On October 2, 1990, a natural gas explosion destroyed the house of Paul P. Sullivan and Mary J. McDonald. Both Sullivan and McDonald looked on from across the street as their home burned to the ground. On January 8, 1991, Sullivan and McDonald filed the present case in the Superior Court. Their complaint alleged that the negligence of the defendant, Boston Gas Company (Boston Gas), caused the explosion. The first count of the complaint requested damages for lost property, lost wages, and for other financial expenses related to the explosion. In the second and third counts, Sullivan and McDonald sought compensation for the emotional distress which each claimed to have suffered as a result of the explosion.
Boston Gas moved for partial summary judgment on the emotional distress counts. Boston Gas argued that Sullivan and McDonald did not demonstrate compensable claims for emotional distress, see
Payton
v.
Abbott Labs,
Before ruling on Boston Gas’s motion for partial summary judgment, the judge below conducted a proceeding which the parties have described as a “mini-trial.”
2
This proceeding
The judge, however, granted Boston Gas’s motion with respect to Sullivan. He ruled that Sullivan introduced only “emotional, or mental, or subjective symptoms,” which did not satisfy the
Payton
requirement of physical harm. The judge then proceeded to report to the Appeals Court the issue whether the physical harm rule set out in
Payton
had been applied correctly. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 64,
The record as to Sullivan’s claim of physical harm included a medical affidavit signed by Dr. Walter H. Caskey of Faulkner Hospital. Dr. Caskey stated that Sullivan had suffered from tension headaches related to the emotional stress caused by the explosion. Dr. Caskey also noted muscle tenderness in the back of Sullivan’s head. In addition to this affidavit, Sullivan produced a record of a psychological consultation during which he complained of concentration and reading problems. Finally, Sullivan stated in his responses to interrogatories and in his deposition that he had suffered from sleeplessness, gastrointestinal distress, upset stomach, nightmares, depression, feelings of despair, difficulty in driving and working, and an over-all “lousy” feeling allegedly resulting from the explosion.
McDonald, for her part, submitted an affidavit signed by Dr. Bessel A. van der Kolk, the director of the Trauma
In
Payton,
we held that, in order to recover for negligently inflicted emotional distress, a plaintiff must prove: “(1) negligence; (2) emotional distress; (3) causation; (4) physical harm manifested by objective symptomatology; and (5) that a reasonable person would have suffered emotional distress under the circumstances of the case.”
Id.
at 557.
4
We added
We based our decision in
Payton
on an extensive review of the historical evolution of this area of the law which we need not repeat here. It suffices to say that we described the various limitations on recovery for mental harm which the courts traditionally have imposed, and decided to retain the physical harm rule.
Payton, supra
at 557. The plaintiffs in the present case suggest that we should overrule
Payton
and allow the tort of negligent infliction of emotional distress to operate without artificial restrictions. The plaintiffs find support for this suggestion in the recent decisions that have eliminated the physical harm rule on the ground that, like the other traditional limitations on recovery for mental harm, this rule arbitrarily infringes upon the right of plaintiffs to obtain redress for the invasion of a recognized legal interest. See
Culbert
v.
Sampson’s Supermarkets Inc.,
We note the criticism leveled against the rule which we adopted in
Payton.
We also note that the historical trend has led courts to weigh the concern for the unjust denial of claims more heavily than the fear of fraudulent actions. However, we agree with the Supreme Court of Alabama that “broad pronouncements in this area may have to bow to the precise application of developing legal principles to the particular facts at hand.”
Alabama Great S.R.R.
v.
Jackson,
The courts that' have applied the physical harm rule to particular symptoms have confronted serious definitional difficulties. Physicians themselves often cannot distinguish between the mental and the physical aspects of an emotional disturbance. Modern medicine shows that all emotional disorders have physical ramifications, while all physical illnesses have emotional aspects. See Comment, Negligently Inflicted
Courts have attempted to extricate themselves from this definitional quagmire by resorting to evidentiary concepts designed to provide guidance to fact finders evaluating a plaintiffs symptoms. The Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965), for instance, rejects the distinction between the physical and mental aspects of a particular symptom as a basis for defining the physical harm requirement. The Restatement explains that mental disturbances such as repeated hysterical attacks are illnesses sufficient to corroborate the existence of mental distress. Hence, these mental disturbances qualify as physical harm. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 436A comment c (1965). The Restatement further explains that symptoms such as headaches or nausea could qualify as sufficient evidence of physical illness if they lasted for a substantial period of time. On the other hand, the Restatement does not consider transient symptoms such as vomiting to amount to
The highest court of Maryland interpreted its physical harm requirement to require sufficient objective evidence that the alleged mental distress was not feigned. In
Vance
v.
Vance,
The Supreme Court of New Hampshire similarly has construed its physical harm requirement to revolve around the existence of sufficient objective evidence of harm. In
Corso
v.
Merrill,
In
Anderson
v.
W.R. Grace & Co.,
Anderson
provides an accurate application of our
Payton
standard. In order to satisfy
Payton,
plaintiffs must provide an “objective corroboration of the emotional distress alleged.”
Payton, supra
at 547. A successful negligent infliction of emotional distress claim, in other words, must do more than allege “mere upset, dismay, humiliation, grief and anger.”
Corso, supra
at 653, quoting Comment, Negligence and the Infliction of Emotional Harm: A Reappraisal of the Nervous Shock Cases, 35 U. Chi. L. Rev. 512, 517 (1968). Cf.
Payton, supra
at 555 (physical harm requirement serves “to limit frivolous suits and those in which only bad manners or mere hurt feelings are involved”). Rather, plaintiffs must corroborate their mental distress claims with enough objec
Expert medical testimony may be needed to make this showing. Medical experts, however, need not have observed an actual, external sign of physical deterioration. Anderson, supra at 1227. They may consider, in the exercise of their professional judgment, the plaintiffs’ description of the symptoms they experience. Id. The judge, then, will need to consider each case in its particular factual context. The length of time during which the physical harm manifested itself may provide a reliable indicator of the sufficiency of the evidence introduced. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 436A comment c (1965). Generally, though, the judge will use his or her discretion to evaluate the evidence, keeping in mind that the over-all goal is to determine whether the evidence sufficiently corroborates the plaintiffs claim of mental distress and to strike a wise balance between the fear of fraudulent claims and the danger that worthy claims will not be heard. See Payton, supra at 553. 9
Courts, thus, have construed the physical manifestation standard to include symptoms such as headaches or diarrhea, as well as ailments which impair a person’s daily life such as those alleged by the plaintiffs here. Underlying the judicial decisions qualifying these symptoms as physical manifestations of harm, we perceive the judgment that they present enough objective evidence to allow the jury to determine the
In giving McDonald and Sullivan a chance to have their day in court, we further Payton's search for a rule “by means of which claims for emotional distress damages [can] be differentiated.” Payton, supra at 553. On the facts of this case, we believe that our decision strikes a just balance between our desire to ferret out fraudulent claims and our duty to grant deserving plaintiffs a chance to present their case to a fact finder. Therefore, we affirm the judge’s denial of summary judgment with respect to McDonald and reverse the entry of summary judgment against Sullivan. Both plaintiffs may attempt to establish at trial that they satisfied the physical manifestation requirement of Payton v. Abbott Labs, as well as the other elements of a cause of action for emotional distress which we set out in that case.
So ordered.
Notes
We are given no authority for this procedure in regard to a ruling on motions for summary judgment filed pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 56,
Dr. van der Kolk is also affiliated with Massachusetts General Hospital.
Justice Wilkins, with whom Justice Abrams and the author of this opinion joined, dissented and expressed disagreement with the conclusion of the court that causally related physical harm is a prerequisite to recovery in regard to a claim of negligently inflicted emotional distress.
Payton
v.
Abbott Labs,
Since we decided
Payton,
several courts have reconsidered their position and abandoned the physical harm requirement. See, e.g.,
Bass
v.
Nooney Co.,
To the contrary, some courts have noted that the physical harm rule “encourages extravagant pleading and distorted testimony.”
Culbert
v.
Sampson’s Supermarkets Inc.,
The impossibility of distinguishing between physical and mental symptoms of diseases for purposes of a legal standard has frustrated the courts so deeply that many judges cited to this problem as being itself a ground for abolishing the physical harm rule altogether. See Bass, supra at 771-772.
Thus, the Restatement introduces the time period during which a plaintiffs symptoms manifest themselves as an important factor in determining whether a plaintiffs mental distress has been corroborated sufficiently. By doing so, the Restatement attempts to generate a legal standard against which the trier of fact may assess whether certain symptoms offer sufficient indicia of the genuineness of a plaintiffs mental harm. Applying this general standard, the trier of fact may then use the available medical or psychiatric expert evidence to draw a conclusion as to the sufficiency of this evidence. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 436A comment c (1965). While the passage of time may be a factor in determining whether the claim of emotional distress is genuine, we do not adopt today a rigid rule based on such considerations.
The court also ruled that no expert testimony with respect to the existence of these symptoms would be required.
Vance
v.
Vance,
We construe
Payton
to require sufficient objective evidence of harm because the physical harm rule purports to address a problem of
proof.
See
St. Elizabeth Hosp.
v.
Garrard,
The definition of the terms “physical harm” or “harm to the body” in the context of the
Payton
rule does not affect in any way the treatment of the terms “harm” or “injury” in other areas of the law. We have, for instance, construed the words “bodily injury” in an insurance policy to exclude the coverage of mental pain, and to encompass only “physical injuries to the body and the consequences thereof.”
Allstate Ins. Co.
v.
Diamant,
This holding in no way contradicts prior cases such as
Nancy P.
v,
D‘Amato,
The defendants point out that the judge made no finding with respect to the causal link between the explosion and McDonald’s diarrhea. Treating the matter, as we have, to be a report as to the validity of the judge’s rulings on motions for summary judgment, we rely on the record before the judge and not his findings. See note 2, supra.
