Is there an independent right of action available to parents who are not present at an incident in which serious injuries are inflicted upon their child by the wilful and wanton negligence of a defendant so as to allow recovery for emotional distress and mental suffering which results from the parents learning of such injuries and seeing the injured child following the incident?
That question of first impression confronts us in this appeal by the parents from the grant of defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment. This ruling struck from a three-count complaint those two counts which sought damages based upon "great emotional distress” suffered from their learning that their eleven-year-old daughter had sustained serious injuries from a collision between an automobile driven by defendant while admittedly under the influence of intoxicants and a car in which the child was a passenger riding with other relatives. The parents were not present. There remains a single count by the father for medicals and loss of services with which this appeal is not concerned.
"The thrust of this appeal deals primarily with the problem of whether there is an independent cause of action for emotional harm suffered by a parent upon learning of the injury and the extent thereof to such child when (1) such injury resulted from the wilful and wanton negligence of the defendant; (2) the parent was not a witness to the incident causing such injury; (3) the parent was not nearby when the child was injured; (4) there was no impact to the plaintiff; (5) the negligent acts of the defendant were 'directed -toward’ the child and not the plaintiff and (6) the parent learned of the injury a short time afterward and then suffered emotional harm” (Appellant’s first brief, page 7).
In an excellent and learned brief citing both foreign and Georgia decisions appellant’s able and articulate advocate seeks to persuade this court to create such right of action. He points out that in dealing with negligent infliction of emotional distress the various jurisdictions have devised three theories under which defendants have *910 been held liable to bystanders. These carry the appropriately descriptive names of "impact,” "zone of danger,” and "fear for another” rules.
As the nomenclature indicates, the "impact rule” required that defendant’s negligent conduct result in actual bodily contact to the plaintiff. Excepting for special situations discussed hereafter, Georgia follows this doctrine.
Blanchard v. Reliable Transfer Co.,
While recognizing these Georgia authorities to be controlling in a "negligence” situation appellants’ counsel urges that these cases should not be applied to a factual setting based on "wilfulness and wantonness.” He argues that our court should hold that "When a defendant acts in such a wilful and wanton manner and in complete disregard of the rights of others... he is thereby precluded from raising the question of foreseeability of causing emotional shock and distress to the parents of a child injured in such an incident.” (Appellant’s first brief, page 17). In support of this proposal he cites these California and Hawaii decisions: Dillon v. Legg,
A reading of the California cases shows their decisions were based upon both the "zone of danger” rule, which permits recovery when it was foreseeable that the plaintiff would be in the area of possible physical peril
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when the negligent act occurred, and the "fear for another” rule. Thus in the Dillon case a mother was given legal standing to sue when she witnessed her daughter being run over by defendant’s car and in the Archibald case the mother arrived at the scene minutes after the accident occurred. But, as is pointed out in the appellee’s brief, the most recent decision by a California appellate court, Powers v. Sissoev,
Similarly, a recent decision by the Supreme Court of Hawaii limited the extent of the cases cited by appellant in a situation factually akin to that before us. In Kelley v. Kokua Sales and Supply, Ltd.,
Pragmatic reasoning similar to that expressed by Prosser has been the basis on which most jurisdictions have refused to impose liability in parent absentee situations such as we have here. Thus the Court of Appeals of New York in Tobin v. Grossman,
Our Georgia decisions have permitted recovery for emotional distress without physical impact under circumstances where the wilful act was directed towards the plaintiff. Thus, a defendant was held liable for "emotional suffering, unaccompanied by injury to purse or person” for abusive language directed towards the affected individuals.
Dunn v. Western Union Tel. Co., 2
Ga. App. 845 (
Although the New York case of Tobin v. Grossman, supra, involved only ordinary negligence, we are impressed with the practicality of the reasoning contained in that opinion and regard its logic to be applicable to the instant situation involving wilfulness and wantonness. To those reasons and that logic must be added the philosophy inherent in the cited Georgia decisions which require the plaintiff to show that the malefactor’s act serving as the basis for the suit must be directed towards the complainant. This is particularly true as to the holding in
Southern R. Co. v. Jackson,
Accordingly, we answer in the negative the question stated in the first paragraph of this opinion.
Judgment affirmed.
