Raymon Hamaker appeals the district court’s 1 grant of judgment as a matter of law to the defendants on his tort of outrage claim. Because we find that the evidence presented was not sufficient for a reasonable jury to find for Hamaker on his outrage claim, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Raymon Hamaker, who has an I.Q. of between 75 and 100 and a speech impediment, was in the habit of spending his days “hanging around” the Calhoun County courthouse. The courthouse is a focal point of the town of Hampton, Arkansas, population 1600. Over time, Hamaker became acquainted with the denizens of the courthouse, including the county sheriff, his deputy, the municipal court clerk, and three women who work in the county tax collector’s office.
The friendly atmosphere around the courthouse was marred when Teresa Abies, one of the tax collector’s staff, discovered that Ha-maker had told various townspeople that he was going to pay her $100 to have sex with him. Abies, a married woman, remonstrated with Hamaker about the rumors he was spreading, but he refused to discuss the matter and later sent her flowers. Abies formed a plan to put a stop to Hamaker’s rumor-mongering. She and her friends, including Wanda Ivy, municipal court clerk, obtained and completed an invalid arrest warrant for Hamaker, charging him with “sexual harassment.” On February 4, 1992, Lionel Johnson, deputy sheriff, delivered the warrant to Hamaker outside the courthouse at 7:30 a.m., *110 telling Hamaker that if he did not stop bothering Abies, “the next one will be for real.” Upset, Hamaker immediately went into the courthouse and showed the warrant to the sheriff, who had not been in on the plan, and who told him to show the warrant to the “witnesses” listed. In the next half-hour, Hamaker took the warrant to one of the “witnesses” and to two different friends, all of whom told him that it was invalid.
At 9 a.m., when the local clinic opened, Hamaker saw a doctor, whom he told that he was upset because he had received a fake arrest warrant. He had an increased heart rate and blood pressure, and the doctor gave him a sedative. He returned on February 7 because he was having trouble sleeping, which he ascribed to the receipt of the warrant. Hamaker, however, saw doctors for various ailments unrelated to the warrant twenty-nine times between February 4, 1992, and May 8, 1993.
As a result of this incident, the county sheriff placed the other defendants, except Ivy, who does not report to him, on probation for six months.
Hamaker then brought three claims against defendants in district court: a federal claim of unlawful arrest under § 1983, a state law claim of malicious prosecution, and a state law claim of outrage. After the presentation of evidence, the court granted defendants’ motion for judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50 on the claims of malicious prosecution and outrage. The § 1983 claim went to the jury, which returned a verdict for defendants. Hamaker now appeals only the judgment on the state tort claim of outrage. 2
II. DISCUSSION
In reviewing a motion for judgment as a matter of law, we apply the same standard as the district court.
Swanson v. White Consol. Indus., Inc.,
The Arkansas courts take a very narrow view of claims for the tort of outrage.
See Ross v. Patterson,
A. Extreme and Outrageous Conduct
The second element of the prima facie case is defined as “conduct that is so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized society.”
Tandy Corp. v. Bone,
*111
Factors that bear on the determination of whether conduct is extreme and outrageous include: the conduct at issue; the period of time over which the conduct took place; the relation between plaintiff and defendant,
see Hess,
The conduct of Abies and her cohorts does not reach Arkansas’s exacting standard for extreme and outrageous conduct: It consisted of a rather nasty, but not terribly unusual or shocking, practical joke that cannot be described by any reasonable person as going “beyond all bounds of decency.” The period of time over which the conduct directly caused distress was brief: Hamaker discovered that the warrant was false within one-half hour.
See Hess,
The only factor that may militate toward a finding that the conduct was extreme and outrageous is that defendants are officials of the county government. In Hess v. Treece, the court found that the city director, who had in various ways harassed a police officer for two years, did not have immunity from a claim of outrage, and stated that
the jury could have found that Hess’ conduct became even more outrageous after he took office as City Director ... thus acquiring a position of greater influence, if not actual authority, over city employees. The fact that Mark Treece happened to be a city employee should not deprive him of protection from outrageous conduct; nor should the fact that Bob Hess happened to be a City Director relieve him of responsibility for his actions.
B. Emotional Distress
Under the fourth element of the prima facie case, Hamaker must show that he suffered from emotional distress “so severe that no reasonable person could be expected to endure it.”
Hollingsworth,
*112 III. CONCLUSION
Because no reasonable jury could find that defendants’ conduct was extreme and outrageous or that Hamaker suffered emotional distress so severe that no reasonable person could endure it, we affirm the district court’s judgment as a matter of law in favor of defendants.
