In this tort action between diverse citizens, the district court awarded summary judgment to the defendants, Williams Insurance Company and Constance Williams (‘Williams”), on the issue of negligent infliction of emotional distress.
On June 27, 1988, Constance Williams and her young son and daughter were driving east on a two-lane highway in a ear owned by the Williams Insurance Company. As she turned left and started to cross the westbound lane, Loren Kapoulas, driving a tractor-trailer rig, collided with her car. Ms. Williams survived the accident, but her two children did not. Kapoulas suffered only a bruised shoulder. After the accident, however, Kapoulas suffered psychiatric and emotional problems evidenced by insomnia, nightmares, lethargy, loss of libido, facial twitching, loss of appetite and weight, shaking and sweating. The precise cause or source of this emotional distress is the primary issue in this appeal.
Kapoulas and his wife Alyssa, who correspondingly claims loss of consortium resulting from Kapoulas’ emotional distress, settled all other claims against Williams for lost wages, bodily injury, and property damage to the tractor-trailer. Their settlement did not contemplate any damages for mental or emotional suffering, and Kapoulas’ only remaining claim is for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
We review summary judgments
de novo
and resolve any doubt as to the existence of a material fact in favor of the non-moving party.
New Burnham Prairie Homes, Inc. v. Village of Burnham,
Subsequent Illinois decisions have construed Rickey’s zone of danger rule to apply only where a bystander claims emotional distress. When a direct victim claims emotional distress, the impact rule stiU appHes.
See Corgan v. Muehling,
The district court held that Kapoulas was a bystander and denied plaintiffs’ requests for reHef under Rickey because Ka-poulas could not sufficiently demonstrate that his emotional distress arose from a fear for his own safety rather than a concern for the two chüdren. However, the district court incorrectly assumed that a plaintiff is either a direct victim or a bystander, and therefore did not consider the possibiHty that Kapoulas could have been both a bystander and direct victim. In so doing, the district •court only appHed the Rickey analysis and did not consider the possibiHty that some of Kapoulas’ emotional distress resulted from being a direct victim which would have necessitated an alternative analysis under the impact rule. As shown below, several IlHnois cases Alústrate that a plaintiff may be both a direct victim and a bystander in the same incident for the purposes of determining the source of his emotional distress. Moreover, we disagree with the district court and the defendants that Kapoulas’ emotional suffering came solely from his status as a witness. Our examination of the record reveals that at least part of his emotional distress resulted from his direct involvement as a participant in the accident. This, we conclude, was of such importance in determining plaintiffs’ *1383 recover summary judgment was inappropriate.
Defendants cite two Illinois decisions,
Alexander v. De Paepe,
In
Alexander,
decided
after Rickey,
the plaintiff separately requested damages for her own injuries resulting from an automobile accident, and her emotional distress which resulted from witnessing the fatal injuries to her fiance.
Id.,
Defendants cite Alexander and Carlinville for the uncontested proposition that mere witnesses cannot recover for emotional distress unless they satisfy the Rickey analysis. However, the real issue here is whether Loren Kapoulas’ emotional distress arose strictly from his status as a witness or arose from a combination of his status as a witness and his direct participation in the accident as a victim.
*1384 The defendants argue that because Kapoulas’ emotional distress did not result from a fear for his own safety, he cannot recover for any emotional distress damages. We disagree. Although the evidence, read in a light most favorable to Kapoulas, does not support a finding that his emotional distress resulted from a fear for his own safety, this does not end our analysis under the impact rule. In this case, we conclude that Kapou-las was both a direct victim and a bystander for the purposes of determining the source of his emotional distress.
The depositions of the examining psychiatrists indicate that Kapoulas suffered emotional distress from the fact that he was a participant in the accident. Specifically, he was upset because he was the driver of the truck that killed the two children. Dr. Powell, an examining psychiatrist, testified in his deposition that Kapoulas was angry about being unjustly labelled a killer; he felt guilty and depressed about being involved in the deaths of the two children; he feared getting involved in another accident in which he might be placed in a similar situation; he was angry about being lumped in a group of irresponsible and reckless truckers; and he felt he did not do anything to merit his involvement in the accident. 3 These facets of his emotional distress did not result from his capacity as a bystander but from his participation in the accident and as a direct victim.
Given that Kapoulas suffered some emotional distress as a direct victim, with respect to this emotional distress Kapoulas need only satisfy the demands of the impact rule. Unfortunately, Illinois’ impact rule is not terribly clear. Some Illinois decisions, and at least one federal district court decision, have held that, the emotional distress must be directly causally related to the physical injury to recover under the impact rule.
See In Re Air Crash Disaster Near Chicago,
After carefully considering these different interpretations of the impact rule and the language of the Illinois Supreme Court, we conclude that Illinois law does not require a causal nexus between emotional distress and a physical injury, although we admit that Illinois law is less than compelling on this point. Given this standard, we believe there is sufficient evidence in the record to create a material issue of fact as to the source of Kapoulas’ emotional distress, making summary judgment inappropriate. We therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion on the issue of Loren Kapoulas’ emotional distress and Alyssa Kapoulas’ corresponding claim for loss of consortium.
The plaintiffs also argue that the district court erred in denying their motion to voluntarily dismiss without prejudice. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(2), a district court in its sound discretion may allow a plaintiff to dismiss his claim voluntarily without prejudice.
Tyco Labs., Inc. v. Koppers Co.,
Reversed and Remauded.
Notes
. Many of the difficulties in this case could have been avoided were it not for inartful pleading. In Carlinville and Alexander, the plaintiffs pleaded one claim of relief for their physical injuries and emotional damages resulting therefrom, and a separate claim for their emotional distress which resulted from being a witness to the accident. This probably alerted the courts in both cases to the separate nature of the claims for relief. In this case, the plaintiffs made only one claim for relief, including all physical and emotional or mental damages. The plaintiffs could have made these issues considerably less complex by similarly pleading two separate grounds for emotional distress damages. This, we conclude-, contributed to the district court's failure to separate the emotional damages resulting from Kapoulas’ status as a witness and his emotional distress resulting from the actual impact.
. A third Illinois decision lends additional support to our separation of a direct victim's emotional distress resulting from his impact or injury and his emotional distress resulting from witnessing injuries to another victim. In
Hayes v. Illinois Power Co.,
. Notwithstanding our conclusion that Kapoulas suffered some of his emotional distress as a re- • suit of his direct participation in the accident, the depositions are remarkably unhelpful with respect to this issue. We surmise that the lawyers conducting the depositions were not contemplating the precise issue before this Court. Had they considered the importance of determining the source of emotional distress, either as a witness or a direct participant, our job would have been much easier. In any event, summary judgment was obviously inappropriate.
. We do not interpret “contemporaneous” to mean simply that the emotional distress occurred simultaneously with the accident, notwithstanding the relevance of this fact. Adopting this meaning of contemporaneous would allow recovery for emotional distress wholly unrelated to the accident so long as it occurred simultaneously with the accident. We believe the Illinois Su *1385 preme Court did not intend to allow recovery for emotional distress which is not in some respect proximately related to the impact or injury.
. In fact, in its
Rickey
opinion, the Illinois Supreme Court refers to the “purely formal” or even trivial physical contacts which could give rise to emotional distress damages, suggesting that there need not be a causal relationship between the emotional distress and a physical injury.
See Rickey,
Moreover, the broad language in
Rickey
discussing the impact rule is in -contrast to other jurisdictions which construe the impact rule more strictly.
See, e.g., Bolin v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
