372 A.2d 989 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1976
In the complaint the plaintiff alleges that the defendant negligently drove her automobile onto the sidewalk in front of the plaintiff's residence and that she thereby struck and killed the plaintiff's four-and-one-half-year-old son. *226 In the first count the plaintiff, as administratrix of the decedent's estate, sues for wrongful death, and the demurrer raises no question as to the legal sufficiency of that cause of action.
In the second count the plaintiff sues individually, alleging that at the time of the accident she was "in her home in front of which and on the property of which" the decedent was struck by the defendant. The plaintiff further alleges that she "immediately observed" the "injuries and the death" of her son and that as a result of the defendant's actions she suffered mental pain and anguish. There is no allegation that the plaintiff saw or observed the accident itself or that the automobile struck the plaintiff's residence. Even if the court construes the allegations of the second count in the manner most favorable to the plaintiff, as it must do, there is no basis in the allegations for a conclusion that the plaintiff was within the range of ordinary physical danger from the force of the collision. While the complaint does contain an allegation that the plaintiff suffered a "trauma," it is apparent from the other allegations of the second count that it was an emotional rather than a physical one.
The defendant demurs to the second count on the ground that Connecticut law does not permit recovery for nervous shock and mental anguish caused by the sight of injury or threatened harm to another. For reasons that will appear, the court agrees and sustains the demurrer.
For at least the past thirty-five years it has been clear in Connecticut that one may recover for negligently caused fright or shock even in the absence of bodily injuries if the claimant is within the range of ordinary physical danger from that negligence.Orlo v. Connecticut Co.,
In the present case the plaintiff seeks to recover for fright or shock caused, not by fear of injury to herself, but by injury or fear of injury to the person of another. The Connecticut Supreme Court has denied recovery to a mother for fright or shock owing to fear of threatened injury to her child inStrazza v. McKittrick,
The plaintiff here would distinguish Strazza on the grounds that there the mother's fears were groundless, albeit perhaps reasonable under the circumstances, and that the child there was not in fact injured. Instead, the plaintiff would rely on the leading California case of Dillon v. Legg,
In Dillon the court set forth a new rule allowing a mother to recover for emotional shock, which resulted in physical injury, from witnessing the death of her child. In its opinion the court limited that rule to cases where the plaintiff was near the scene of the accident, where the emotional shock *228
resulted from actually witnessing the accident, as opposed to learning about it from others, and where the plaintiff was closely related to the victim. Even with those limitations, however, serious policy questions are raised by such a rule. The defendant in such a case is already liable in one tort action for wrongful death. Should that responsibility be broadened to include separate and additional liability to each and every close relative of the victim who happens to be on the scene of the accident or even to come upon the scene a short time later? The difficulty of holding to the limitations of the doctrine set forth in Dillon is well illustrated by a subsequent California case allowing recovery to a mother who came upon the scene of her child's injury after the accident had occurred. Archibald v. Braverman,
The New York Court of Appeals expressly rejected the Dillon rule in Tobin v. Grossman,
Moreover, even if Dillon and D'Amicol were followed here, the facts of this case, as pleaded, do not *229 fall within that rule. There is no allegation in the complaint that the plaintiff was at the scene of, or actually witnessed, the accident. The complaint says only that she was in the house when the accident occurred outside and that she "immediately observed" the "injuries and death" of her son. That does not satisfy the requirements of the rule inDillon and D'Amicol, and this court rejects its further extension in Archibald v. Braverman, supra, for the mother who comes upon the scene shortly after the accident. There is no logical basis for such an extension. Where can the line reasonably be drawn if Archibald is accepted? A mother who sees her child suffer and die an hour, a day or even a week after an accident is no less traumatized than one who comes upon the scene "immediately" after an accident. And what of the woman who learns of her child's accidental death at some time and place distant from the scene of the accident or who learns of her cousin's death under like circumstances? Thus, even if Dillon v. Legg, supra, were followed here this cause of action would fail.
The demurrer to the second count is sustained.