In this action arising from a motor vehicle accident, the district court for Gage County held as a matter of law that Christopher S. Hamilton could not recover on his negligence claim. The court reasoned that Hamilton suffered no physical injury in the accident and therefore could not recover damages for his emotional distress caused by the accident. Hamilton appeals from a denial of his motion for new trial.
FACTS
In Hamilton’s operative amended petition filed against Wayne Nestor, the personal representative of the estate of DiAnn K. Nestor (Nestor), Hamilton alleged that on October 21, 1997, he was involved in a motor vehicle collision caused by Nestor’s negligence. Both Nestor and her daughter Laura, who was a passenger in her vehicle, sustained fatal injuries. Hamilton alleged that as a proximate result of Nestor’s negligence, he suffered “mental and psychological injuries, including posttraumatic stress disorder.” He prayed for both general and special damages.
The personal representative moved for summary judgment. At a hearing on the motion, the personal representative offered portions of Hamilton’s deposition in which he admitted that he banged his knees on the dashboard during the accident but otherwise suffered no physical injuries. In other portions of the deposition, Hamilton described recurrent nightmares in which he comes upon accident scenes and finds that he or his family members are the victims. These nightmares occur five to six times a week when he is not on medication and one to two times a week when he is medicated. Hamilton also described “flashbacks” that usually occur when he is driving, in which he sees all or part of the accident. Hamilton is generally fearful that he will be involved in another accident and feels guilty that he was unable to prevent the deaths of two people. He testified that he once blacked out while driving near the intersection where the accident occurred. Also received in evidence was the deposition testimony of Dr. Y. Scott Moore. Moore testified that Hamilton suffered posttraumatic stress disorder as a result of the accident.
The district court granted the personal representative’s motion for summary judgment on January 10,2002. In its order, the court
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found that Hamilton did not suffer any physical injury in the accident. Relying on
Hartwig
v.
Oregon Trail Eye Clinic,
254 Neb.
777,
Hamilton filed a motion for new trial in which he alleged that the trial court erred in granting the motion for summary judgment. Alternatively, Hamilton alleged that the trial court erred in failing to allow the case to proceed on the theory of negligent infliction of emotional distress or to grant Hamilton leave to amend his petition to specifically allege that theory. In an order overruling the motion, the district court held that Hamilton could not recover on a negligence cause of action because his mental suffering did not arise out of a physical injury and that he could not proceed on a negligent infliction of emotional distress theory as a matter of law because he had no marital or familial relationship with Nestor. Hamilton filed this timely appeal, and we granted his petition to bypass the Nebraska Court of Appeals.
ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Hamilton assigns, restated and summarized, that the district court erred in (1) sustaining Nestor’s motion for summary judgment on the basis that posttraumatic stress disorder is not compensable under a general motor vehicle negligence claim and (2) denying his motion for new trial, thereby precluding him from proceeding on an alternate claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A motion for new trial is addressed to the discretion of the trial court, whose decision will be upheld in the absence of an
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abuse of that discretion.
Bradley T. & Donna T.
v.
Central Catholic High Sch.,
Summary judgment is proper when the pleadings and the evidence admitted at the hearing disclose that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from those facts and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1332 (Cum. Supp. 2002);
Soukop v. ConAgra, Inc.,
ANALYSIS
Characterization of This Action
We disagree with the district court’s characterization of this action as “not one for negligent infliction of emotional distress, but rather [one that] alleges mental or emotional damages as a result of automobile negligence.” We have stated that an “emotional distress claim is not a cause of action, but, rather, a separate theory of recovery or element of damage.”
Fackler
v.
Genetzky,
In
Consolidated Rail Corporation
v.
Gottshall, supra,
the U.S. Supreme Court was presented with the issue of whether a purely emotional injury was compensable under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, which permits railroad employees to recover for work injuries caused by an employer’s negligence. See 45 U.S.C. § 51 (2000). In addressing this issue, the Court acknowledged that while nearly all states have recognized a right to recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress, as defined by the Court in the passage quoted above, the “fundamental differences between emotional and physical injuries” has led to practical limitations upon the common-law right of recovery for reasons of public policy.
Consolidated Rail Corporation
v.
Gottshall,
“[bjecause the etiology of emotional disturbance is usually not as readily apparent as that of a broken bone following an automobile accident, courts have been concerned . . . that recognition of a cause of action for [emotional] injury when not related to any physical trauma may inundate judicial resources with a flood of relatively trivial claims, many of which may be imagined or falsified, and that liability may be imposed for highly remote consequences of a negligent act.”
For all of these reasons, courts have realized that recognition of a cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress holds out the very real possibility of nearly infinite and unpredictable liability for defendants. Courts therefore have placed substantial limitations on the class of plaintiffs that may recover for emotional injuries and on the injuries that may be compensable.
(Emphasis supplied.)
Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress in Nebraska
This court addressed the relationship between emotional injury and physical injury in
Hanford
v.
Omaha & C. B. Street R. Co.,
We considered analogous circumstances in
Netusil
v.
Novak,
Rasmussen v. Benson,
In
Fournell
v.
Usher Pest Control Co.,
A dissent in
Fournell v. Usher Pest Control Co., supra,
argued that the requirement that emotional harm must manifest itself in bodily harm was “outmoded and should be rejected.”
Id.
at 690,
To suggest that a psychological injury is not as grievous as a physical injury is to ignore reality. And to further suggest that if one can be sufficiently mentally disturbed so as to suffer a coronary occlusion, he or she may recover in tort, but if he or she simply becomes an emotionally distressed person, reduced to sniveling and crying and attempting suicide, he or she may not recover, does not seem to me to be founded upon any rational basis.
Id.
at 690-91,
To therefore require that, before one who is mentally injured may recover, he must at least regurgitate once seems to me to be imposing upon the law a requirement that makes little or no sense. As I indicated at the outset, I would join with those jurisdictions which have adopted what I perceive to be the more modem view and would permit a cause of action to exist for mental anguish, absent bodily harm or other compensable damage.
Id.
at 697,
Four years later, this court decided
James
v.
Lieb,
First, we held that the relationship between the plaintiff and the victim was the most valuable in determining foreseeability, and thus required that there be a marital or intimate familial relationship between the plaintiff bystander and the victim. We then noted that the plaintiff was not required to experience actual sensory perception of the injury. Finally, we held that the emotional trauma must result from either death or serious injury to the victim.
Finally, but significantly, we addressed the
Foumell
requirement that a plaintiff must present evidence of a physical injury resulting from the emotional trauma. Agreeing with the rationale of the
Foumell
dissent, we rejected the physical injury requirement, noting that “[w]hile physical manifestation of the psychological injury may be highly persuasive, such proof is
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not necessary given the current state of medical science and advances in psychology.”
James
v.
Lieb,
James
v.
Lieb,
Our jurisprudence from
Hanford v. Omaha & C. B. Street R. Co.,
We refined the test for compensability of negligently inflicted emotional injury in
Schleich
v.
Archbishop Bergan Mercy Hosp.,
Hamilton’s Claim for Emotional Distress
Applying these principles to the instant case, we conclude that Hamilton falls within the class of plaintiffs who may seek damages for emotional injury caused by the negligence of another. As the operator of one of the vehicles involved in the collision, Hamilton was clearly within the zone of danger. Because he was thus a direct victim of the alleged negligence of the other driver, and not a bystander, his right to recover is not dependent upon
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establishing a “marital or intimate familial relationship” with any other victim. See
James
v.
Lieb,
The remaining issue is whether the specific emotional injury sustained by Hamilton is actionable under the criteria established by our cases. The record includes the expert opinion of Moore, a psychiatrist, that Hamilton suffers from posttraumatic stress disorder as a result of the 1997 accident. Moore testified that Hamilton exhibits symptoms of this disorder, including dreams and flashbacks, which warrant treatment. Moore referred to these symptoms as “clinically significant distress.” This evidence is sufficient to meet the requirement that the emotional anguish or mental harm for which recovery is sought must be medically diagnosable and must be of sufficient severity that it is medically significant. See, Sell v. Mary Lanning Memorial Hosp., supra; Schleich v. Archbishop Bergan Mercy Hosp., supra.
However, as noted above, actionable emotional distress must also be “ ‘ “so severe that no reasonable person could have been expected to endure it.” ’ ”
Sell
v.
Mary Lanning Memorial Hosp.,
Similarly, in
Andreasen
v.
Gomes,
While the evidence viewed in a light most favorable to Hamilton shows that he did experience diagnosable and clinically significant emotional distress resulting from the accident, it was not of sufficient severity to be actionable under our case law. Moore testified that posttraumatic stress disorder may range in severity from mild to severe. According to Moore, the posttraumatic stress disorder experienced by Hamilton falls within the lower half of the range, “[b]etween mild and moderate.” On the basis of information obtained from Hamilton, Moore described him as “pretty well beat up emotionally for a short period of time, but before too long he went on with his life.” Viewing this medical testimony, as well as Hamilton’s testimony describing his symptoms, in a light most favorable to Hamilton, we conclude that the emotional injury so described cannot, as a matter of law, be considered so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it.
Accordingly, although our reasoning differs significantly from that of the district court, we conclude that the personal representative was entitled to summary judgment and that the district court did not err in denying Hamilton’s motion for new trial. We therefore affirm.
Affirmed.
