Following a jury trial, the Superior Court, Cumberland County, entered a judgment against the plaintiff, Gerald C. Gammon, and in favor of the defendants, Osteopathic Hospital of Maine, Inc. and Neal-York Funeral Home, Inc. On appeal Gammon challenges the directed verdict granted on Count I of his complaint, which alleged negligent infliction of severe emotional distress. 1 Because the evidence introduced at trial would support a verdict in Gammon’s favor on the negligence theory of Count I, we vacate the judgment.
*1283 I.
Linwood Gammon, Gerald’s father, died on November 7, 1982 at the Osteopathic Hospital in Portland. Gerald Gammon asked the Neal-York Funeral Home to make the funeral arrangements. Morrill York went to the hospital to pick up Linwood Gammon’s body. Hospital personnel directed him to the hospital morgue where corpses are kept in a two-drawer cooler. York found the bottom drawer empty. The top drawer contained Linwood Gammon’s body identified by a tag. That drawer also contained two plastic bags, one of which was identified by a tag as Gammon’s personal effects. Because on prior occasions York had found personal effects in the cooler with corpses, he assumed that both bags contained Gammon’s personal effects.
Both plastic bags were delivered to Gerald Gammon at the funeral home and taken by him to his father’s home in Limington. The next morning Gammon searched the tagged bag looking for his father’s shaver. He found only clothing. Inside the untagged bag, he found a second bag. When he opened the second bag, Gammon discovered a bloodied leg, severed below the knee and bluish in color. He yelled “Oh my God, they have taken my father’s leg off.” He ran into the kitchen where he leaned against the refrigerator for support, and said, “Guess what I found in the bathroom. I found my father’s leg.” In the words of Gammon’s aunt, “He was as white as a ghost.”
Gammon later found a label located on the outside of the inner bag that identified the leg as a pathology specimen that had been removed from someone other than his father. He carried the bag to the garage and called York who returned the bag to the hospital. Thereafter, Gammon began having nightmares for the first time in his life, his personality was affected and his relationship with his wife and children deteriorated. After several months Gammon’s emotional state began to improve, although his wife testified that he still had occasional nightmares and Gammon testified that he still sees the leg in his mind two or three times a week. He did not seek medical or psychiatric evaluation or treatment and no medical evidence was offered at trial.
The trial court granted the defendants’ motions for a directed verdict on Gammon’s claim for negligent infliction of severe emotional distress. Gammon’s claim in Count III of his complaint for damages resulting from intentional or reckless infliction of severe emotional distress was submitted to the jury upon special interrogatories. The jury concluded that Gammon had suffered “severe emotional distress” 2 but that the distress was not proximately caused by intentional or reckless conduct of either defendant. Accordingly, the court entered judgment in favor of the defendants.
II.
The issue is whether, in these circumstances, Gammon has established a claim, in tort, for negligent infliction of severe emotional distress. A person’s psychic well-being is as much entitled to legal protection as is his physical well-being. We recognize as much and provide compensation when the emotional distress is intentionally or recklessly inflicted, when the emotional distress results from physical injury negligently inflicted, or when negligently inflicted emotional distress results in physical injury. In order to ensure that a claim for emotional distress without physical injury is not spurious, we have previously required a showing of physical impact, objective manifestation, underlying or accompanying tort, or special circumstances. In the case before us, we conclude that these more or less arbitrary requirements should not bar Gammon’s claim for compensation for severe emotional distress.
*1284
In 1880 we held that “mental suffering alone, unattended by any injury to the person, caused by simple actionable negligence” was not compensable.
Wyman v. Leavitt,
Two years later, in the context of a defamation action, we reaffirmed the
Culbert
foreseeability test but concluded that the jury verdict for the defendant on the defamation action precluded recovery by the plaintiff for negligently inflicted emotional distress.
Packard v. Cent. Me. Power Co.,
No useful purpose would be served by more detailed analyses of our prior decisions or by consideration of whether the holdings of these cases follow a consistent trend. They demonstrate in a variety of ways the difficulty courts have had dealing *1285 with psychic injury. 5 They also demonstrate the frailty of supposed lines of demarcation when they are subjected to judicial scrutiny in the context of varying fact patterns. Moreover, these cases disclose our awareness of the extensive criticism aimed at the artificial devices used by courts to protect against fraudulent claims and against undue burden on the conduct of defendants.
The analyses of commentators 6 and the developing trend in caselaw 7 encourage us to abandon these artificial devices in this and future tort actions and to rely upon the trial process for protection against fraudulent claims. In addition, the traditional tort principle of foreseeability relied upon in Wallace and Culbert provides adequate protection against unduly burdensome liability claims for emotional distress. Jurors or trial judges will be able to evaluate the impact of psychic trauma with no greater difficulty than pertains to assessment of damages for any intangible injury. We do not foresee any great extension of tort liability by our ruling today. We do not provide compensation for the hurt feelings of the supersensitive plaintiff —the eggshell psyche. A defendant is bound to foresee psychic harm only when such harm reasonably could be expected to befall the ordinarily sensitive person. 8
We have previously recognized that courts in other jurisdictions have allowed recovery for mental distress alone for negligent mishandling of corpses.
Rubin,
Although the analysis in the instant case may impact upon the rationale of our recent cases, we do not find it necessary to overrule those cases. We do not hold that any prior case was wrongly decided. Rather, we recognize that the elimination of some barriers to recovery for negligent infliction of severe emotional distress may compel further evaluation of other policy considerations. For example, the result in
Packard
is supported on the ground stated by the trial court: “[B]y allowing recovery ... merely on the ground of negligence, the ‘qualified privilege’ given to communications to law enforcement officials is diluted.”
Packard,
On the facts and circumstances of the case before us, however, we find no sound basis to preclude potential compensation to Gammon. We hold, therefore, that the trial court erred in directing a verdict on Gammon’s claim for negligent infliction of severe emotional distress. 9 Accordingly, we vacate the judgment in favor of the defendants on Count I.
The entry is: Judgment on Count I vacated.
Remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion herein.
All concurring.
Notes
. Gammon's brief states that the court also erred in directing a verdict for the defendants on Count II, but he presents no argument in support of that contention. Gammon does not challenge the jury verdict against him on Count *1283 Ill that alleged intentional or reckless infliction of emotional distress.
. The court defined severe emotional distress as "such that no reasonable man could be expected to endure it.”
. There was evidence of impact in Wallace although the impact clearly was insufficient of itself to cause physical, as opposed to psychic, injury.
. Our implicit rejection of section 313 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965) that requires proof of "illness or bodily harm" as a result of negligently inflicted mental distress reflected the developing caselaw rejecting this requirement in the 17 years since the Restatement's adoption.
. When discussing this type of injury, the courts of other jurisdictions and the commentators have used as the adjective either "emotional, mental, nervous or psychic” together with the noun "distress, pain, injury, harm, trauma, disturbance or shock.” These phrases have not become words of art although each, with varying degrees of accuracy, seems to refer to non-tactile trauma resulting in injury to the psyche.
. See, e.g., Prosser and Keeton on Law of Torts, 54 (5th ed. 1984); Bell, The Bell Tolls: Toward Full Tort Recovery for Psychic Injury, 36 U.Fla.L. Rev. 333 (1984); Nolan & Ursin, Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress: Coherence Emerging from Chaos, 33 Hast. LJ. 583 (1982); Zepkin, The Independent Tort of Negligently Inflicted Emotional Distress — Its Time Has Come, 10 Va.Bar J. 4 (1984).
.
See, e.g., Molien v. Kaiser Foundation Hosp.,
.We described serious mental distress in
Cul-bert
as being "where a reasonable person, normally constituted, would be unable to adequately cope with the mental stress engendered by the circumstances of the event.”
Rowe,
. By virtue of the pleadings and the jury finding in the case before us, our holding necessarily is limited to negligently inflicted severe emotional distress. We do not decide whether a defendant shall be liable for negligently inflicted emotional distress of any lesser degree.
