Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, Catrina Graves, appeals a ruling by the Superior Court (.Hampsey, J.) granting the defendant, Franklin L. Estabrook’s, motion to dismiss her complaint for negligent infliction of emotional distress. Estabook argued that because Graves was not related by blood or marriage to the decedent, but was only the decedent’s fiancée, she cannot recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress. We reverse and remand.
We rely upon the facts pled by Graves. In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, we assume the truth of all facts alleged by the plaintiff and construe all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to her. Minuteman, LLC v. Microsoft Corp.,
Graves was engaged to Brett A. Ennis and had lived with him for approximately seven years. On September 23, 2000, Ennis was riding his motorcycle while Graves followed immediately behind him in a car. At an intersection, Estabrook’s vehicle failed to yield at a stop sign and collided with Ennis. As Graves looked on, Ennis flipped over the hood of Estabrook’s car and landed on the pavement. Graves immediately stopped her car and ran to the aid of her flaneé. She saw blood coming from his mouth and significant trauma to his head. She followed the ambulance that transported her flaneé to the hospital, stayed by his side while he was being treated, and attempted to comfort his parents and son. Ennis died the next day. Graves alleges that as a result of witnessing the collision and death of her flaneé, she suffered shock, severe mental pain and emotional distress.
The issue before us is whether a plaintiff who lived with and was engaged to marry the decedent may recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress. We hold that she may recover damages for emotional distress as a result of witnessing the collision.
Many of the first States to recognize bystander liability for negligent infliction of emotional distress limited its scope by applying the “physical impact test,” without considering foreseeability. See Consolidated Rail Corp. v. Gottshall,
In Corso, however, we rejected the zone of danger rule. Corso,
We held that “freedom from mental distress is an interest that is today worthy of legal protection” and that in deciding whether a defendant could be held liable, “[t]he key to applying a traditional negligence approach is the doctrine of foreseeability.” Id. at 651-52; see Barnhill v. Davis,
We adopted the test first enunciated 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 an absence of any relationship or the presence of only a distant relationship.
Dillon v. Legg,
This case requires us to examine the scope of Dillon’s third factor. The defendant argues that we should continue to follow the California Supreme Court and adopt its subsequent holding in Elden v. Sheldon,
As noted by the New Jersey Supreme Court in Dunphy v. Gregor,
There has been no comparable expansion of the scope of bystander liability in New Hampshire. Indeed, in Corso, we emphasized the limits of bystander liability.
Plaintiffs burden of proving causation in fact should not be minimized. The emotional injury must be directly attributable to the emotional impact of the plaintiffs observation or contemporaneous sensory perception of the accident and immediate viewing of the accident victim. Therefore, recovery will not be permitted for emotional distress when the plaintiff is merely informed of the matter after the accident or for the grief that may follow from the death of the related accident victim.
Corso,
We subsequently have adhered to the limitations created in Corso. For example, in Nutter v. Frisbee Memorial Hospital,
Notwithstanding this difference, the defendant urges us to construe the third factor of Corso literally. He argues that we should limit the meaning of “closely related” to a dictionary definition: people “connected by consanguinity,” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1916 (unabridged ed. 1961), or “persons connected by kinship, common origin or marriage.” AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY 1473 (4th ed. 2000).
Corso, however, did not modify the phrase “closely related” with “by blood or marriage.” Corso,
In Elden, the California Supreme Court rejected a traditional analysis of foreseeability for three policy reasons: first, the State’s strong interest in marriage; second, the potential invasion into an unmarried plaintiffs privacy required to prove a close relationship; and third, the need to limit the class of plaintiffs by a bright line rule. Elden,
First is the State’s strong interest in marriage. In Elden, the court stated that “to the extent unmarried cohabitants are granted the same rights as married persons, the state’s interest in promoting marriage is
The court in Elden apparently relied upon the dubious assumption that the possibility of recovery in tort litigation is an incentive to marry. Rejecting this assumption, the New Jersey Supreme Court observed that “a person who would not otherwise choose to marry would not be persuaded to do so in order to assure his or her legal standing in a future personal injury action should that person have the misfortune of witnessing the serious injury of his or her spouse.” Dunphy,
The second reason relied upon in Elden was the “difficult burden on the courts.” Elden,
Again, we agree with the New Jersey Supreme Court, which noted that “[o]ur courts have shown that the sound assessment of the quality of interpersonal relationships is not beyond a jury’s ken and that courts are capable of dealing with the realities, not simply the legalities, of relationships to assure that resulting emotional injury is genuine and deserving of compensation.” Dunphy,
Furthermore, the real burden is not on the court but on the plaintiff who chooses to seek recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress. At the outset, the plaintiff will know that the details of the relationship with the decedent will be examined and that this may involve an intrusion into the plaintiffs private life. The decision to submit to this searching inquiry is the plaintiffs choice and should not be the basis for limiting liability.
Third, the court in Elden relied upon “the need to limit the number of persons to whom a negligent defendant owes a duty of care.” Elden, 758 P.2d at 588. The court noted that “[i]t would be an entirely unreasonable
Rejecting the bright line rule in Elden, however, does not place an intolerable burden upon society or unfair burden upon a negligent defendant. Rather, it allows recovery for an eminently foreseeable class of plaintiffs. This class of plaintiffs is further narrowed by “the other elements of the bystander cause of action, such as contemporaneous observation, death or serious injury to the victim, and severe emotional injury to the plaintiff, [that] structure the kind of ‘particularized foreseeability’ that ensures that the class of plaintiffs is reduced even further and that limitless liability is avoided.” Note, supra at 947.
Elden argued that “[t]he need to draw a bright line in this area of the law is essential” because there is no “principled distinction between an unmarried cohabitant who claims to have a de facto marriage relationship with his partner and de facto siblings, parents, grandparents or children.” Elden,
overinclusive because it permits recovery when the suffering accompanies a legal or biological link between bystander and victim, regardless of whether the relationship between the two is estranged, alienated, or in some other way removed. Conversely, the [rule] is underinclusive because it arbitrarily denies courtaccess to persons with valid claims that they could prove if permitted to do so.
Note, suprn at 917.
More fundamentally, we decline to adopt a bright line rule when a “flexible approach, designed to account for factual nuances” is available. See Quirk v. Town of New Boston,
Corso rejected the bright line “zone of danger” rule as a “mechanical rule that does more harm than good.” Corso,
We conclude that “to foreclose [an unmarried cohabitant] from making a claim based upon emotional harm because her relationship with the injured person does not carry a particular label is to work a potential injustice ... where the emotional injury is genuine and substantial and is based upon a relationship of significant duration that ... is deep, lasting and genuinely intimate.” Id. A number of courts have reached a similar conclusion. See Thurman v. Sellers,
We thus recognize that unmarried cohabitants may have a close relationship, i.e., a “relationship that is stable, enduring, substantial, and mutually supportive ... cemented by strong emotional bonds and provid[ing] a deep and pervasive emotional security.” Dunphy,
take into account the duration of the relationship, the degree of mutual dependence, the extent of common contributions to a life together, the extent and quality of shared experience, and ...whether the plaintiff and the injured person were members of the same household, their emotional reliance on each other, the particulars of their day to day relationship, and the manner in which they related to each other in attending to life’s mundane requirements.
Id. at 378 (quotation omitted).
In this case, the plaintiff alleged in her complaint that she was engaged to the decedent and that they had lived together for seven years immediately preceding the accident. Construing all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, Minutemcm, LLC v. Microsoft Corp.,
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. Because I believe that the class of bystanders who may recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress should be limited to those closely related to the victim by marriage or blood, I respectfully dissent.
In Corso v. Merrill,
In establishing a clearly-defined boundary to liability, we must balance the need to compensate those plaintiffs whose injuries derive from the defendant’s negligence with the need to avoid both infinite liability and uncertainty in the law. See Wilder v. City of Keene,
The policy goals of limited liability and certainty of the law cannot be achieved if the class of plaintiffs who may recover is based upon the subjective emotional connection of the parties. Rather, we should narrowly construe the “closely related” factor by limiting recovery with objective standards that clearly define the defendant’s liability. See Grotts v. Zahner,
The majority’s interpretation of the “closely related” factor is “so ambiguous as to limit the class of plaintiffs who could assert a claim for [negligent infliction of emotional distress) only by the imagination of counsel drafting the pleadings.” Lindsey v. Visitec, Inc.,
If the class of potential plaintiffs who may recover is extended beyond those closely related to the victim by blood or marriage, courts will face difficult problems of proof in determining whether the relationship is sufficiently close to permit recovery. See Elden,
Thus, I would not expand the class of potential plaintiffs beyond those closely related to the victim by the objective criteria of marriage or blood. While I recognize that “[s]uch limitations are indisputably arbitrary since it is foreseeable that in some cases unrelated persons have a relationship to the victim or are so affected by the traumatic event that they suffer equivalent emotional distress,” Thing v. La Chusa,
The majority declines to adopt a bright line rule in favor of a “flexible approach” to account for “factual nuances.” I fail to see how adopting a bright line rule here is any different from the bright line rule that we have followed with regard to the contemporaneous observation factor. We have denied recovery to parents who viewed their deceased child in the hospital after the accident, see Nutter,
We have heretofore avoided expanding the scope of bystander liability. We have done so by narrowly construing the Corso factors and by establishing clearly defined boundaries to the cause of action. I see no reason to depart from this practice, and, therefore, I would affirm.
