On claimant Fleeter Thorpe’s appeal, the issue is whether the daughter of a patient in a State hospital, falsely advised that the patient, her mother, had died, may recover from the State for emotional harm. She sustained the harm as a direct result of the negligent misinformation provided by the hospital in the course of it advising relatives of the death of a patient. The mother was in fact alive and well.
Claimant and her aunt, Nellie Johnson, since deceased, had filed a claim against the State for funeral expenses incurred, emotional harm and punitive damages. The Court of Claims awarded claimant $7,500 for funeral expenses undertaken on the false information, and for emotional harm. It denied her punitive damages, and dismissed the aunt’s claim for insufficiency. The State appealed to the Appellate Division and claimants cross-appealed. The Appellate Division modified, limiting the daughter’s award to her pecuniary losses of $1,658.47, and otherwise affirmed as to both claimants. The aunt’s estate, unlike the daughter, took no further appeal to this court.
There should be a reversal. The daughter of a hospital patient may recover for emotional harm sustained by her as a result of negligent misinformation given by the hospital that *380 her mother had died. Key to liability, of course, is the hospital’s duty, borne or assumed, to advise the proper next of kin of the death of a patient.
Claimant’s mother, Emma Johnson, had been a patient in the Hudson River State Hospital since 1960. On August 6, 1970, another patient, also named Emma Johnson, died. Later that day, the hospital sent a telegram addressed to Nellie Johnson of Albany, claimant’s aunt and the sister of the living Emma Johnson. The telegram read:
"REGRET TO INFORM YOU OF DEATH OF EMMA JOHNSON PLEASE NOTIFY RELATIVES MAKE BURIAL ARRANGEMENTS HAVE UNDERTAKER CONTACT HOSPITAL BEFORE COMING FOR BODY HOSPITAL WISHES TO STUDY ALL DEATHS FOR SCIENTIFIC REASONS PLEASE WIRE POST MORTEM CONSENT
HUDSON RIVER STATE HOSPITAL”
In accordance with the instructions in the telegram, claimant was notified of her mother’s death by her aunt. An undertaker was engaged; the body of the deceased Emma Johnson was released by the hospital and taken to Albany that night. A wake was set for August 11, with burial the next day. In the interim claimant incurred expenses in preparing the body for the funeral, and in notifying other relatives of her mother’s death.
On the afternoon of the wake, claimant and her aunt went to the funeral home to view the body. After examining the body, both claimant and her aunt remarked that the mother’s appearance had changed. Nellie Johnson also expressed doubt that the corpse was that of her sister Emma. Thereafter the doubts built up, and upon returning that evening for the wake, claimant, in a state of extreme distress, examined the corpse more closely and verified that it was not that of her mother. At this point, claimant became "very, very hysterical”, and had to be helped from the funeral chapel.
The hospital was called, and the mistake confirmed. Claimant’s mother was alive and well in another wing of the hospital. Later that evening at the hospital, the deputy director, with the authorization of the director, admitted the mistake to claimant and her aunt. Upon the trial it appeared that the hospital had violated its own procedures and with gross carelessness had "pulled” the wrong patient record.
After this incident, claimant did not work in her employment for more than 11 days. She complained of "[recurrent *381 nightmares, terrifying dreams of death, seeing the coffin * * * difficulty in concentrating, irritability, inability to function at work properly, general tenseness and anxiety.” Her psychiatrist testified that "She appeared to be somewhat depressed, tremulous. She seemed to be under a considerable amount of pressure. She cried easily when relating events that occurred. I though that she spoke rather rapidly and obviously perspiring.” Both her psychiatrist and that of the State agreed that, as a result of the incident, claimant suffered "excessive anxiety”, that is, anxiety neurosis. Her expert, as indicated, testified that she showed objective manifestations of that condition.
One to whom a duty of care is owed, it has been held, may recover for harm sustained solely as a result of an initial, negligently-caused psychological trauma, but with ensuing psychic harm with residual physical manifestations
(Battalla v State of New York,
There have developed, however, two exceptions. The first is
*382
the minority rule permitting recovery for emotional harm resulting from negligent transmission by a telegraph company of a message announcing death (see cases collected in Restatement, Torts 2d, App, § 436A; Prosser,
op. cit.,
p 329; but see
Western Union Tel. Co. v Speight,
The second exception permits recovery for emotional harm to a close relative resulting from negligent mishandling of a corpse (see Prosser,
op. tit.,
pp 329-330, and cases collected). Recovery in these cases has ostensibly been grounded on a violation of the relative’s quasi-property right in the body (see
Darcy v Presbyterian Hosp.,
In both the telegraph cases and the corpse mishandling cases, there exists "an especial likelihood of genuine and serious mental distress, arising from the special circumstances, which serves as a guarantee that the claim is not spurious” (p 330). Prosser notes that "[t]here may perhaps be other such cases” (p 330; see
Nieman v Upper Queens Med. Group,
As the Appellate Division correctly found and the State in truth concedes, the hospital was negligent in failing to ascertain the proper next of kin when it mistakenly transmitted the death notice to claimant’s aunt and through her, at its behest, to claimant. While for one to be held liable in negligence he need not foresee novel or extraordinary consequences, it is enough that he be aware of the risk of danger. The consequential funeral expenditures and the serious psy
*383
chological impact on claimant of a false message informing her of the death of her mother, were all within the "orbit of the danger” and therefore within the "orbit of the duty” for the breach of which a wrongdoer may be held liable
(Palsgraf v Long Is. R. R. Co.,
Tobin v Grossman
(
Moreover, not only justice but logic compels the further conclusion that if claimant was entitled to recover her pecuniary losses she was also entitled to recover for the emotional harm caused by the same tortious act. The recovery of the funeral expenses stands only because a duty to claimant was breached. Such a duty existing and such a breach of that duty occurring, she is entitled to recover the proven harmful consequences proximately caused by the breach. In the light of the
Battalia
and
Ferrara
cases
(supra),
and the reasoning upon which they were based, recovery for emotional harm to one subjected directly to the tortious act may not be disallowed so
*384
long as the evidence is sufficient to show causation and substantiality of the harm suffered, together with a "guarantee of genuineness” to which the court referred in the
Ferrara
case (
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the matter remitted to that court for a determination of the facts in accordance with CPLR 5613.
Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones, Wachtler, Fuchsberg and Cooke concur.
Order reversed, with costs, and case remitted to Appellate Division, Third Department, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.
