Marjorie WILLIS, et vir., Petitioners,
v.
GAMI GOLDEN GLADES, LLC., etc., et al., Respondents.
Supreme Court of Florida.
Barbara Green, Coral Gables, Florida and David P. Lister of Martin, Lister and Alvarez, Miami Lakes, FL, for Petitioners.
Hinda Klein of Conroy, Simberg, Ganon, Krevans and Abel, P.A., Hollywood, FL, and Thomas J. Morgan, Sr., Coconut Grove, FL, for Respondents.
Robert S. Glazier, Miami, FL, on behalf of Academy of Florida Trial Lawyers, as Amicus Curiae.
PER CURIAM.
We have for review a decision of a district court of appeal on the following questions, *848 which the court certified to be of great public importance:
1. IS THE EVIDENCE THAT THE PLAINTIFF WAS TOUCHED AGAINST HER WILL BY THE PISTOL PLACED TO HER HEAD AND IN "PATTING DOWN" HER BODY SUFFICIENT TO SATISFY THE FLORIDA IMPACT RULE? SEE AND COMPARE, E.G., GRACEY V. EAKER,837 So.2d 348 , 355 (Fla.2002); ZELL V. MEEK,665 So.2d 1048 (Fla. 1995); EAGLE-PICHER INDUSTRIES, INC. V. COX,481 So.2d 517 (Fla. 3D DCA 1985), REVIEW DENIED,492 So.2d 1331 (Fla.1986).
2. IS THE EVIDENCE THAT THE PLAINTIFF WAS APPARENTLY THE OBJECT OF AN ASSAULT AND MULTIPLE BATTERIES SUFFICIENT TO SATISFY A "FREE STANDING TORT" EXCEPTION TO THE IMPACT RULE WHICH MAY EXIST IN FLORIDA? SEE KUSH V. LLOYD,616 So.2d 415 (Fla.1992).
3. IS THE INNKEEPER-GUEST RELATIONSHIP INVOLVED IN THIS CASE A "SPECIAL RELATIONSHIP" UNDER AN EXCEPTION TO THE IMPACT RULE WHICH MAY EXIST IN FLORIDA? ROWELL V. HOLT,850 So.2d 474 (Fla. 2003); GRACEY V. EAKER,837 So.2d 348 (Fla.2002).
4. SHOULD THE IMPACT RULE BE ABOLISHED?
Willis v. Gami Golden Glades, LLC,
The instant action comes for review after the Third District Court of Appeal has affirmed a final summary judgment in favor of the defendants/respondents, Gami Golden Glades, LLC (hereinafter "Gami") and American Knights Security, Inc. (hereinafter "American Security"). See Willis v. Gami Golden Glades, LLC,
Procedural rules require that the facts be viewed most favorably to Mrs. Willis in the review of this summary final judgment. See Moore v. Morris,
She stepped out of the car with her pocketbook on her arm as the gunman ordered that she empty her pockets. See id. During this confrontation, the gunman placed the gun to Mrs. Willis's head and she heard the gun click as if firing. See id. She attempted to move but was unable to do so. See id. As she attempted to walk away, the gunman used the weapon to wave her back to the car. See id. As he made this motion, and issued additional demands, she thought she was facing death. See id. The assailant then demanded that Mrs. Willis lift her clothing and as she did so, he proceeded to place his hands on her, patting down her exposed body. See id.
After the gunman had stolen her rental car and driven off, the security guard refused to provide assistance to Mrs. Willis. See id. The guard attempted to act as though he had never seen her. See id. Mrs. Willis found no greater help from the hotel personnel inside the facility. See id. Mrs. Willis experienced a sleepless night in the Holiday Inn hotel room she shared with her friend, walking the floor in "agony" and "scared." See id. at 704-05.
The next day, Mrs. Willis was seen in a local emergency room. See id. at 705. Since that time, she has been under the care and treatment of a psychiatrist and a psychologist, as well as her general practitioner, for anxiety, depression, panic attacks and posttraumatic stress disorder. See id. She has been on medication, including Paxil, Buspar, Wellbutrin and Zoloft. See id. She is afraid everywhere she goes; her relationship with her husband has deteriorated. See id. Her life is simply nothing like it was before this frightening experience. See id. As a direct result of this encounter, the treating psychologist described the following physical manifestations of injuries resulting from the attack: (1) sexual dysfunction; (2) peripheral temperature changes; (3) muscle tightening; and (4) increased sweat gland activity. See id. This medical evidence remains uncontradicted. See id. The defendants simply assert that the "impact rule" precludes this action. See id. The courts below accepted the defendants' argument and we now review the issues presented and questions certified.[1]
The affirmance by the Third District below of the final summary judgment was logically based on its prior opinion in Ruttger Hotel Corp. v. Wagner,
Based on the analysis set forth below, we answer the first certified question in the affirmative, quash the Third District's decision in this case, and disapprove Ruttger Hotel Corp. v. Wagner,
ANALYSIS
The application of the "impact rule" in Florida reflects a dichotomy under the law for cases in which the plaintiff is claiming damages for mental pain and anguish. This dichotomy and controlling law was aptly described by the Third District Court of Appeal in Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc. v. Cox,
In Florida, the prerequisites for recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress differ depending on whether the plaintiff has or has not suffered a physical impact from an external force. If the plaintiff has suffered an impact, Florida courts permit recovery for emotional distress stemming from the incident during which the impact occurred, and not merely the impact itself. If, however, the plaintiff has not suffered an impact, the complained-of mental distress must be "manifested by physical injury," the plaintiff must be "involved" in the incident by seeing, hearing, or arriving on the scene as the traumatizing event occurs, and the plaintiff must suffer the complained-of mental distress and accompanying physical impairment "within a short time" of the incident.
Eagle-Picher Indus., Inc.,
We have previously stated that for a plaintiff to have endured an impact or contact sufficient to render an action sustainable the "plaintiff may meet rather slight requirements." Zell,
The essence of impact, then, it seems, is that the outside force or substance, no matter how large or small, visible or invisible, and no matter that the effects are not immediately deleterious, touch or enter into the plaintiff's body.
Id. at 527, quoted with approval in Zell,
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we answer the first certified question in the affirmative, disapprove the Third District's opinion and decision in Ruttger Hotel Corp. v. Wagner,
It is so ordered.
LEWIS, C.J., and ANSTEAD, PARIENTE, and QUINCE, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, C.J., specially concurs with an opinion.
PARIENTE, J., concurs with an opinion, in which ANSTEAD, J., concurs.
QUINCE, J., concurs with an opinion, in which ANSTEAD and PARIENTE, JJ., concur.
WELLS, J., dissents with an opinion.
CANTERO, J., dissents with an opinion, in which WELLS and BELL, JJ., concur.
LEWIS, C.J., specially concurring.
Although I concur with the result of the majority today that the impact rule has no application in the instant case (and has never had application when touching has occurred) because Mrs. Willis did indeed sustain an impact to her person,[2] I am compelled to specially concur because the analysis of the majority fails to address the many significant challenges that have been mounted by the dissenting opinions with regard to when and why the impact rule applies in certain cases involving mental distress and anguish. I am particularly concerned that while the dissenting opinions consume literally dozen of pages, those opinions fail to acknowledge even once the critical fact that under Florida law, the impact rule does not apply and has never applied to torts which involve impact to or contact with the claimant's person. This is the line that has been established for many years. Instead, the dissents create a contrary interpretation of the impact rule based on what they believe the law should be, rather than how it has been established in Florida. The dissenting opinions further avoid and detract from the primary issue by expounding upon tangential issues such as corroboration of Mrs. Willis's version of the incident, the differences between summary judgment and directed verdict proceedings, verdict forms and the comparative negligence of assailants, and the fact that some other states apply a different form of the impact rule than that which has been adopted in Florida.
Moreover, to the extent that the dissents claim that our longstanding interpretation *852 of the impact rule has created confusion and inconsistent rulings in the lower courts, the only confusion I can detect that has arisen is in connection with those cases in which there has been no contact or no impact. On the other hand, the rule reaffirmed by the majority today has been consistently applied in every district court opinion where there has been contact or an impact, except for oneRuttger, which is the outlier opinion and decision the majority has now disapproved. A logical discussion of what the law should be can only begin with at least an acknowledgement of existing law. The dissents expand upon what the law "should be" to actually suggest that the "impact rule" should be abolished. If the dissent believes the line established in Florida based upon touching or contact versus no contact "makes no sense," dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 868, maybe it is time to consider simply abolishing the "impact rule" entirely. While I do believe the "impact rule" has a valid place in our jurisprudence when properly applied, we could throw the proverbial "baby out with the bathwater," as the dissent concludes. Indeed, if the dissents' interpretation of the "impact rule" accurately reflected the current state of Florida law, I would most assuredly support abolition of the rule.
To fully understand the rationale for application of the impact rule and its limited exceptions, and to understand that the interpretation of the rule employed by the dissents is inaccurate, it is necessary to review the extensive history of this doctrine. The name of the rule itselfImpactdefines the rule which my good colleagues ignore. The initial discussion of an "impact rule" in Florida can be traced to at least 1893 when this Court was faced with the issue of addressing a claim seeking damages for mental injuries suffered in the absence of contact with the plaintiff's person. In International Ocean Telegraph Co. v. Saunders,
mental suffering [h]as never [been] allowed to be considered as an element of damages for which pecuniary compensation could be awarded, except (1) in cases of torts, where there was some physical injury and bodily suffering, in which cases, whether there were any circumstances justifying exemplary damages or not, the mental suffering, incident to, connected with, and flowing directly from the physical injury was permitted to be considered in connection with the physical pain, both taken together, but not the one disconnected from the other; and (2) in cases founded purely in tort, where the negligence was so gross as to reasonably imply malice, or where, from the entire want of care or attention to duty, or great indifference to the persons, property, or rights of others, such malice will be imputed as would justify the assessment of exemplary or punitive damages; and (3) in cases growing out of contract, in the one exceptional case of the breach of a contract to marry.
Id. at 151. In the Court's view, in cases such as that pending, circumstances involving no impact with the plaintiff's person, the plaintiff's only injury"mental suffering and disappointment""is one that soars so exclusively within the realms *853 of spirit land that it is beyond the reach of the courts to deal with, or to compensate." Id. at 152.[3] Thus, Saunders marked the Court's formal recognition that it would not allow recovery for mental suffering alone in circumstances where no physical contact with the claimant had occurred without the plaintiff demonstrating "some physical injury" from which the mental suffering was "incident to, connected with, and flow[ed] directly [there]from." Id. at 151.
The so-called rule was again addressed in the non-impact context in 1950 in our opinion in Kirksey v. Jernigan,
extend this rule to cases founded purely in tort, where the wrongful act is such as to reasonably imply malice, or where, from the entire want of care of attention to duty, or great indifference to the persons, property, or rights of others, such malice will be imputed as would justify the assessment of exemplary or punitive damages.
Id. We concluded that the facts in Kirksey satisfied this standard and reversed the lower court's entry of final judgment on demurrer in favor of the defendant. See id. at 190.
The impact rule was next addressed by this Court in 1954 in our opinion in Crane v. Loftin,
In recent years, we have been repeatedly asked to address the continued vitality of the impact rule, and have consistently responded and reaffirmed that the rule *854 serves as an important safeguard when applied under certain proper circumstances in our judicial system. See Rowell v. Holt,
Despite the extensive history of the impact rule that has been consistently applied in Florida, the view embodied within the dissenting opinions of my esteemed colleagues would rewrite over one hundred years of Florida law and hold contrary to that precedent by requiring a Florida citizen who has clearly sustained an impact to or unauthorized touching of his or her body to also demonstrate "some physical injury or manifestation" or significant injury to state a viable cause of action sounding in tort, currently a requirement only in non-impact cases. See dissenting op. of Wells, J., at 865; dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 867. This Court has never required or approved attempts to quantitatively assess the nature or extent of a legal injury produced by a touching or sustained as the result of a physical impact or contact as a threshold for allowing an action to recover for mental distress to proceed. Rather, we have consistently recognized that it is the mere existence of a physical impact or contact that is the criterion by which actions are deemed viable, not the relative force of the impact or contact, nor the size of the bruise or scrape that may result from that contact. This Court made this clear in our decision in Clark v. Choctawhatchee Electric Co-Operative, Inc.,
Even more disturbing and questionable is the analysis employed by the dissenting justices, which relies on cases that do not involve an impact to arrive at this additional "demonstrative injury" requirement. This new requirement clearly departs from longstanding Florida precedent, which has always required either impact or a physical *855 manifestation of injury. In the instant matter, Mrs. Willis indisputably sustained a touching or impact to her person and, therefore, stated a viable cause of action under Florida law.
For example, one colleague begins his dissent by stating that "we have never applied the [impact] rule without requiring physical injury." Dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 867. Although this correctly states that when there is no impact, the "impact rule" requires an actual physical injury as a predicate to recovery, but only and exclusively when there is no impact or no touching, it neglects to recognize that the rule only applies in cases which do not involve an unauthorized touching or an impact with the plaintiff's person. In cases, such as the one before us, which do involve a touching, a contact, or an impact to the person, no matter how slight, we historically have never required that Florida citizens also demonstrate a particular physical manifestation of injury to state a viable cause of action. The "impact rule" simply has no application. Rather, in such cases, we have consistently recognized a cause of action without limitation by the "impact rule" and have declined all attempts to assess the extent, significance, or nature of injury that is alleged to have resulted from the impact or touching, as such an assessment is totally unnecessary to factual scenarios that involve impact to the plaintiff. See Hagan v. Coca-Cola Bottling Co.,
Included within my good friend's discussion of Florida's "physical injury requirement" is a list of cases which are presented as support for the position that this Court has historically required both the manifestation of physical injury and impact to allow recovery for pain and suffering or damages in the nature of emotional distress. However, of all the cases cited to support this, only three actually involved an impact to the person, and any discussion in those cases of a physical injury requirement was exclusively in reference to the "impact rule" in the abstract, which applies solely in cases which do not involve an impact to the person, and absolutely did not apply a rule as advanced by my learned colleagues.
For instance, my colleague is correct that in Food Fair Stores of Florida, Inc. v. Macurda,
A review of the remainder of the cases cited by my colleague in support of the assertion that this Court has "never applied the [impact] rule without requiring physical injury," dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 867, demonstrates that these cases have no application in this discussion and are completely distinguishable from the instant case in that there was no impact to the person seeking damages for mental anguish or emotional distress. See Kirksey v. Jernigan,
Justice Cantero further asserts that "our jurisprudence has created much confusion in the lower courts," dissenting op. at 876, and refers to cases in which the district courts certified questions of great public importance in an effort to bolster his assertion. See dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 876-77 n. 16. However, a close inspection reveals no such confusion exists when these cases are viewed through the lens of the "impact rule" as it has always *857 existed in Florida; i.e., where there is impact or an unauthorized touching, there is no need to demonstrate physical injury, and where there is no impact or touching, an actual physical injury is required. Only two of the district court cases cited by Justice Cantero (Hagan and the instant case) involved an impact or a touching of the plaintiff's person, and in each of those cases we subsequently held that the lack of physical injury did not bar recovery because contact occurred. See majority op. at 850; Hagan,
My good friend also suggests that this Court "certainly had the opportunity in Hagan to hold that the impact rule requires only impact, since only impact was present in that case." Dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 874. However, this assertion is quite simply illogical because the impact rule does not apply when there is impact to or contact with the claimant's person. Instead, in Hagan we correctly recognized that the ingestion of a contaminated substance constituted an impact, thereby rendering the "impact rule" totally inapplicable and any accompanying demonstrable physical injury requirement inapplicable.
As this Court recognized in Tanner, the impact rule does not apply where emotional damages are a "consequence of conduct that itself is a freestanding tort apart from any emotional injury."696 So.2d at 708 (quoting Kush,616 So.2d at 415 ). And, of course, Doyle recognized a cause of action based on the ingestion of a contaminated food since ingestion itself constitutes an impact. Consistent with our opinions and holdings in Tanner and Doyle, we hold that a plaintiff need not prove the existence of a physical injury in order to recover damages for emotional injuries caused by the consumption of a contaminated food or beverage. . . . Further, since we have concluded that there was an impact in the case at hand by the ingestion of a contaminated substance, and the impact rule does not bar the action, we decline to rule on the broader question [of whether to abolish the impact rule].
The dissenting opinions utilize abstract statements of the "impact rule" in and from non-impact cases in an effort to justify their view that Florida law requires a physical manifestation of injury even in cases where it is undisputed that the plaintiff has suffered an impact. I believe that the dissents' focus on cases with inapposite facts (no contact) to reach what they believe to be the preferable rule of law is both faulty and misguided. In my view, the dissents' proposed method of applying a rule that was very clearly designed and intended to pertain only to cases which involve no contact or no impact to the facts of the case before us, which clearly and admittedly involves an impact to Mrs. Willis's person, entirely misconstrues our precedent in this area, misapplies the "impact rule" to factually distinguishable cases in which it has never been applied, and would create a bar that has never before existed to causes of action in Florida. If we are urged to rewrite over a century of Florida law, it should be done openly and with a straightforward approach stating that we are doing so, rather than engaging in an attempt to persuade that we are merely applying our longstanding precedent as it was designed, intended, and has been established, when in fact we are not. In my view, the dissents attempt to do the latter by relying upon a rule of law which has consistently been applied only to non-impact cases to reach the conclusion that a claim which undoubtedly involves impact should be barred, without even so much as acknowledging this critical distinction. In truth, these dissenting assertions amount to little more than straw men which are born of the erroneous interpretation that the impact rule (and its requirement that physical injury be demonstrated) applies in all cases, not just cases where no impact has been sustained by the victim.
Finally, with regard to the holding of the majority, one colleague opines:
Under the conclusions of the per curiam and concurring opinions, any person in Florida other than perhaps a trespasser can now claim that someone touched the person on an owner's premises and that the touching frightened the person so much that the person is entitled to damages for emotional distress, resulting in the premises owner being subject to a jury award for damages against the owner.
Dissenting op. of Wells, J., at 866. However, my colleague is misconstruing the majority's opinion. He fails to recognize, or acknowledge, that the instant matter is before this Court on final summary judgment in favor of the defendants. Therefore, the majority merely concludes that if a review of the facts in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party reveals that the plaintiff has suffered a physical impact or touching, then the claim should not be barred prematurely by misapplication of an erroneous rule of law to those circumstances.[6] Contrary to the assertion of my *859 colleague, the majority opinion should not be construed as commenting on the merits of Mrs. Willis's claim, or as holding that "[Mrs. Willis] is entitled to damages for emotional distress." Dissenting op. of Wells, J., at 866. In addition, the same dissent misconstrues the majority opinion as authorizing "any person in Florida other than perhaps a trespasser" to institute an action for injuries incurred on an owner's property. Id.[7] Again, contrary to his interpretation of the majority opinion, the majority of course recognizes that not just "any person in Florida" can recover in a negligence action but rather that the plaintiff must demonstrate that he or she is owed a duty by the defendant, that the defendant breached that duty, and that such breach resulted in a physical impact or touching of the plaintiff and accompanying intangible damages.
In his dissent, my colleague further incorrectly asserts that "all of our district courts" have held similarly to the Third District's decision in the instant matter. Dissenting op. of Wells, J., at 867. However, a review of the district court decisions upon which he relies for support for this assertion reveals that the analysis in his dissent is not at all supported by those decisions. In Rivers v. Grimsley Oil Co.,
PARIENTE, J., concurring.
I agree with the majority that in this case Florida's judicially created impact rule, which generally prohibits recovery of emotional distress damages, should not apply because the plaintiff sustained a physical impact. See Rowell v. Holt,
I have always understood that the presence of an impact makes a showing of physical injury or illness flowing from the emotional distress unnecessary. See Gracey,
Clearly, the impact rule does not bar Mrs. Willis from bringing a cause of action in this case. Specifically, the evidence demonstrates that Mrs. Willis was touched against her will when the assailant placed a pistol against her head and also when the assailant "patted down" her exposed body. Mrs. Willis also alleged that as a result of this incident she has received treatment from a psychiatrist, a psychologist, and a general practitioner for anxiety, depression, panic attacks, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Further, Mrs. Willis alleged that she is taking Paxil, Buspar, Wellbutrin, and Zoloft for her condition. According to these allegations, it is clear that Mrs. Willis has suffered significant emotional distress damages. Indeed, the psychologist stated in an affidavit that Mrs. Willis has experienced physical manifestations of the emotional injury and described these manifestations as including sexual dysfunction, peripheral temperature changes, muscle tightening and increased sweat gland activity. Therefore, as the majority correctly concludes, under the facts of this case the impact rule does not preclude recovery of the mental pain and suffering damages alleged.
Although I agree with the result reached by the majority in this case, I write separately to once again express my concerns regarding the vitality of the impact rule as it exists in Florida, and to urge this Court to consider receding from the impact rule as set forth in this Court's precedent. I recognize that this Court has to date declined to recede from the impact rule, but at the same time, the Court has continued to carve out well-meaning exceptions to this rule on a case-by-case basis.[9]*862 This case-by-case approach has resulted in the district courts of appeal continuing to certify questions of great public importance to this Court concerning the applicability of the impact rule under the facts of a particular case. This alone demonstrates the lack of stability and the lack of predictability in this area of the law, and should cause us to consider whether the impact rule is the soundest common law approach to addressing concerns about awarding intangible damages unless a "genuine" injury can be shown.[10]
As I explained in Rowell, the impact rule "reflects an outmoded skepticism for damages resulting from mental injuries."
I reiterate my agreement with the Illinois Supreme Court's summary of the primary criticisms of the impact rule:
The requirement [of physical manifestation of emotional distress] is overinclusive because it permits recovery for mental anguish when the suffering accompanies or results in any physical impairment, regardless of how trivial the injury. More importantly, the requirement is underinclusive because it arbitrarily denies court access to persons with valid claims they could prove if permitted to do so.
Additionally, the requirement is defective because it "encourages extravagant pleading and distorted testimony." To continue requiring proof of physical injury when mental suffering may be equally recognizable standing alone would force "victim[s] to exaggerate symptoms of sick headaches, nausea, insomnia, etc., to make out a technical basis of bodily injury upon which to predicate a parasitic recovery for the more grievous disturbance, the mental and emotional distress she endured."
Id. at 483-84 (Pariente, J., specially concurring) (quoting Corgan v. Muehling,
This case is a good example of the practical problems caused by the impact rule's *863 requirement that a plaintiff sustain a physical impact in order to maintain an action for negligent infliction of emotional distress. In this case, if the gun had been placed within an inch of Mrs. Willis's head without touching her, no one would seriously think that the emotional distress accompanying this trauma would be any less severe than that suffered by Mrs. Willis as a result of the gun actually touching her. It seems to me that Justice Cantero recognizes this reality in his dissent when he states that "the Court now allows emotional distress damages even where the distress may be minimal or nonexistent; yet where the damages may be great but no `impact' occurred, the Court would deny them."
But instead of receding from the impact rule, we continue to create case-by-case exceptions. As I stated in Rowell and Gracey, I believe that the traditional foreseeability analysis applicable to negligence claims is the more appropriate framework for a limitation on tort recovery in this state. See generally McCain v. Florida Power Corp.,
ANSTEAD, J., concurs.
QUINCE, J., concurring.
In yet another case involving the Florida Impact Rule the Third District Court of Appeal affirmed a summary judgment entered by the trial court in favor of a hotel after a hotel patron, Mrs. Willis, sued the hotel for negligence in failing to exercise reasonable care to protect her from foreseeable criminal activity. The plaintiff in this case was a patron at the hotel who was told by a hotel security guard, provide by the respondent American Knights Security, to park in a parking lot across the street from the hotel. In addition, the security guard told the woman that the parking lot was safe. However, when the patron opened her car door, a gun was place to her head. The gun actually touched her head, and she was told to empty her pockets. In addition, the patron was told to pull up her shirt and the assailant touched her body in search of money or other things. As a result of this incident, Mrs. Willis could not sleep and spent the night walking the floor in the hotel. The next day she went to an emergency room, and has, since that time, been treated by a psychiatrist and a general practitioner for depression, anxiety, panic attacks, and posttraumatic stress disorder.
On a motion for summary judgment, the defendants argued that Mrs. Willis's cause of action for severe psychological damages was barred by the impact rule. The trial court granted a motion for summary judgment on that basis and the Third District Court of Appeal affirmed. A majority of this Court reverses the summary judgment because the facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, demonstrates that the gun was in actual contact with the plaintiff's body and the assailant actually touched her body. I agree with this determination because this Court has never attempted to determine the application of the impact rule based on the nature or extent of the physical impact. The outside force, in the words of the Third District, "no matter how large or small, visible or invisible, and no matter that the effects are not immediately deleterious," can qualify as an impact. Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc. v. Cox, 481 So.2d *864 517, 527 (Fla. 3d DCA 1985). In fact our cases have held that a plaintiff can maintain an action for psychological trauma where the psychological trauma is caused by some physical impact or where the psychological trauma caused a demonstrable physical impact or injury. See, e.g., Gracey v. Eaker,
Based on the meaning of impact as outlined in these cases, I must conclude that Mrs. Willis's action for emotional distress was not subject to dismissal on a motion for summary judgment.
ANSTEAD and PARIENTE, JJ., concur.
WELLS, J., dissenting.
I dissent because I conclude that the impact rule should be applied under the facts of this case. I would follow the cases from the district courts which have applied the impact rule in similar factual situations. I find that the cases from this Court cited in the per curiam opinion to support reversing the Third District Court of Appeal in this case are cases based on very different factual situations, and they should not be applied to this case. In respect to the case precedent, I substantially rely upon and concur in Justice Cantero's excellent opinion as a reply. I believe that the Court must continue, as it has in the past, to have a gatekeeper role in objectively testing the reliability of claims for emotional distress where the alleged tort does not result in discernible physical injury. This role is necessary in order to maintain trust and confidence that court judgments are not enforcing fictitious claims. It is this role in the Court testing such claims which gave rise to the impact rule as a basis for objective analysis.
I recognize that Chief Justice Lewis, in responding to my dissent, lays great stress repeatedly on this being a summary judgment. However, he fails to point out how the issues will be different on motion for directed verdict or on a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. We have to assume on summary judgment that the record contains all of the evidence available on what happened in the incident in the parking area adjacent to the Holiday Inn and whether Mrs. Willis had a discernible physical injury from an impact. Moreover, neither the per curiam opinion nor the concurring opinions acknowledge that whether a claim is barred by the impact rule has been held by this Court to be an issue of law which is properly considered on a motion to dismiss or motion for summary judgment. Crane v. Loftin,
The evidence set forth in the per curiam opinion was evidence adopted by the district court from the petitioners' brief in the district court. However, it must be noted that this evidence concerning what occurred in the parking lot is "undisputed" because the only evidence concerning the episode is from plaintiff Willis in her deposition. Thus, there is no way to dispute what the per curiam concludes is all that is necessary for the plaintiff to recover emotional damages from these defendants because *865 the cause of action is entirely based upon the uncorroborated statements of the plaintiff.
Justice Lewis says that "after conducting a thorough review of the record [he] perceive[s] no hint of fabrication in Mrs. Willis's version of events." Of course, the very problem is that we have only what Mrs. Willis says to rely upon for any "version of events." We have no objective way to test whether Mrs. Willis is fabricating, and this is the reason this Court's precedent has required that an impact result in some discernible physical injury or manifestation.
There was no evidence of any physical injury or marking of any kind resulting from Mrs. Willis's reported gun touching and patting. The alleged assailant was not identified or ever seen by anyone other than Mrs. Willis. Mrs. Willis only gave a very general description of the assailant. Mrs. Willis did not seek immediate medical treatment.
Q Did you get a look at the person who took your car?
A It happened so fast, I didn't. All I know, he waswhen he shot, he wasI don't know.
Q Do you remember anything about the individual, voice, inflection, height, race, anything?
A Yes, I remember the gun in my face.
Q Other than the gun in your face, do you remember anything else?
A No.
Following the incident in the parking lot, Mrs. Willis spent the night at the Holiday Inn. Then, on the afternoon following the incident, Mrs. Willis returned to her home in Port Orange, Florida. Thereafter, she went to an emergency room, although her testimony was that she could not remember when she first sought or received any medical treatment. (Deposition of Willis, record at 154.) In respect to treatment of Mrs. Willis, the record only contains an affidavit of treatment by a psychologist.
In R.J. v. Humana of Florida, Inc.,
The impact rule has had a long legal history in this state, beginning with this Court's decision in International Ocean Telegraph Co. v. Saunders,32 Fla. 434 ,14 So. 148 (1893). In essence, the impact rule requires that "before a plaintiff can recover damages for emotional distress caused by the negligence of another, the emotional distress suffered must flow from physical injuries the plaintiff sustained in an impact." Reynolds v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,611 So.2d 1294 , 1296 (Fla. 4th DCA 1992), review denied,623 So.2d 494 (Fla.1993). As explained by one commentator, the underlying basis for the rule is that allowing recovery for injuries resulting from purely emotional distress would open the floodgates for fictitious or speculative claims. 1 Thomas M. Cooley, Cooley on Torts 97 (3d ed.1906). As this Court stated in Saunders, compensatory damages for emotional distress are "spiritually intangible," are beyond the limits of judicial action, and should be dealt with through legislative action rather than judicial decisions.14 So. at 152 . Another commentator has stated that the requirement of a physical impact gives courts a guarantee that an injury to a plaintiff is genuine. W. Page Keeton, et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 54, at 363 (5th ed.1984). Further without an impact requirement, defendants would not be sure whom they had injured or where they may have injured a person, thus paralyzing their ability to defend themselves. Id. at 364.
*866 (Emphasis added.) The Court in R.J. continued to recognize the limited exception which the Court had found in the application of the impact rule but then stated:
We reaffirm today our conclusion that the impact rule continued to serve its purpose of assuring the validity of claims for emotional or physic damages, and find that the impact rule should remain part of the law of this state. Consequently we reject R.J.'s request that we abolish the impact rule.
Id. at 363. Though this Court, in the subsequent cases of Rowell v. Holt,
However, the reasons of Rowell, Gracey, Hagan, Tanner, and Zell for not applying the impact rule are not present here. Rather, this case presents the very real problem of how, without an impact that causes physical injuries, an accused defendant can test or verify the plaintiff's claim.
In Brown v. Cadillac Motor Car Division,
Contrary to Justice Pariente's view, the required oath swearing to tell the truth has no more empirical support as a deterrent to fraud in this kind of case presently than it had when the impact rule was adopted. There is plainly a continuing need for trial judges to be the gatekeepers in these kinds of claims.
Under the conclusions of the per curiam and concurring opinions, any person in Florida other than perhaps a trespasser can now claim that someone touched the person on an owner's premises and that the touching frightened the person so much that the person is entitled to damages for emotional distress, resulting in the premises owner being subjected to a jury award for damages against the owner. This decision highlights a problem which the Legislature considered in its 2005 session with our decision in Merrill Crossings Associates v. McDonald,
The Third District's decision in Ruttger Hotel Corp. v. Wagner,
The other district courts which have reviewed robbery-related situations in light of the impact rule have similarly not allowed recovery. Jackson v. Sweat,
In sum, I join with all of our district courts and dissent from the per curiam decision, which is in conflict with this uniform view and with this Court's holding as set forth in R.J. and in Brown as to the reason for applying the impact rule. I would affirm the decision of the Third District and answer the first certified question in the negative.
CANTERO, J., dissenting.
From my reading of our precedent, today a majority of this Court departs from our oft-stated rule that to recover damages for emotional distress, a plaintiff must demonstrate some physical injury or "manifestation." Although we have fashioned several case-specific exceptions to the impact rule, we have never applied the rule without requiring physical injury. When the impact rule is applied so that the difference between having a cause of action and lacking one depends on whether an armed robber's gun actually touched the victim's head, something is dramatically wrong with the law. Requiring mere physical contact does nothing to further the purposes behind the rule. Indeed, it tears the rule from the purpose behind it: to ensure the authenticity of claims for emotional distress. It renders the rule both over- and under-inclusive, allowing damages for trivial claims of emotional distress while prohibiting recovery on substantial *868 claims that happen to involve no impact. Thus, I would continue to require some physical injury or manifestation. In this case, none has been shown. As I explain below, if we are to eliminate the physical injury requirement, we might as well abrogate the impact rule altogether and allow damages for severe emotional distress. As the majority applies it today, the rule makes no sense.
A. The Physical Injury Requirement
Historically our cases have required a physical injury to allow recovery for emotional distress. See, e.g., Zell v. Meek,
During the past decade, we have consistently included the physical injury requirement as part of our standard definition of the impact rule, which is that "before a plaintiff can recover damages for emotional distress caused by the negligence of another, the emotional distress suffered must flow from physical injuries the plaintiff sustained in an impact." Humana,
Thus, this very Court has cited this formulation of the rule no fewer than seven times in the last twelve years. Our decisions have clearly and repeatedly stated the rule as requiring both impact and injury. Therefore, contrary to Chief Justice Lewis's contention that I "would rewrite over one hundred years of Florida law," specially concurring op. at 854, it is the majority that ignores repeated statements of this Court, some as recent as 2005.[11]
As some of our opinions note, there are good reasons behind the rule. The purpose of requiring both an impact and a physical injury is to ensure the authenticity of claims for emotional distress. See Gonzalez v. Metro. Dade County Pub. Health Trust,
As we have emphasized, however, the reasons for the rule extend even further:
[T]here is more underlying the impact doctrine than simply problems of proof, fraudulent claims, and excessive litigation. The impact doctrine gives practical recognition to the thought that not every injury which one person may by his negligence inflict upon another should be compensated in money damages. There must be some level of harm which one should absorb without recompense as the price he pays for living in an organized society. *870 Gonzalez,651 So.2d at 675 (quoting Stewart v. Gilliam,271 So.2d 466 , 477 (Fla. 4th DCA 1972) (Reed, C.J., dissenting), quashed,291 So.2d 593 (Fla.1974)).
Other states, too, have required a physical injury or manifestation. See, e.g., Hinsberger v. State,
In fact, Justice Pariente has conceded at least until todaythat the physical injury requirement remains the majority rule. See Gracey,
B. Have We Eliminated the Requirement?
The majority concludes that, so long as there is an impact, we no longer require a physical injury. See majority op. at 850. The majority cites Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc. v. Cox,
Cox is not a case from this Court, but from the Third District. In Cox, the plaintiff sought recovery for mental anguish caused by the increased risk of cancer resulting from the inhalation of asbestos fibers and his subsequent contraction of asbestosis. The district court held that inhalation of asbestos fibers, although involving only slight physical contact, nevertheless constituted an impact: "The essence of impact, then, it seems, is that the outside force, no matter how large or small, visible or invisible, and no matter that the effects are not immediately deleterious, touch or enter into the plaintiff's body."
Having determined that inhalation of asbestos satisfies the impact rule, and that, therefore, the plaintiff need not physically manifest his alleged emotional distress, we must still determine if and when recovery is available for fear of cancer. . . .
. . . [S]everal courts have required that "fear of" claims be available only to those who have suffered a physical injury. . . .
The physical injury requirement is consistent with Florida law, necessary and fair. Millions of people have been exposed to asbestos. Permitting an action for fear of cancer where there has been no physical injury from the asbestos would likely devastate the court system as well as the defendant manufacturers. Imposing a requirement that there be a physical injury as a predicate for recovery . . . is not an arbitrary act. . . .
. . . In short, the physical injury requirement will insure that the claims permitted are only the most genuine.
. . . .
. . . The stringent requirement of both impact and injury for a "fear of" claim keeps the [floodgates] intact.
*872 Cox,
More on point is the Third District's subsequent application of the rule in Ruttger Hotel Corp. v. Wagner,
The majority also relies on Zell for the rule that once an impact occurs, a plaintiff is not required to demonstrate physical injury. Our opinion in Zell, however, is replete with references to Florida's physical injury requirement. In Zell, after witnessing her father's death as a result of a bomb that exploded in their unit, the plaintiff sued an apartment complex for negligent infliction of emotional distress. Although the plaintiff was not physically injured in the blast, we permitted recovery because she suffered physical manifestations of her mental anguish following the incident.
In Zell we applied the "bystander rule," which permits recovery for emotional distress absent an actual impact if a plaintiff can demonstrate physical injuries resulting from the mental anguish of witnessing the death or injury of a loved one. We first adopted the bystander rule in Champion v. Gray,
Although Champion, Zell, and the "bystander" line of cases permit recovery for emotional distress without an impact, they clearly continue to require a physical injury or manifestation:
*873 [W]e rejected the impact rule to the extent that we held that no impact need be shown where psychological trauma could be demonstrated to cause a demonstrable physical injury, but we retained the rule as a bar to psychic injuries resulting from such trauma. Of course, in addition to the requirement of a physical injury, we limited the class of claimants to those "who, because of [their] relationship to the [directly] injured party and [their] involvement in the event causing the injury, [are] foreseeably injured."
. . . .
The essence of our holding in Champion was to recognize a claim where an actual physical injury could be demonstrated by psychic trauma. . . .
. . . .
. . . . [T]he elements required to allege a cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress [are]: (1) the plaintiff must suffer a physical injury; (2) the plaintiff's physical injury must be caused by the psychological trauma; (3) the plaintiff must be involved in some way in the event causing the negligent injury to another; and (4) the plaintiff must have a close personal relationship to the directly injured person.
Zell,
We reached a similar result in Gracey, where we described the impact rule as having a "`hybrid' nature, requiring either impact upon one's person or, in certain situations, at a minimum the manifestation of emotional distress in the form of a discernible physical injury or illness."
*874 In the one other case the majority cites for the elimination of the physical injury requirement, see majority op. at 850, we actually found the impact rule inapplicable. Hagan held "that the impact rule does not apply to cases where a plaintiff suffers emotional distress as a direct result of the consumption of a contaminated beverage."
We certainly had the opportunity in Hagan to hold that the impact rule requires only impact, since only impact was present in that case. The plaintiffs had ingested a bottle of Coca-Cola that apparently contained a condom (later determined to be mold). Impact was clear because our previous cases held that ingesting a foreign substance constitutes an impact. See Doyle v. Pillsbury Co.,
In his separate opinion, the Chief Justice cites Crane v. Loftin,
The Chief Justice also relies on our holding in Macurda,
The Chief Justice also relies on our decision in Clark,
Granted, our definition of the required physical injury has evolved: while we previously demanded that a physical injury produce the emotional distress, we now require only that the emotional distress produce some "discernible physical injury" or some "physical manifestation." See Champion,
We have never receded from the cases requiring physical injury, and we do not recede from our cases sub silentio. See Puryear v. State,
*876 C. Exceptions to the Rule
No doubt, we have recently created many exceptions to the impact rule, which are so specific that they were apparently designed to prevent application of the rule in the particular circumstances involved. See, e.g., Rowell,
In cases that do not involve an exception, however, we have continued to require physical injury. Unlike cases in which we have recognized an exception to the rule, this case falls squarely within it. The majority does not abrogate the rule, but instead applies a watered-down version that requires impact but no physical injury. The circumstances of this case aptly show the arbitrariness of such a rule. Under the majority's approach, the plaintiff may recover damages for emotional distress only because the perpetrator's gun happened to touch her forehead. Yet in a case like Jordan v. Equity Properties & Development. Co.,
D. A New Rule
I cannot agree with the majority's emasculation of the impact rule. If we are not to require some physical manifestation, as historically we have and as most states still do, then we should discard the rule. I agree with Justice Pariente to the extent that she argues for a more workable one. As it is, our jurisprudence has created much confusion in the lower courts. During the last decade, no less than nine times district courts have certified questions to us regarding the rule's application or continued vitality.[16] To bring an end to this *877 confusion, while also preserving the screening function that the impact rule sought to serve, I would allow emotional distress damages when the plaintiff can prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that she has suffered severe emotional distress. Such severe emotional distress must have been foreseeable. See, e.g., Sacco v. High Country Indep. Press, Inc.,
The majority's requirement of an "impact," no matter how small, without any physical injury or manifestation, tears the rule from the policy behind it: to ensure the authenticity of claims. The Court now allows emotional distress damages even where the distress may be minimal or nonexistent; yet where the damages may be great but no "impact" occurred, the Court would deny them. We should either continue to apply the physical injury requirement, which better implements the policy behind the rule, or scrap the rule and allow damages for clear and convincing evidence of severe emotional distress.
I therefore respectfully dissent.
WELLS and BELL, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The summary judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and, therefore, the district court appropriately considered the facts as presented by the appellants, concluding that they "fairly describe[d] the record evidence in the required light most favorable to [the plaintiffs'] position." Willis,
[2] My colleague, in his dissenting opinion, contends that the evidence set forth in the majority decision with regard to the attack suffered by Mrs. Willis, although undisputed, is "uncorroborated." Dissenting op. of Wells, J., at 865. However, "corroboration" is not necessary in the summary judgment posture, and it is clear from the record that Mrs. Willis's car, and all of her belongings therein, were in fact stolen. Moreover, after conducting a thorough review of the record I perceive no hint of fabrication in Mrs. Willis's version of events, especially when this Court must view the facts in a light most favorable to her as the nonmoving party. See Moore,
[3] It should be noted that although the Court did not explicitly find that a contract existed between the plaintiff and the defendant, it did appear to base its holding in part on the fact that it viewed the plaintiff's claim as based partially in contract: "In the case under consideration, the plaintiff's suit, though sounding in tort, is for compensation only, for the breach by the defendant telegraph company of its contract promptly to deliver a telegram summoning him to the deathbed of his wife." Saunders,
[4] The string citation to cases from other jurisdictions in support of the assertion that a physical injury or manifestation is required even where there has been an impact to the plaintiff, see dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 870, is similarly misguided because even some of those cases did not involve a touching of, or impact to, the plaintiff. See, e.g., FMC Corp. v. Helton,
[5] Even the United States Supreme Court has recognized that under the case law of certain states, a plaintiff need not demonstrate a physical injury in order to recover for emotional distress where a physical impact has occurred. See Consol. Rail Corp. v. Gottshall,
[6] I take issue with my colleague's approach of viewing the facts in a light most favorable to the moving party in determining whether to approve an entry of summary judgment. Such an approach is directly contrary to and disregards long-established case law dictating that, when reviewing the entry of summary judgment, the record is to be viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. See Markowitz v. Helen Homes of Kendall Corp.,
[7] A learned colleague also presents a similar faulty argument when he contends that "today's decision grants every plaintiff ever exposed to asbestos fibers a prima facie case for negligent infliction of emotional distress." Dissenting op. of Cantero, J., at 872 n. 13. These assertions that "the sky is falling" amount to little more than scare tactics without support in the law.
[8] In his dissent, Justice Cantero brought to my attention my statement in Gracey that "a majority of jurisdictions continue to adhere to the traditional rule requiring some form of physical injury." Gracey,
[9] Most recently, in Rowell, we held that the impact rule did not preclude recovery of emotional distress damages when an attorney's negligence resulted in his client's wrongful pretrial incarceration.
[10] The Fourth District certified a question in Woodard v. Jupiter Christian School, Inc.,
[11] Both Chief Justice Lewis and Justice Pariente, in their separate opinions, suggest that our statements in these cases were dicta. Essentially, they argue that we did not mean what we said in Humana,
[12] Some of these states do recognize narrow exceptions to the physical injury requirement. A handful of other states have physical injury requirements with broader exceptions. See, e.g., Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Bowers,
[13] Contrary to the case the majority purports to follow, today's decision grants every plaintiff ever exposed to asbestos fibers a prima facie case for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
[14] Even if Gracey and Kush had intended to alter the meaning of "impact," they would not be binding on that issue. Neither case involved an impact without a physical injury. Rather, Gracey involved a psychotherapist's breach of a statutory duty of confidentiality, while Kush involved negligent medical advice leading to the birth of a deformed child. We refused to apply the impact rule in either circumstance. Gracey,
[15] Although the Court in Hagan cited Humana only as requiring "injuries," the actual language from Humana more specifically requires "physical injuries."
[16] See Woodard v. Jupiter Christian Sch., Inc.,
