154 Misc. 2d 844 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1992
OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendants have brought this motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint in which she seeks damages for severe emotional shock and trauma which she suffered as the result of being in close proximity to an accident on November 10, 1989 in which her aunt was hit and killed.
Plaintiff alleges that witnessing her aunt’s death in this manner has caused her to suffer severe depression and other emotional and psychological damages. She has not been able to forget the circumstances of her aunt’s death, and cannot even mention her aunt’s name or look at her photograph. Plaintiff now suffers from numerous phobias; she is not able to cross a road, she constantly fears she will die of a heart attack or will cause the death of other family members, she thinks about experiencing the pain her aunt experienced, she thinks about walking out in front of a truck, and has suicidal thoughts. She has treated with psychologist Dr. Norman J. Lesswing at Benjamin Rush Center, and has been evaluated by psychiatrists Richard M. Zoppa, M.D. and Daniel N. Uwah, M.D.
Defendants now seek summary judgment dismissing this complaint alleging that since plaintiff’s aunt Phyllis Fisher was not a member of her "immediate family”, she cannot recover under the "zone of danger” theory. Plaintiff opposes summary judgment, asserting that her aunt Phyllis Fisher should be considered "immediate family”, because she raised plaintiff after her own mother’s death, and they have always lived together or near each other, engaging in daily activities together.
This court has found no case in New York State which specifically defines the term "immediate family”. However, the treatises provide some guidance as to how other States have handled this issue, and what may be considered a reasonable definition of that term. The objective of limiting recovery to immediate family members is to contain the number of bystander claims, which could impose upon wrongdoers unlimited liability to stranger-bystanders (see, 1 Minzer, Nates, Kimball, Axelrod and Goldstein, Damages in Tort Actions § 5.24 [2] [d]). Several courts which have adopted a broadened rule of bystander recovery have concluded that the relationship to the victim is the most important element of the criteria designed to circumscribe liability (see, ibid,.). The question then is whether the "close relationship” criteria should encompass relationships other than those based on marriage or consanguinity. In a Hawaii Supreme Court case, it was held that a child who saw his stepgrandmother being struck and killed by the defendant’s car should be permitted to prove the nature of his relationship to the victim and the extent of damages suffered as a result of those injuries (Leong
The case before this court presents a question of first impression; namely, whether a niece would fit within the class of potential plaintiffs entitled to assert a "zone of danger” claim in New York. On the particular facts above, which reveal a significant attachment between the plaintiff and the deceased more in the nature of a mother/child relationship rather than an aunt/niece relationship, the plaintiff should be considered "immediate family” to her aunt, and therefore permitted to maintain an action for emotional damages under the New York State "zone of danger” theory. Defendants’ motion is therefore denied, without costs to either party, and plaintiff’s case may proceed to trial on her cause of action for severe emotional shock and trauma as stated in her complaint.