This is an appeal by the plaintiffs, William J. Wilder and Diane M. Wilder, from an order of the Superior Court {Hollman, J.) dismissing their individual claims of negligent infliction of emotional distress for failure to state a cause of action. The plaintiffs’ claims arise from a fatal accident involving their eight-year-old son, Bryon. The plaintiffs appeal the trial court’s dismissal, arguing that they are entitled to pursue a cause of action for emotional and physical harm where they contemporaneously perceived their son’s injuries immediately following the accident and viewed him while he was alive and in extremis. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ individual claims.
In considering a motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs’ allegations are regarded as true. Gould v. Concord Hospital,
The trial court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss the plaintiffs’ individual claims against both defendants, finding that the facts alleged did not constitute a cause of action for the negligent infliction of emotional distress. The trial court ruled that the “essential elements of spatial and temporal unity required to make emotional distress a foreseeable consequence of defendants’ negligence are clearly lacking.”
It is from this ruling that the plaintiffs appeal, raising two arguments in their brief. First, they argue that they should be allowed to pursue an action for damages based on the emotional and physical harm they suffered when they perceived their son’s injuries immediately after the accident, and viewed him while he was still alive and in extremis. Second, they assert that failure of the court to allow a cause of action would be a violation of their State and federal constitutional rights to a remedy for a civil wrong and to equal protection under the law.
We first consider whether the plaintiffs’ claims constitute a cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress. The accepted standards for recovery in this area of the law have evolved over the years, and part of the rationale underlying each new standard has been the public policy objective of preventing unlimited and burdensome liability. See Corso v. Merrill,
Unlike some States, however, New Hampshire declined to apply the impact rule as a bar to recovery in emotional distress cases, see Chiuchiolo v. New England &c. Tailors,
More recently still we abandoned the “zone of danger” standard in favor of returning to the traditional tort concepts of foreseeability and causation. Corso v. Merrill,
The standard of recovery set out in Corso reflects an attempt to satisfy two important policy considerations — the need to avoid infinite liability and uncertainty in the law. See Nutter v. Frisbie Mem. Hosp.,
Consistent with our holding in Corso, in Nutter v. Frisbie Memorial Hospital supra, we denied recovery to parents who viewed their child in the hospital shortly after the child’s death. In that case, we refused to extend liability beyond the standard previously established in Corso, because to do so “would create a potential cause of action in every parent who learned, by any reasonable means, of his or her child’s negligently inflicted death or injury, and as a result suffered emotional injury manifested by physical symptoms.” Nutter,
In the case before us, the parents seek to recover although they neither saw nor heard the accident. Plaintiffs’ counsel agreed that there is no claim by the plaintiffs that they either witnessed the accident or were in close proximity to it and saw their son at the accident site. Rather, they argue that they contemporaneously perceived the injury to the child when they arrived at the hospital and witnessed his condition. Furthermore, the plaintiffs assert that
In light of the above discussion, it is readily apparent that the plaintiffs do not fall within the standard of recovery set out in Corso. As the superior court correctly recognized, the requisite foreseeability criteria of geographic and temporal proximity to the accident, necessary for an emotional distress claim, are clearly lacking. The plaintiffs were not sufficiently close to the accident scene to experience a sensory perception of the event. They did not see Bryon until he was at the hospital, approximately one hour after the accident occurred. We also note that the factual distinctions which the plaintiffs draw between themselves and the parents in Nutter are irrelevant to our determination. We focus our analysis on whether the plaintiffs observed or perceived the accident when it occurred, not on whether they observed or perceived the injuries their child sustained.
The plaintiffs also argue that they in fact satisfy the time requirement of contemporaneous sensory perception. They direct our attention to this court’s decision in State v. Martineau,
We find this argument unpersuasive. The requirement of contemporaneity in the context of the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule is aimed at assuring the trustworthiness of the statements at issue, see McCormick on Evidence § 297, at 855 (3d ed. 1984), whereas the necessity of contemporaneity in the context of bystander recovery is intended to limit liability and to assure foreseeability. See Nutter,
In short, the plaintiffs are asking us to disregard Corso and Nutter and to allow a cause of action where the parents later see the injured child, while alive, at the hospital. We decline this invitation. To allow recovery under the facts of this case would
With regard to the constitutional questions discussed by the plaintiffs and the amicus curiae, we find that they were not raised in the plaintiffs’ notice of appeal and, therefore, are not properly before this court. See Sup. Ct. R. 16(3)(b); see also State v. O’Connell,
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the plaintiffs’ claims for negligent infliction of emotional distress for failure to state a cause of action.
Affirmed.
All concurred.
