Opinion
In the published portion of this opinion we shall consider whether the parents of a child injured during childbirth stated a cause of action on their own behalf against a hospital and its doctors for negligent infliction of emotional distress. We hold that they did. In the unpublished portion we consider and resolve the statute of limitations issues in favor of plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment of dismissal entered after the superior court sustained a demurrer to their first amended complaint for medical malpractice. 1 In sustaining the demurrer the trial court held that all three causes of action in the complaint were barred by the statute of limitations, and that the third cause of action failed to state a claim as a matter of law. On appeal the plaintiffs raise issues concerning the validity and applicability of the statute of limitations for medical malpractice, and assert that their third cause of action states a cognizable cause of action for negligent in *388 fliction of emotional distress. Because we agree with plaintiffs, we shall reverse the judgment of dismissal.
Facts
Since this appeal comes to us after an order sustaining a demurrer we shall accept as true all material, issuable, properly pleaded facts of the complaint.
(Alcorn
v.
Anbro Engineering, Inc.
(1970)
Plaintiffs filed their complaint on September 27, 1983. In explanation for their delay in commencing this litigation, plaintiffs allege that they were ignorant of the exact nature and cause of James’ injuries and could not have been expected to know of the nature and cause of the injuries. They allege that at the time of James’ birth Kaiser told them that he had been born with his head and arm together and that this was a common form of birth. Kaiser knew that the probable cause of injury to James was the unnecessary and excessive traction to his head during vaginal birth and it intentionally omitted to tell plaintiffs that the injury could have been prevented by delivery through cesarean section rather than vaginal delivery. Kaiser intended that plaintiffs rely on its representations so that they would not pursue legal remedies, and the plaintiffs did rely on those representations until 1983 when they filed this action.
The first cause of action of the complaint seeks damages for personal injury to James due to Kaiser’s negligence. The second cause of action is brought on behalf of Rebecca and Robert, and seeks compensation for expenses they have incurred and will necessarily incur in the future due to the injury to James. The third cause of action is also on behalf of Rebecca and Robert, and seeks damages for the negligent infliction of emotional distress.
Kaiser demurred to the first amended complaint. The trial court held that under the facts alleged the plaintiffs’ duty of inquiry arose in 1979, and *389 thus all three causes of action were barred by the statute of limitations on medical malpractice actions set forth in Code of Civil Procedure section 340.5. The court also held that the third cause of action did not allege sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action. The demurrer was sustained without leave to amend and a judgment of dismissal was entered.
Discussion
I
We will first consider whether the third cause of action of the first amended complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The trial court sustained the demurrer to the third cause of action on two grounds: the statute of limitations and the decision in
Dillon
v.
Legg
(1968)
In
Dillon
the California Supreme Court “became the first American jurisdiction to hold that a parent who witnesses the negligent infliction of death or injury on her child may recover from the resulting emotional trauma and physical injury in cases where the parent does not fear imminent physical harm.”
(Ochoa
v.
Superior Court
(1985)
In establishing a cause of action for a percipient family member, the Dillon court noted that the prime concern in every case was to be foreseeability, because that factor is the chief element in determining a defendant’s duty to the plaintiff. As the court later noted, the “touchstone of our analysis in Dillon was foreseeability.” (Ochoa v. Superior Court, supra, 39 Cal.3d *390 at p. 166.) This determination of foreseeability was to be made on a case-by-case basis.
Lower courts at first tended to adhere rigidly to guidelines established in
Dillon.
(See e.g.,
Jansen
v.
Children’s Hospital Medical Center
(1973)
However, this cauterization of “the incursion of pure foreseeability . . . was not to be.”
(Andalon
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
Unfortunately, the court gave no indication of the meaning of “direct victim” for plaintiffs other than Mr. Molien. The unenviable tasks of distinguishing bystander from direct victim cases and establishing limits for the latter have been left to the lower courts with a “foreseeable” diversity of results. Kaiser—as is its due—tries to uphold the judgment by playing upon this confusion. It claims Robert and Rebecca are not direct victims because the malpractice was aimed at James, not them. Thus, Kaiser reasons, the parents are third parties and must comply with the Dillon guidelines.
As support for their position, they cite two cases decided immediately after
Molien
which denied recovery to parents. The first,
Cortez
v.
Macias
(1980)
In Andalon,
in order to rationalize the direct victim question, we analyzed the concept under the theory of
Biakanja
v.
Irving
(1958)
In this case, an obstetrician-patient relationship existed. It cannot be gainsaid that the mother is a direct victim of the alleged negligence committed in the execution of this relationship which resulted in injuries to her child.
(Andalon,
In their complaint, the parents allege the relationship between Kaiser and Rebecca for the purpose of prenatal treatment and childbirth.
4
They further allege that they were the direct victims of the negligent execution of this relationship, which was the actual and proximate cause of their emotional distress at their son’s injuries. This is sufficient to state a claim under
Andalón
without amendment. To deny recovery in this circumstance on grounds of
Dillon
would misconstrue that decision. After all,
Dillon
was an action against a stranger for damages for emotional distress to a parent caused by viewing an automobile accident involving her child. The question was whether the defendant driver owed a duty to a plaintiff not struck by the car and in answering that question the court focused on foreseeability. (68 Cal.2d at pp. 740-741.) That is all well and good where there is no relationship between the parties, but here Kaiser entered into a contract with the mother to provide care for herself and child during the birth process. A duty of care may arise from contract even though there would otherwise be none.
(Eads
v.
Marks
(1952)
II, III *
Disposition
The judgment of dismissal is reversed and the matter is remanded with directions to the trial court to vacate its order sustaining Kaiser’s demurrer and to enter a new order overruling the demurrer.
Carr, Acting P. J., and Sims, J., concurred.
Notes
The named defendants are Kaiser Hospital, Kaiser Foundation Hospitals, Inc. and Kaiser Permanente Medical Group. Only Kaiser Foundation Hospitals filed a demurrer to the complaint. For convenience, we shall collectively refer to all the parties defendant as Kaiser.
In one of those two cases,
Sesma
v.
Cueto
(1982)
Accounts Adjustment Bureau
v.
Cooperman
(1984)
Presumably the plaintiffs will want to amend the 1968 date for the commencement of the doctor-patient relationship, since it is alleged James was born in 1967.
Nor is there anything in
Ochoa
to change this result. There the plaintiff’s son was admitted to the custody of a juvenile hall and became ill. Proper medical care was not rendered despite plaintiff’s urgent pleas. The son died and the high court concluded that the mother was a foreseeable plaintiff to whom the defendants owed a duty of care under
Dillon.
The court went on to say that plaintiff had not stated a cause of action as direct victim of defendant’s
*393
negligence under
Molieti.
This was because defendant’s negligence was directed primarily at the decedent son, with his mother looking on as a helpless bystander. Thus, the duty was “owed to her as a percipient witness, not as a direct victim of negligence.”
(Ochoa
v.
Superior Court, supra,
See footnote, ante, page 386.
