In this аppeal, we must decide whether plaintiff has stated a claim against defendant Tri-Met for intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED). The trial court entered judgment on the pleadings in favor of defendant, pursuant to ORCP 21 B; plaintiff appeals. In reviewing the trial court’s ruling, we accept as true all facts allegеd in the complaint and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from those facts.
Slogowski v. Lyness,
This case arises out of the manner in which plaintiff, who is physically disabled, allegedly was treated by a bus driver after she and her assistance dog boarded a Tri-Met bus. Plaintiff alleged that after boarding the bus, the following occurred:
“[A]s plaintiff sought access to the seating area of the bus, the Tri-Met driver * * * berated, insulted, and belittled the plaintiff in the presence of other passengers by loudly questioning her right to bring an assistance dog onto the bus. After refusing to exаmine paperwork offered by plaintiff to show that the dog’s presence on the bus was lawful, the driver wrongly insisted that the assistance dog must have a photo identification card before it would be permitted to accompany the plaintiff on a Tri-Met bus in the future. The driver also asked the plaintiff why she needed [an] assistance dog and said that she didn’t look disabled to him, and said that rather than being disabled, she was simply trying to pay a reduced fee by using a disabled citizen’s card. The driver then ordered the plaintiff to sit down. At all times, the assistance dog was fully under plaintiffs control. Additionally, after the plaintiff indicated that the bus was apprоaching her destination, the driver ordered the plaintiff to get off of the bus and told the plaintiff not to try to reboard any transit vehicle which he was driving. [The driver] also loudly proclaimed that he did not have to have any stupid dog on the bus if he did not want it to be there.”
Plaintiff further alleged that at all times the driver was acting within the course and scope of his employment; that the driver’s conduct was “socially intolerable”; that the driver *689 acted with an intent to cause severe emotional distress or with reckless disregard that severe emotional distress was likely to result; and that plaintiff “did in fact suffer, continues to suffer, and wdll permanently suffer from sevеre emotional distress in the form of fear, anguish, depression, anxiety, and humiliation.”
This appeal turns on whether a jury reasonably could find that defendant’s conduct, as pleaded, constitutes an “extraordinary transgression” of socially tolerable conduct. The trial court concluded that the allegations оf the complaint did not meet that standard; the court therefore granted judgment on the pleadings for defendant. Plaintiff challenges that ruling, arguing that a jury could find that defendant’s conduct exceeded the range of what is “socially tolerable” based on two factors: (1) plaintiffs status as a person with a physical disаbility, and (2) defendant’s relationship to plaintiff as a provider of public transportation. In response, defendant contends that, although the bus driver’s conduct undoubtedly qualifies as rude and offensive behavior, as a matter of law, it falls short of what reasonably can be deemed “socially intolerable conduсt.”
To state an IIED claim, a plaintiff must plead that
“(1) the defendant intended to inflict severe emotional distress on the plaintiff, (2) the defendant’s acts were the cause of the plaintiffs severe emotional distress, and (3) the defendant’s acts constituted an extraordinary transgression of the bounds of socially tolerable conduct.” McGanty v. Staudenraus,321 Or 532 , 543,901 P2d 841 (1995) (quotation marks omitted; citing Sheets v. Knight,308 Or 220 , 236,779 P2d 1000 (1989)).
Whether particular conduсt rises to the necessary level of social intolerability is, for the most part, a fact-specific inquiry that requires a case-by-case examination of the circumstances as a whole.
Rockhill v. Pollard,
The crux of the issue here is whether the bus driver’s behavior, as alleged in the complaint, could be considered, at most, commonplace “friction and rudeness among people in day-to-dаy life,”
Hetfeld v. Bostwick,
“The liability [for intentional infliction of extreme emotional distress] * * * does not extend to mere insults, indignities, threats, annoyances, petty oppressions, or other trivialities. The rough edges of our society are still in need of a good deal of filing down, and in the meantime plaintiffs must necessarily be expected and required to be hardened to a certain amount of rough language, and to occasional acts that are definitely inconsiderate and unkind. There is no occasion for the law to intervene in every case where somе one’s [sic] feelings are hurt.” Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 46 at 73 (1965).
Thus, the essential distinction is between offensive and even emotionally hurtful behavior that is a normal incident of daily life and behavior that goes beyond the bounds of what society would say reasonably must be endured.
As alleged, the specific comments made by the bus driver to plaintiff could be considered harassment directed to plaintiff specifically in connection with her disabled status. In that respect, the bus driver’s conduct is closely analogous to conduct in
Lathrope-Olson
that we held sufficient to state a claim for IIED. The plaintiff in that case was a female
*691
employee who was part Native Americаn. Her male supervisor and other male employees regularly referred to her as “squaw,” repeatedly subjected her to sexually harassing comments, and jeopardized her physical safety in various ways. We held that “[s]uch overt acts of racism and sexual harassment are not simply rude and boorish, but are mоre properly characterized as the kind of conduct that a jury could find was intended to inflict deep, stigmatizing and psychic wounds on another person.”
Lathrope-Olson,
Similarly,
Whelan v. Albertson’s, Inc.,
The common thread running through
LathropeOlson
and
Whelan
is the recognition that, depending on the circumstances, insults or harassment directed to individuals on the basis of historically disfavored personal characteristics more readily transgress contemporary social bounds than do other forms of antagonistic behavior. That same recognition is reflected in the variety of public accommodation and anti-discrimination laws еnacted in Oregon and other states. So-called “hate crimes” laws, for example, provide for aggravated penalties for certain forms of bias-motivated conduct in acknowledgment that such conduct inflicts “distinct emotional harms on their victims” that are not inflicted when the same conduct is not bias-motivated.
See generally Wisconsin v. Mitchell,
Laws specially protecting disabled persons from bias-motivated discrimination and harassment have been in place in Oregon for more than two decades.
See generally Bush v. Greyhound Lines, Inc.,
Giving plaintiff the benefit not only of the facts alleged, but also of the reasonable inferences to be drawn from those facts, we conclude that the complaint states a claim. Fundamental to our conclusion is plaintiffs disabled status. By challenging plaintiff as he allegedly did, the driver could be perсeived as drawing attention to plaintiffs status while also ridiculing her for not being disabled “enough” to justify a reduced fare and accommodation for her special needs. As pleaded in the complaint, the driver’s conduct could be considered harassment of a kind that historically has been directed to disablеd individuals in an effort to ostracize and humiliate them.
Equally fundamental to our holding is the driver’s relationship to plaintiff. As a provider of public transportation, the relationship is a special one within our society, as evidenced by the extensive fabric of laws that seek to secure full and effective acсess to publicly available goods and services for disabled persons.
See Bush,
*694
We reject defendant’s contention that because the encounter between plaintiff and the driver occurred one time only, the insults legally cannot constitute an extraordinary transgression of socially tolerable conduct. The repeated nature of harassing behavior directed to a plaintiff certainly bears on whether conduct is outrageous or extreme,
see Lath-rope-Olson,
It remains for plaintiff to come forward with satisfactory evidence that the conduct occurred as she alleges, that the driver hаd the requisite intent, and that the conduct caused the damages she has alleged. On that evidence, it will be for a factfinder to decide whether the driver’s conduct was an “extraordinary transgression of the bounds of socially tolerable conduct,” or fell below that level of offensiveness. The only question before us is whether the complaint states a *695 claim for IIED sufficient to survive a motion for judgment on the pleadings. We hold that it does.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
In McGanty, the Supreme Court quoted that language from
Hall v. The May Dept. Stores,
See, e.g., ORS 44.547 (courts shall specially accommodate witnesses with disabilities); ORS 192.630 (government meetings must be held in places that do not discriminate against persons with disabilities); ORS 240.630 (state employees shall be hired without regard to disabilities); ORS 447.210 et seq. (policy of ensuring equal physical access to commercial facilities, public accommodations, private entities, churches, and private membership clubs for persons with disabilities); ORS 659.020 (declaration of state policy against discrimination on basis of disability); ORS 659.100 (prohibiting private employment discrimination on the basis of disability); ORS 659.425 (unlawful for place of public accommodation to make any “distinction, discrimination or restriction” based on disability); ORS 659.430 (protection from housing discrimination on basis of disability).
Although this case does not involve actual slurs, the observations that courts and academic writers have made about the uniquely injurious forcе of such words apply equally to the kind of disability-based harassment involved here.
See, e.g.,
Richard Delgado,
Words that Wound: A Tort Action for Racial Insults, Epithets, and Name-Calling,
17 Harv Civ Rts-Civ Lib L Rev 133, 157 (1982) (“Racial insults are different qualitatively because they conjure up the entire history of racial discrimination in this country.”);
Karins v. City of Atlantic City,
152 NJ 532,
Defendant, somewhat briefly, argues that no consideration should be given to the relationship between the driver, as a provider of public transportation, and *694 plaintiff, as a disabled user of that transportation, because the complaint does not allege that the driver knew that plaintiff was aсtually disabled. The gravamen of the complaint, defendant contends, is that the driver did not believe that plaintiff was disabled. Perhaps that is one inference to be drawn from the complaint. However, an equally reasonable inference is that the driver was belittling plaintiff based on her disability. On review, plaintiff is entitled to the more beneficial of those competing inferences.
