Opinion
—The parents and brothers of Meghan K. Fife
appeal a summary judgment granted to Jennifer Astenius. The Fifes are seeking recovery for the alleged negligent infliction of emotional distress (hereafter NIED) caused when they heard a car crash and went to the street to discover Meghan had been injured. The Supreme Court’s guidelines for recovery in
Thing
v.
La Chusa
(1989)
I
Meghan was injured when the truck in which she was a passenger collided with another car. The accident occurred on the street directly behind Meghan’s house. Her parents and three brothers, who were in the house at the time, heard the crash and saw debris fly above a wall which separated their yard from the street. Although none of the family members saw the accident, Meghan’s father and brothers immediately went outside and, after climbing the wall, found Meghan still inside the truck. Meghan’s mother remained in the house until one of her sons informed her that Meghan had been hurt.
Meghan’s parents and brothers filed the underlying lawsuit alleging the negligence of the truck’s driver, Jennifer Astenius, was a proximate and contributing cause of their emotional distress. They maintained she should have provided a seat belt for Meghan and insisted that she use it. 1 The trial court granted Astenius’s motion for summary judgment.
II
The court in
Thing
v.
La Chusa, supra,
A plaintiff must “contemporaneously perceive the injury-producing event and its traumatic consequences.” (
If we were to accept the Fifes’ definition of “contemporaneous observance,” we would be regressing to the “ever widening circles of liability”
La Chusa
was trying to avoid.
(Thing
v.
La Chusa, supra,
Judgment affirmed. Respondent to receive costs on appeal.
Crosby, J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Notes
Because we affirm, we need not address Astenius’s argument that she did not owe such a duty.
The Fifes allege they were present at the scene of the accident because they heard the collision. In
Krouse
v.
Graham
(1977)
Krouse
further relied on
Archibald
v.
Braverman
(1969)
Justice Broussard notes in his dissenting opinion that “[u]nder the majority’s strict requirement, a mother who arrives moments after an accident caused by another’s negligence will not be permitted recovery.” (
As a matter of law, the Fifes’ alternative “zone of danger” argument is meritless.
