Keck v. Jackson

593 P.2d 671, 122 Ariz. 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMay 9, 1978
Docket1 CA-CIV 3303
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 593 P.2d 671 (Keck v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keck v. Jackson, 593 P.2d 671, 122 Ariz. 117 (Ark. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinions

OPINION

DONOFRIO, Judge.

Plaintiff/appellant, Dorothy Ann Keck, appeals from a final order of the Coconino Superior Court dated August 25, 1975, which granted defendants’/appellees’ motion to dismiss Count One of her complaint. The portion of appellant’s complaint which has been dismissed reads:

“Prior to the events aforementioned and during the prolonged and futile agonizing battle for life which MRS. GILLESPIE underwent the Plaintiff DOROTHY ANN KECK had been a very close and loving daughter. Further, Plaintiff has been caused to suffer severe emotional and physical distress, sorrow, mental suffering, pain, shock, anxiety and anguish because of the aforementioned injuries to her mother and being present during her mother’s battle for life all to her damage.”

The Superior Court in its order to dismiss found that Arizona law does not, at this time, impose liability upon a defendant for shock and mental anguish of a plaintiff resulting from the observation of the injuries, the pain, and the suffering of a close family member, even though the plaintiff incurred physical injuries in the same impact. The court further stated that the lengthy time period involved in the death of the appellant’s mother was not determinative in the granting of the motion to dismiss.

The appellant presents us with the following single issue here on appeal:

Whether or not appellant may recover money damages for emotional and physical distress and mental anguish sustained from witnessing the pain and suffering of appellant’s mother who was injured as a result of defendant’s negligence when appellant was injured physically at the same time by the same negligent act of appellee.

In considering whether a motion to dismiss for failure of state a claim upon which relief can be granted was properly sustained, the Court of Appeals presumes that facts alleged in the complaint are true. Savard v. Selby, 19 Ariz.App. 514, 508 P.2d 773 (1973); Ulan v. Lucas, 18 Ariz.App. 129, 500 P.2d 914 (1972). The facts which formulate the action in the trial court and now here on appeal are below set forth:

Appellant was a passenger in a stationary vehicle which was situated in the eastbound emergency parking lane of Interstate 40 approximately twenty miles east of Flagstaff, Coconino County, Arizona. The car, in which appellant was a passenger, was parked in the emergency lane in order that a flat tire could be changed.

At the same time, appellee, Martha F. Jackson, was proceeding eastbound on the same interstate highway. Appellants alleged that appellee, while under the influence of alcohol, was negligently driving her automobile within the emergency parking lane; did not see the stationary vehicle or its warning signals; and caused the impact between her car and the car in which appellant was a passenger.

Appellant received serious physical injuries from the resulting impact. Appellant’s mother, also a passenger in the same car as appellant, received fatal injuries and expired three months after the impact.

Appellant alleges that the observations and sensations she experienced due to her mother’s serious condition caused her obvious mental suffering with physical manifestations.

[119]*119As the trial court judge noted in her order to dismiss, the issue presented by appellant’s Count I is an issue of first impression in Arizona. Thus, this Court has two avenues of approach it may take on this appeal. We may either deny relief to appellant thus maintaining the status quo in Arizona, or we may look to our sister states for guidance in granting appellant relief. The progressiveness of our sister states encourages us to choose the latter approach.1

California, in Dillon v. Legg, 68 Cal.2d 728, 69 Cal.Rptr. 72, 441 P.2d 912 (1968), was the first jurisdiction to allow recovery to a mother who suffered emotional trauma and physical injury from witnessing the infliction of death upon her child due to the negligence of a tort-feasor without the requirement of a simultaneous impact to the mother. The Dillon Court recognized that past decisions have barred such recovery on the ground that there was an absence of the required duty of due care by the tort-feasor to the mother, and that the imposition of such duty would work a disaster because it would invite fraudulent claims and involve the courts in the hopeless task of defining the extent of the tort-feasor’s liability. The Dillon Court artfully summarized these past decisions when it said, “In substance, they [past decisions] say, definition of liability being impossible, denial of liability is the only realistic alternative.”

Past California decisions have addressed themselves to this very problem. In Emery v. Emery, 45 Cal.2d 421, 289 P.2d 218 (1955), the California Supreme Court said:

«* * * [T]he fact that there may be greater opportunity for fraud or collusion in one class of cases than another does not warrant courts of law in closing the door to all cases of that class. Courts most depend upon the efficacy of the judicial processes to ferret out the meritorious from the fraudulent in particular cases.” 45 Cal.2d at 431, 289 P.2d at 225.

Dillon, supra, has expounded upon this theory when it stated:

“Indubitably juries and trial courts, constantly called upon to distinguish the frivolous from the substantial and the fraudulent from the meritorious, reach some erroneous results. But such fallibility, inherent in the judicial process, offers no reason for substituting for the case-by-case resolution of causes an artificial and indefensible barrier. Courts not only compromise their basic responsibility to decide the merits of each case individually but destroy the public’s confidence in them by using the broad broom of ‘administrative convenience’ to sweep away a class of claims a number of which are admittedly meritorious. The mere assertion that fraud is possible, ‘a possibility [that] exists to some degree in all cases’ (Citation omitted), does not prove a present necessity to abandon the neutral principles of foreseeability, proximate cause and consequential injury that generally govern tort law.
Indeed, we doubt that the problem of the fraudulent claim is substantially more pronounced in the case of a mother claiming physical injury resulting from seeing her child killed than in other areas of tort law in which the right to recover damages is well established in California. For example, a plaintiff claiming that fear for his own safety resulted in physical injury makes out a well recognized case for recovery. (Footnote and Citations Omitted).
* * * * * *
[120]*120In sum, the application of tort law can never be a matter of mathematical precision. In terms of characterizing conduct as tortious and matching a money award to the injury suffered as well as in fixing the extent of injury, the process cannot be perfect. Undoubtedly, ever since the ancient case of the tavern-keeper’s wife who successfully avoided the hatchet cast by an irate customer (I de S et ux v. W de S, Y.B. 22 Edw. iii, f.

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Keck v. Jackson
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Keck v. Jackson
593 P.2d 671 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
593 P.2d 671, 122 Ariz. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keck-v-jackson-arizctapp-1978.