Plaintiff, a witness to his wife’s slip and fall accident, sued to recover damages for his own mental anguish and for loss of consortium resulting from his wife’s injuries. Summary judgment was granted defendant on each element of damage. The trial court ruled as a matter of law that there could be no recovery for mental anguish in the absence of some definable *755 physical injury; and that except for an intentional invasion no cause of action for loss of consortium existed in Texas at the time of the occurrence in question. We disagree with the trial court’s ruling on each ground and reverse and remand for trial on the merits.
The facts are not in dispute. Plaintiff and his wife were shopping in defendant’s grocery store on Sunday afternoon when the wife slipped on a bottle cap and fell to the floor. She immediately exhibited severe pain, commenced vomiting, and, as it was later revealed, suffered internal hemorrhage and injury to her back. While plaintiff received no physical contact, he observed the fall and his wife’s immediate reactions. The wife settled her claims and fully released defendant, but plaintiff was not a party to the release. Thereafter, plaintiff filed this suit seeking recovery for his mental anguish. He contends the trial court erred in ruling that no action lies for mental anguish unless accompanied by physical impact or bodily injury and cites
Bedgood v. Madalin,
Bedgood
presented the question as to whether a bystander parent could recover damages for mental anguish when he heard the impact of an automobile striking his son and then observed his son’s injuries at the scene of the accident shortly before the son died. In allowing recovery to the parent for his mental anguish, the court followed
Landreth
v.
Reed,
Defendant urges that because the so-called bystander doctrine is a departure from the long standing rule in Texas that mental suffering is not ground for recovery in negligence cases unless accompanied by physical injury, there should be strict limitations placed upon it. Defendant suggests that one guideline, in addition to the foreseeability factors set forth in
Landreth v. Reed,
Furthermore, we cannot agree with defendant that this case presents, for the first time, a. departure from the long standing rule in Texas concerning a cause of action asserted by an “uninjured bystander.” We note that the supreme court has granted writ of error in
Bedgood.
However, in
Covington v. Estate of Foster,
We need not approve either of the limitations discussed as an arbitrary limitation on the right of recovery for injuries resulting from emotional shock caused by negligent conduct. Both limitations are present in this case. There are also other factors which when combined with the limitations discussed impel a conclusion as a matter of law that the defendant could not reasonably have foreseen the injuries suffered by the plaintiff as a natural and probable consequence of her negligent conduct.
Id. at 170. The court then concluded:
We recognize that this field of law is in a developing process, as is the field of psychiatry, and we would be reluctant to hold at this time that any one of the enumerated factors would of and by itself be sufficient to require a judgment denying liability. We are satisfied, however, that public policy is better served by denying liability when all are combined. [Emphasis added.]
Id.
at 171. The court held as a matter of law that defendant could not reasonably have foreseen the consequences of her act, but implicit in its holding is a recognition of a cause of action by an uninjured bystander for damages for mental anguish. The same holding is also implicit in
Gulf, Colorado & Sante Fe Railway v. Hayter,
We also do not agree with defendant’s contention that plaintiff may not assert a cause of action for loss of consortium. While our courts have long held to the contrary, the supreme court in
Whittlesey v. Miller,
As to the retroactive application of our holding that either spouse has a cause of action for the negligent impairment of consortium where the other spouse has been negligently injured by a third party, we declare, as a matter of sound administration and fairness, that this holding shall be applicable only in the present case and those actions arising after the effective date of this decision.
The above language is not central to the court’s holding in
Whittlesey
but rather is a statement of the court’s intention with respect to cases not before it. Our problem in applying
stare decisis
to
Whittlesey
is whether to follow the court’s actual holding on the facts before the court or its declaration of policy with respect to cases not before it. Our understanding of
stare deci-sis
is that we are bound by actual holdings rather than dicta.
State v. Valmont Plantations,
*757 [We] are of the opinion that the declaration of the court as to what its decision in futuro shall be should not be treated as having the force and effect of a regularly formulated and properly promulgated rule of practice. What the Supreme Court decides should be with us the highest evidence of what the law is upon the point, and should be followed, unless for very cogent reasons it is believed to be erroneous; but, as we think, no such weight should be given to its declarations as to what it will decide. We think that we should follow the decision, rather than the announcement of a rule as to future cases .
Id. at 26.
We recognize that in defining adherence to precedent, the supreme court may make its own choice between prospective or retrospective application of its decisions without violating constitutional restraints.
See Great Northern Railway Co. v. Sunburst Oil & Refining Co.,
In
Molitor v. Kaneland Community Unit District No. 302,
18 I11.2d 11,
Our supreme court has stated its reasons for giving retroactive application to Whittlesey to be in the interest of sound administration and fairness but these reasons give no specific direction to a lower court. In the absence of specific direction to the contrary, we deem it our duty as an intermediate appellate court to adhere to the law as it is announced by our supreme court. We therefore hold in this case as the supreme court held in Whittlesey that either spouse has a cause of action for loss of consortium resulting from injury to the other spouse from negligence of a third party.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. While it appears that they more clearly relate to causation, the court in Landreth v. Reed set out relevant factors for determining foreseeability. These are: (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 of a 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 were closely related.
