¶ 1. This case presents two questions: first, whether noneconomic damages are available when a pet dies due to negligent or wanton acts of veterinarians and a pharmaceutical company; second, whether a claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress lies for the dеath of a pet when its human companion was not within any so-called zone of danger at the time of the mishap. We answer both questions in the negative and affirm the superior court’s order of dismissal.
¶2. Plaintiffs, the owners of two cats who allegedly died from treatment and medication supplied by defеndants, appeal from the superior court’s grant of partial judgment on the pleadings for defendants. The trial court’s order dismissed plaintiffs’ claims for loss of companionship and society and severe emotional distress, as well as their complaint for negligent infliction of emotional distress. The first two counts are for noneconomic damages claimed by plaintiffs as part of their causes of action for breach of implied warranty of merchantability, breach of express warranty of merchantability, breach of implied warranty of merchantability for a particulаr purpose, negligence and wantonness, breach of the Vermont Consumer Fraud Act, and breach of contract. Initially, plaintiffs received the superior court’s permission to take an interlocutory appeal from the order, but defendants opposed the appeal, and this Court dismissed it as improvidently granted. Plaintiffs then voluntarily dismissed their remaining claims for economic damages so that they could proceed with a direct appeal of the superior court’s partial judgment on the pleadings. *
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¶ 3. When reviewing a grant of judgment on the pleadings, we take as true “all well-pleaded factual allegations in the nonmovant’s pleadings,” including “all reasonable inferences to be drawn from them.”
Knight v. Rower,
¶ 4. According to plaintiffs’ allegations, their two cats were being treated for hypertension by defendant veterinarians Paula Yankauskas, Valerie Yankauskas, Cynthia Pratt, and Charles Powell at Lamoille Valley Veterinary Services. The prescribed treatment for the cats’ hypertension was the administration of one 1.25 milligram tablet of amlodipine per cat per day. Plaintiffs followed this treatment plan, and purchased a refill of the amlodipine from the veterinary clinic in early December 2002. The clinic dispensed the amlodipine from a stock bottle of the drug manufactured by defendant Vetpharm, a Texas corporаtion whose primary business is selling compounded veterinary drugs. According to plaintiffs, this refill batch of the amlodipine initiated a series of events culminating in their cats’ deaths.
¶ 5. The day after plaintiffs began administering the refill amlodipine to their cats, they noticed that the cats seemed ill. The *67 next day, рlaintiffs brought one of the cats to the veterinary clinic, where one of the defendant veterinarians diagnosed it with a respiratory illness, and treated it with an antibiotic. On the following day, plaintiffs informed another of the defendant veterinarians that their cats’ conditions were worsening and that both сats were resisting taking the amlodipine. The defendant advised plaintiffs to continue administering the hypertension drug. On the fourth day after the refill of Vetpharm amlodipine, plaintiffs rushed one of the cats to the clinic, where it died hours later. That same evening, after realizing the seriousness of the first cаt’s condition, plaintiffs brought their other cat to the clinic. One of the defendant veterinarians treated the second cat with fluids and another drug for two or three days, but the second cat also died.
¶ 6. Plaintiffs allege that the deaths of their pets were due in part to the fact that the refill amlodiрine tablets manufactured by Vetpharm contained at least twenty times the labeled dose of the drug, causing severe toxicity in plaintiffs’ cats. Plaintiffs further allege that the defendant veterinarians negligently or wantonly failed to diagnose the toxicity in the cats, and that defendants improperly treаted both cats after the onset of the cats’ toxic responses to the amlodipine. Plaintiffs seek compensation for the lost companionship and society of their animals, and for emotional distress at having been made the unwitting agents of their pets’ demise.
¶ 7. Plaintiffs recognize that thе common law generally treats animals as personal property.
McDerment v. Taft,
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¶ 8. We have acknowledged that pets have special characteristics as personal property. See, e.g.,
Lamare v. N. Country Animal League,
¶ 9. Plaintiffs and amicus Animal Legal Defense Fund urge us to adopt the view that companion animals are more properly considered as family members than personal property, so that recovery for noneconomic damagе occasioned by their loss should be similarly available as for the wrongful death of next of kin. See 14 V.S.A. §§ 1491, 1492(b) (enabling recovery by parent for the “loss of love and companionship” of a deceased child and “for destruction of the parent-child relationship”);
Dubaniewicz v. Houman,
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¶ 10. We note that under the Wrongful Deаth Act people may recover only for the loss of their next of kin, which can exclude recovery in many cases for the loss of many close relatives, such as grandparents or grandchildren, nieces, nephews, aunts, and uncles, as well as for the loss of nonrelatives like stepchildren, fiancés, or other closely held companions. See
Dubaniewicz,
¶ 11. The changes plaintiffs request are better presented to the General Assembly. To the extent that plaintiffs ask for an extension of the Wrongful Death Act to pets, “in an area of law created entirely through statutory enactment, we are hesitant to create rights where the Legislature chose not to do so.”
Gallipo v. City of Rutland,
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¶ 12. Turning to the second issue, plaintiffs cannot recover for NIED because they were never the objects of the allegedly negligent acts of the veterinarians and pharmacy, and thus were neither in physical danger themselves, nor had any reason to fear for their own physical well-being. To make a prima facie case for NIED, plaintiffs must first make a “threshold showing that [they] or someone close to [them] faced physical peril.”
Brueckner v. Norwich Univ.,
¶ 13. Plaintiffs allege that by being directed to administer the fatal medication, and by being near their cats when they administered the medication, they were within the “zone of danger” of the negligent acts directed at their cats. Vermont caselaw, however, clearly articulates that, to be in the “zone of danger,” the plaintiff must be within the zone “of an act
negligently directed at him
by defendant.”
Id.
(emphasis added). Further, recovery for NIED is precluded where the claimant does not allege any “reasonable fear for [his or] her own safety.”
Vaillancourt v. Med. Ctr. Hosp. of Vt., Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
Defendants argue that plaintiffs in fact voluntarily dismissed all of the remaining causes of аction, and not just their claims for economic damages. Defendants urge this Court to rule that plaintiffs’ two claims for noneconomic damages are now moot because the case no longer includes any underlying cause of action upon which to claim damages — economiс or noneconomic — aside from the NIED cause of action dismissed in toto by the trial court’s judgment on the pleadings. *66 We are not persuaded by this argument. The superior court’s judgment on the pleadings dismissed plaintiffs’ claims for noneconomic damages, but the noneconomic damages were not dismissed in a vacuum, they were dismissed insofar as the court concluded that they were not supportable as an element of plaintiffs’ causes of action. As virtually, if not expressly, acknowledged by defendants — responding in opposition to what they perceived as a selective motion to dismiss by plaintiffs, and insisting on an “all or nothing” dismissal — plaintiffs clearly intended to dismiss their remaining causes of action for economic damages so that they could appeal the court’s Rule 12(c) dismissal of their noneconomic damages and NIED claims as the sole outstanding, and final, judgment in the case. Absent any demonstrated substantial prejudice to defendants, and despite plaintiffs’ arguably inartful and unintended dismissal of “all remaining claims,” plaintiffs’ voluntary dismissal of their remaining claims left the previously established partial judgment on the pleadings denying the claims for noneconomic damages, and the causes of action of which they were an element, preserved for appeal.
