thought a nurse failed to give a necessary medication when actually the nurse gave too much)?
The doctors discuss the preexisting duty cases of Hawks v. Department of Public Safety ,
The doctors assert that we "affirmed the trial court's 'finding that no duty was owed to the [plaintiff's] children under a negligent infliction of emotional distress claim,' " quoting our discussion of the trial court proceedings, but the children's NIED claim was not at issue on appeal. We did address the children's separate loss of consortium claim. Chizmar ,
See Mitchell v. Teck Cominco Alaska Inc. ,
The doctors rely on cases from several other states besides the later California cases that narrowed the Dillon test. Other jurisdictions reject NIED claims in the medical malpractice context for different reasons. Several disallow them because of the bystander's likely inability to distinguish between proper and negligent medical care-a rationale which supports our decision here. See Squeo v. Norwalk Hosp. Ass'n ,
Beck v. State, Dep't of Transp. & Pub. Facilities ,
We note finally that the doctors raise several alternative arguments that were not addressed by the superior court, including: (1) that Doan's NIED claim is entirely barred by the wrongful death statute, AS 09.55.580, and (2) that Doan has a disqualifying conflict of interest as both representative of the estate and individual plaintiff on the NIED claim. Because the superior court has not addressed these issues, we do not decide them on this petition.
Concurrence Opinion
Concurrence Opinion
I write separately to (1) elaborate on the distinction between the negligent infliction of emotional distress (NIED) claim requirements that a bystander-plaintiff (a) be physically present at the injury-causing event and (b) contemporaneously recognize that the injury-causing event was the result of someone's tortious conduct; and (2) address the separate concurring opinion's focus on our past rejection of the physical presence requirement.
This matter comes to us on petition for review from the superior court's summary judgment order dismissing Nixola Doan's bystander NIED claim. The superior court's legal rationale was that our existing NIED case law requires a bystander-plaintiff-contemporaneously with the shocking observation
The separate concurring opinion suggests that today's decision expands liability under Alaska's NIED case law, especially in the medical malpractice context. Today's decision does nothing of the kind. Our existing NIED case law never has included, and does not now include, the legal requirement the superior court imposed; our existing NIED case law never has supported (or even suggested), and does not now support, a special carve-out for NIED claims based on underlying medical malpractice torts. Today's decision in no way expands NIED liability; it instead rejects a new legal theory which, if adopted, would limit NIED liability.
The bulk of the separate concurring opinion's discussion relates to a legal issue that was not ruled on by the superior court, was not a subject of our granted petition for review, was not briefed by the parties, and was not considered by this court. The separate concurring opinion questions our existing NIED case law regarding when a bystander must observe a loved-one's harm, and it posits that we should follow the California Supreme Court's Thing v. La Chusa decision by limiting NIED claims to bystanders who actually are present at the harm-causing event.
But even if this court had, nearly 30 years ago, decided Beck differently and followed Thing , today's decision-addressing whether a bystander-plaintiff must contemporaneously appreciate that tortious conduct underlies the injury-causing event-would be the same. The facts of Beck and Thing are similar. In Beck a mother drove to the site of her daughter's vehicle accident and then to a hospital where she first saw her daughter's injured body.
The Thing court reversed precedent and created a new physical-presence requirement for bystander-NIED claims: The plaintiff must be "present at the scene of the injury-producing event at the time it occurs and ... then aware that it is causing injury to the victim."
This is not to say that a layperson can never perceive medical negligence, or that one who does perceive it cannot assert a valid claim for NIED. To suggest an extreme example, a layperson who watched as a relative's sound limb was amputated by mistake might well have a valid claim for NIED against the surgeon. Such an accident, and its injury-causing effects, would not lie beyond the plaintiff's understanding awareness. But the same cannot be assumed of medical malpractice generally.[13 ]
Although Bird relied on Thing to create an additional NIED requirement, at least in the medical malpractice context, Thing itself did not require a bystander-plaintiff claiming NIED to be aware of underlying tortious conduct when seeing the injury-producing event.
The doctors in this case understand the distinction between the Thing and Bird holdings. They posit that, notwithstanding Beck 's rejection of Thing 's requirements that the bystander be physically present and observe the injury-causing event, we should follow courts defining "injury-causing event" in the medical malpractice context to mean obviously (to the bystander) negligent medical care. Under this view-which today's decision rejects-the absence of a contemporaneous recognition of negligent medical care is cast as the bystander's failure to recognize that an injury-causing event has occurred.
Adherence to Beck is not at issue in this petition for review. The question raised by the petition for review is whether we should impose a new restriction for NIED claims based on allegations of underlying medical malpractice. I agree with today's decision to reject the proposed restriction; I disagree with the separate concurring opinion that the result is mandated by stare decisis adherence to Beck .
Op. at 713.
See AS 09.55.530 -.560.
Id .
Id .
Id . (citing Dillon v. Legg ,
Id .
Id .
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result reached by the court, but only under the compulsion of our precedent in Tommy's Elbow Room, Inc. v. Kavorkian ( Kavorkian III ),
In our formative bystander negligent infliction of emotional distress (NIED) cases, the plaintiffs observed a relative's injuries contemporaneously with or closely on the heels of learning of the events that caused them. In contrast, Doan was in the hospital waiting room when much of the alleged medical malpractice occurred, and upon seeing her daughter's body, she was not contemporaneously aware of the "nature" of Tristana's
Doan's case is similar to Beck . As the court explains above, in Beck a mother was at home when she learned that her daughter had been involved in an automobile accident six miles away.
In my view this court missed the opportunity to place sensible limits on NIED claims in Beck . The rule articulated by the California Supreme Court in Thing was a reasonable and necessary approach to bystander NIED claims:
[A] plaintiff may recover damages for emotional distress caused by observing the negligently inflicted injury of a third person if, but only if , said plaintiff: (1) is closely related to the injury victim; (2) is present at the scene of the injury producing event at the time it occurs and is then aware that it is causing injury to the victim ; and (3) as a result suffers serious emotional distress-a reaction beyond that which would be anticipated in a disinterested witness and which is not an abnormal response to the circumstances.[14 ]
The Thing court rightly recognized that "[l]ittle consideration [was] given in post- Dillon decisions to the importance of avoiding the limitless exposure to liability that the pure foreseeability test of 'duty' would create."
Because this court purposefully and explicitly declined to join California in tightening the law for bystander NIED claims in Beck , respecting the doctrine of stare decisis I am compelled to follow the law as this court expressed it. I therefore concur in the opinion of the court. But I am concerned that our case law is expanding the boundaries of NIED into an ever-widening circle of liability; at some point, almost any conceivable emotional injury following injury to a closely
Thing ,
