OPINION
This is an appeal from a summary judgment in favor of the appellees, John Darrell Riley and his employer, South Texas Drill *321 ing & Exploration, Inc. Appellant, Ruben Hinojosa brought suit and alleged that he had suffered severe psychological and mental impairment as a result of hearing his co-worker, Santiago Galvan, fall to his death from an oil rig on January 24, 1982, and then observing Galvan’s body where it landed in close proximity to where he was working.
Appellant and Galvan were employed by Air Equipment Rental Inc., which in turn was hired by South Texas Drilling to run the casing of an oil drilling rig in Zapata County, Texas. According to appellant, Riley negligently operated the traveling block on the oil rig before the other crew members were ready. Such action, allegedly, caused Galvan to slip off a platform and fall to his death.
Appellant sued Riley and South Texas Drilling, alleging that Riley’s negligence occurred during the course and scope of his employment with South Texas Drilling. Appellees filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. Based upon the deemed responses to their Request for Admissions, appellees argued that appellant had failed to demonstrate that a familial relationship existed between him and Galvan. Appel-lees further argued that because appellant was not physically injured nor struck by any object, he had no cause of action under the Texas Wrongful Death Statute, TEX. REY.CIV.STAT.ANN. art. 4675 (Vernon Pamp.1986). 1
Appellees also argued in their motion that appellant was not entitled to recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress as a bystander because he was not closely related to Galvan.
In his response to the motion for summary judgment, appellant argued that his cause of action was “based on a theory of gross negligence and the wrongful infliction of mental anguish leading to his neurosis with its attendant physical manifestations.” He further argued that his neurosis is a compensable physical injury. Appellant maintains that the action was not brought pursuant to the wrongful death statute, which he concedes did not provide him a cause of action, but rather that it arises out of common law negligence.
In
Landreth v. Reed,
1. Whether the plaintiff was located near the scene of the accident;
2. Whether the shock resulted from a direct emotional impact upon the plaintiff from the contemporaneous perception of the accident, as distinguished from learning of the accident from others after its occurrence; and
3. Whether the plaintiff and the victim are closely related.
Landreth, supra at 489. It is the third prong of this test which is before us for consideration. Appellant bears no familial relationship to Galvan and alleges a relationship only as a co-worker and “close friend.”
Initially we note that the California Supreme Court in Dillon v. Legg, supra, set out the third prong of the test of foreseeability as “whether plaintiff and the victim were closely related, as contrasted with an absence of any relationship or the presence of only a distant relationship.” The Court further stated:
The evaluation of these factors will indicate the degree of the defendant’s foreseeability: obviously defendant is more likely to foresee that a mother who observes an accident affecting her child will suffer harm than to foretell that a stranger witness will do so ... All these elements, of course, shade into each other; the fixing of obligation, intimately tied into the facts, depends on each case. (Emphasis in original).
Id.
at 739,
*322 Appellee argues that appellant lacks a familial relationship with Galvan and so is unable to satisfy the third element of the Dillon test. Appellant, however, replies that his action is based upon common law negligence, which requires only proof of negligence, duty, proximate cause and damages to support a recovery.
Appellant cites us to the case of
Hill v. Kimball,
Clearly Texas has adopted the
Dillon
test in determining the foreseeability of damages to bystanders who are not themselves physically injured by another’s negligence.
See Landreth v. Reed, supra. See also, Genzer v. City of Mission,
Recently, in
Hastie v. Rodriquez,
Absent the bond of familial relationship, appellant cannot recover damages for mental anguish under ‘bystander recovery.’
The other jurisdictions addressing the close relationship element are divided. In
Elden v. Sheldon,
Any other interpretation would result in an indefinite extension of liability for negligent infliction of emotional distress to every conceivable type of relationship. Neither law nor logic would countenance such a result.... Not every loss can be made compensable in money damages, and legal causation must terminate at some point.
Id.
A similar result was reached in
Drew v. Drake,
Emotional distress to a spouse or a parent witnessing an injury to spouse or child meets the Dillon test because it is reasonably foreseeable that a person standing in such close relationship to the injured person may be present and suffer intense distress. No reported decision extends the ‘close relationship’ guideline to include friends or housemates ... To allow persons standing in a ‘meaningful relationship’ (to use a contemporary colloquialism) to recover for emotional distress resulting in physical injury would abandon the Dillon requirement that ‘[t]he courts ... mark out the areas of liability, excluding the remote and unexpected.’
Id.
at 557,
However, in
Ledger v. Tippitt,
The
Ledger
court disagreed with the
Drew
court, finding that
Drew
rewrote the close relationship standard of
Dillon
to require a formal marriage license. The court also distinguished
Drew
by recognizing that the plaintiff in
Ledger
had attempted to marry the decedent, had had his child, and was economically dependent on him. It also gave great weight to the “appalling facts” of the assault and death in her arms.
Id.
at 648,
Similarily, in
Mobaldi v. Board of Regents of the University of California,
In
Elden, Drew, Mobaldi,
and
Ledger, supra,
the courts required a familial relationship, although in
Ledger
and in
Mobal-di,
the courts labored to find that such a relationship existed. No recovery for emotional distress was permitted, however, in a clearly non-familial relationship case,
Kately v. Wilkinson,
Rhonda [the victim] and Rebecca [the passenger] were both fourteen years old at the time of the accident. They were best friends and were frequently in each other’s company, in each other’s homes, and together on social and recreational outings. Rhonda was treated as a ‘filial member’ of the Kately family, and Rebecca loved Rhonda, cared for her, and held her life as dear as she would have a natural sister.
The relationship between Kately [the driver and Rebecca’s mother] and Rhonda was very much akin to that of mother and daughter. Kately loved Rhonda and cared for her and held her life as dear as she did that of her natural daughter.
Id.
at 580,
The court concluded that it was “not reasonable to foresee severe emotional trauma being sustained by a complainant who, without any position in the family circle of the victim, has an attachment derived from association with the victim as friend.”
Id.
at 585-86,
The courts of California seem willing to liberally construe the close relationship requirement of Dillon to find that a familial relationship exists between victims and plaintiffs. Nevertheless, as stated by the court in Kately, “if we err in construing the close relationship guideline of Dillon v. Legg as requiring a relationship at least legally cognizable, even if not one of blood or marriage [citations omitted] then it is for the Supreme Court to expand the rationale of Dillon.” Id.
Other jurisdictions have also considered the close relationship guideline. In
Ramirez v. Armstrong,
There must be a marital, or intimate familial relationship between the victim and the plaintiff, limited to husband and wife, parent and child, grandparent and grandchild, brother and sister and to those persons who occupy a legitimate position in loco parentis.
Id.
at 541,
The Supreme Court of Wyoming in
Gates v. Richardson,
While we do not expect everyone to easily overcome the sight of violent injury or death to a loved one, we expect them to cope with the sight of violent injury or death to acquaintances or strangers.
* * * * * *
Some limitation on the class of plaintiffs is also justified by the potential burden on economic activity that an unlimited class could impose, [citations omitted] A timely example is the space shuttle disaster. If every person who witnessed that catastrophic event and suffered mental harm could recover, the courts would be overwhelmed and such projects as the space shuttle would be laden with insuperable risks. As a society, we must tell most of those who observed the disaster and may have suffered because of it, that it is a suffering that is not compensable. In this we recognize that part of living involves some unhappy and disagreeable emotions with which we must cope without recovery of damages.
Id. at 198.
In
Leong v. Takasaki,
Neither should the absence of a blood relationship between the victim and the plaintiff — witness foreclose recovery.
* * * * * *
Hence the plaintiff should be permitted to prove the nature of his relationship to the victim and the extent of damages he has suffered because of this relationship.
Id.
at 766.
See also Kelley v. Kokua Sales & Supply, Ltd.,
In each of these cases the existence of a close relationship is an essential element in determining the foreseeability of the resulting emotional distress. A close relationship may be broadly expressed based upon the circumstances. However, we have found no case wherein a clearly unrelated person, standing in the position of friend or co-worker, was allowed to recover, except in Hill v. Kimball, supra. But even in Hill a remand was necessary to address foreseeability of the resulting injury.
Since Hill the Texas courts have adopted the Dillon v. Legg guidelines for determining the foreseeability of injuries resulting from a negligent act in bystander cases. These guidelines require a close relationship between the plaintiff and victim.
A relationship is generally defined as “related by consanguinity or affinity.” WEBSTER’S NEW COLLEGIATE DICTIONARY 723 (7th ed. 1963).
Appellant has not alleged any relationship or association between himself and Galvan other than that of co-worker and close friend. Therefore, we hold that appellant has not stated a recognized cause of action entitling him to recover in his capacity as a bystander for physical injuries resulting from the negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Generally, we review the granting of summary judgment by determining whether summary judgment proof establishes as a matter of law that there is no genuine issue of fact as to one or more of
*325
the essential elements of the plaintiff’s cause of action.
Gibbs v. General Motors Corporation,
Appellant concedes that an essential element for recovery under traditional bystander standards is lacking in his pleadings but would have us carve an exception. Thus there is no contention that his pleadings state a cause of action under the criteria laid out in Landreth v. Seed, supra. Rather the argument made is that Lan-dreth should not be applicable insofar as requiring a close familial relationship between the plaintiff and the victim. Under the circumstances, appellant’s pleadings were not subject to cure through amendment following the lodging of a special exception. As the pleadings stand, they simply fail to allege a legal claim or cause of action.
The trial court was correct in holding that summary judgment was in order as a matter of law.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Article 4675 was repealed by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., p. 7218, ch. 959, § 9(1) eff. Sept. 1, 1985. See now TEX.CIV.PRACTICE AND REM.CODE ANN. § 71.004 (Vernon 1986).
