William Earl Twyman appeals from a $15,000 district court judgment in favor of Sheila Kay Twyman for negligent infliction of emotional distress. We will affirm the judgment of the district court.
Sheila and William Twyman were married in 1969. Sheila filed suit for divorce in *820 1985, but did not proceed with the suit until July 9, 1987, when she amended her petition to include the claim against William for negligent infliction of emotional distress. After a bench trial, the court rendered judgment dissolving the marriage, dividing the marital estate, awarding con-servatorship of the children, ordering child support, and awarding Sheila $15,000 plus interest for her tort claim. William appeals only from the judgment for the tort claim.
In her amended original petition, Sheila alleged William had “intentionally and cruelly attempted to have [her] engage in deviant sexual acts with [him]” and such conduct proximately caused her emotional harm and mental anguish. She testified that William first introduced bondage activities into their sexual relations approximately five years after they were married. After that experience she told him for the first time she had been forcibly raped at knife-point before their marriage and she could not “handle” engaging in bondage activities. Approximately ten years later Sheila discovered William was having sexual relations with another woman. At that time he said to Sheila, “If you could have just done bondage, nothing else would have mattered.” Sheila sought help from a psychologist William was seeing, and, at a joint session, William said he would try to save their marriage and discontinue seeing the other woman. Sheila later discovered William was still calling the woman. Soon thereafter, their ten-year-old son discovered magazines William had hidden away in their house which depicted sexual bondage activities. Seeing the magazines, Sheila realized bondage involved more than she had imagined and she experienced “utter despair.” She consulted another therapist.
Throughout this time, William repeatedly indicated to Sheila that there was something wrong with her for not engaging in the activities; told her that when he was out of town he visited stores selling bondage paraphernalia and that “women in their mink coats and men in their three-piece business suits purchased these items”; told her he visited “sex parlors” and that there had been other women besides his current girlfriend; described his sexual activities with his girlfriend and made derogatory comparisons of Sheila’s sexual abilities with those of his girlfriend; and told Sheila they would have a marriage if she could do bondage — that he could not see a future for them if she did not.
Sheila testified that during this time she felt utter despair and devastation and believed she was losing her marriage because of her inability to participate in these activities. She lost 30 pounds and saw three different counselors. Under this pressure and upon the advice of one of her counselors, Sheila again attempted to engage in bondage activities with William. Their last encounter, however, was so rough that Sheila sustained bleeding for four days and was treated by a gynecologist who tested her for venereal disease. She testified the activity was so painful and humiliating that she knew she could not continue to attempt it, and that she feared exposure to AIDS and other venereal diseases.
William brings five points of error. Under point two, he argues the trial court erred in applying the concept of continuing tort to these facts, thereby preventing the running of the statute of limitations.
Texas courts first recognized the tolling concept of continuing tort in trespass to land and nuisance cases.
Creswell Ranch & Cattle Co. v. Scoggins,
Neither party cites authority applying continuing tort to negligent infliction of emotional distress, and we find no Texas cases involving this issue. One federal
*821
court concluded that when a pleading alleges that intentional infliction of emotional distress continued up to the present, the allegation overcomes the statute of limitations defense raised in a motion to dismiss.
Linker v. Custom-Bilt Mach. Inc.,
A continuing tort is “one inflicted over a period of time; it involves a wrongful conduct that is repeated until desisted, and each day creates a separate cause of action.” 54 C.J.S.
Limitations of Actions
§ 177, at 231 (1987). This case does not involve acts that are “complete in themselves,”
Franzetti,
The trial court found William “engaged in a continuing course of conduct of attempting to coerce [Sheila] to join in his practices of ‘bondage’ by continually asserting that [their] marriage could be saved only by [Sheila] participating with [William] in his practice of ‘bondage.’ ” We conclude the court did not err in applying the tolling concept of continuing tort to these facts. William’s second point of error is overruled.
In his first point of error, William argues “the trial court erred when it found that Respondent engaged in a ‘continuing course of conduct and attempted emotional coercion’ because there is no evidence to support a finding of any ‘continual course of conduct’ occurring after July 9, 1985.” He does not assert legal insufficiency, but concludes without citation of authority that an act revealed in the record which occurred after that date “does not a continuing course of conduct make.” Any acts occurring after July 9, 1985, were significant, however, in determining whether the statute of limitations had run (an issue which William does not raise in this point of error), not in determining whether his acts are properly termed a “continual course of conduct.” Point of error one is overruled.
In his third point of error, William complains the trial court erred in assessing damages for acts that occurred more than two years before commencement of the tort action because recovery for these acts was barred by the two-year statute of limitations. Sheila filed her amended petition July 9,1987. William argues that recovery for any acts occurring before July 9, 1985, is barred. This would be true in the “usual personal injury case [in which] the defendant’s wrongful conduct ceases on a certain day insofar as it may be considered a cause of the injury in question.”
Adler,
William’s fourth point of error is multifarious. He appears to make a legal insufficiency argument regarding the trial court’s finding that bondage is a deviant sexual act, claiming there is no evidence supporting that fact. His argument, however, also complains of the factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting a finding of mental anguish. Following
Pool v. Ford Motor Co.,
*822
William did not include his “no evidence” contention in his motion for new trial, and that part of his point of error is not preserved and cannot be raised on appeal.
Salinas v. Fort Worth Cab & Baggage Co.,
In reviewing an insufficiency of the evidence contention, we must consider all of the evidence in the record to determine whether the findings are so contrary to the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be manifestly unjust.
In re King’s Estate,
William complains the evidence was insufficient to establish that Sheila’s emotional response rose to the level of mental anguish necessary to prove a negligent infliction of emotional distress claim. In order to recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress, a complainant must show “the tortfeasor acted knowingly or with conscious indifference, causing a relatively high degree of mental pain and distress, such as a mental sensation of pain resulting from such painful emotions as grief, severe disappointment, indignation, wounded pride, shame, despair, or public humiliation.”
Underwriters Life Ins. Co. v. Cobb,
Viewing the evidence as a whole, we cannot say the evidence is insufficient to support the trial court’s finding of mental anguish, or that it shocks the conscience or clearly demonstrates bias.
Pool,
In his fifth point of error, William complains that “the trial court erred in granting a tort judgment because there is no evidence that respondent breached any duty owed to petitioner that was the proximate cause of any mental anguish suffered by petitioner.” Although this appears to be a no evidence point as to the duty, breach of duty, and proximate cause elements of a negligence cause of action, it is not supported by any argument concerning sufficiency of the evidence. Instead the argument concerns a question of public policy — whether interspousal immunity should bar joinder of negligent tort causes of action, such as infliction of emotional distress, with suits for divorce. Following the rule that “we look not only at the wording of the points of error, but to the argument under each point to determine as best we can the intent of the party,”
Pool,
William argues that by allowing negligent tort causes of action to be brought in divorce proceedings, divorces will become unnecessarily embittered, traumatic, and expensive. We note the Fourteenth Court of Appeals in Houston recently held that interspousal immunity bars a separate cause of action for intentional infliction of
*823
emotional distress in divorce suits.
Chiles v. Chiles,
William in his brief and the court in
Chiles
argue that
Price
is distinguishable because it did not involve a divorce proceeding. In
Price,
the Supreme Court recounted — and discounted — the historical bases for the doctrine of interspousal immunity, noting that adoption of the Married Women Acts eliminated the fiction that legal existence of the wife during marriage was merged into that of her husband.
Price,
William argues that stronger reasons exist for barring claims based on a negligent act than one based on an intentional act in divorce proceedings. But Price involved a negligent tort, and as the Supreme Court pointed out: “[T]he arguments in favor of interspousal immunity are generally equally applicable [to both intentional and negligent torts], and lacking, as to both.” Id. at 318.
William further argues that
Price
is distinguishable because it involved a wife attempting to recover damages from her husband’s insurance company for personal injuries caused by his negligence in a traffic accident, whereas the present case involves a negligent infliction of emotional distress claim brought in a divorce proceeding. In
Stafford v. Stafford,
Finally, to dispel any doubt regarding the abolition of interspousal immunity, the Court concluded: “The doctrine of inter-spousal immunity has previously been abrogated as to some causes of action in this jurisdiction. We now abolish that doctrine completely as to any cause of action.” Id. at 319 (emphasis added).
In Chiles the Court of Appeals argued the issue of interspousal immunity had not been preserved for review in Price:
[I]n Price v. Price,732 S.W.2d 316 (Tex. 1987), the supreme court abolished inter-spousal tort immunity and stated that they abolished interspousal immunity as to any cause of action.... The court candidly admitted, however, that the issue of interspousal immunity had not been preserved for their review.
Chiles,
This is an erroneous reading of
Price.
In the cited passage, the Supreme Court merely stated that the issue of interspousal immunity had not been preserved for review in the
Stafford
case.
Price,
The judgment is affirmed.
