Kraszewski v. Baptist Medical Center of Oklahoma, Inc.

916 P.2d 241, 1996 WL 132212
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 26, 1996
Docket83638
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 916 P.2d 241 (Kraszewski v. Baptist Medical Center of Oklahoma, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kraszewski v. Baptist Medical Center of Oklahoma, Inc., 916 P.2d 241, 1996 WL 132212 (Okla. 1996).

Opinions

KAUGER, Vice Chief Justice:

The novel issue presented is: whether the appellant may recover damages [243]*243for intentional infliction of emotional distress1 arising from seeing his wife fatally injured.2 We find that because the appellant may be entitled to damages for his emotional distress because: 1) he was directly physically involved in the incident; 2) he was damaged from viewing the injury to his wife rather than from learning of the accident later; and 3) he was the spouse of the party whose injury gave rise to his anguish.3 The [244]*244cause is remanded for a jury determination on the issues of the extremeness of the ap-pellee’s conduct and the severity of the distress suffered by the appellant.4

FACTS

On November 7, 1992, Robert Vester Page (appellee/Page/driver) spent the afternoon in a local bar where he became legally intoxicated. Rather than calling for a taxi or allowing someone else to drive, Page sat in his pickup in a parking lot near the entrance of a grocery store. As Gerard R. KraszewsM (appellant/Kraszewski/husband) and Mary, his wife of thirty-eight years, walked hand-in-hand through the Buy For Less parHng lot, the driver accelerated, leaving twenty feet of sMd marks on the parking lot surface and hitting the couple. The husband was struck in the shoulder, the chest, and the knee and knocked back from the truck. After the impact with the pickup split the couple, the wife became stuck under the rapidly accelerating vehicle. The husband recovered and pounded on the side of the truck begging the driver to stop while his wife was trapped under the vehicle and dragged sixty feet through the parking lot.5 The driver stopped only when he was forced to do so by baeked-up traffic. Arguably, he would have continued out of the parking lot had his path not been blocked. Once the driver backed off Mary’s body, the husband held her and comforted her until the paramedics arrived. She died later that evening.

The driver was arrested at the scene of the accident and later charged with driving under the influence and manslaughter in the first degree. His blood alcohol content was .14% at the time of his arrest.6 After pleading guilty to the charges, the driver was sentenced to thirty-eight years in prison, twenty-four of which were suspended.

The husband sued the driver for damages arising from the accident and for the wrongful death of his wife. Hartford Underwriters Insurance Company (Hartford/insurer) intervened. In addition to the claim for wrongful death, the husband sought compensation for recHess infliction of emotional distress arising from seeing his wife being fatally injured in the accident. The driver and the insurer filed motions for partial summary judgment arguing that because the husband was a bystander he could not recover damages for recHess infliction of emotional distress caused by the driver’s negligence. The motion was sustained, and the cause was dismissed without prejudice. The husband refiled the action naming the driver, the hospital where his wife was treated, and the doctors charged with her care. Again, Hartford intervened, and the insurer and the driver filed motions for partial summary judgment. The husband argued again that [245]*245he was entitled to damages for negligent infliction of emotional distress, and the trial court allowed him to amend his petition to add a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress or the tort of outrage. However, the trial court, ruling that the facts would not support an award for either negligent or intentional infliction of emotional distress, sustained the motion for summary judgment. The wrongful death action against the driver, the hospital and doctors and Hartford was litigated and later settled. Only the husband’s individual claim for damages associated with the viewing of his wife’s injury and subsequent suffering was left for consideration on appeal. The Court of Appeals affirmed after finding that the husband could not recover for emotional distress arising from the injury to his wife. We granted certiorari on December 7, 1995, to determine whether the husband might recover for his mental injury for the intentional infliction of emotional distress.

I.

BEFORE A PLAINTIFF, WHO IS INVOLVED IN AN ACCIDENT AND SUFFERS MENTAL SUFFERING FROM VIEWING AN INJURY TO ANOTHER, MAY ESTABLISH A CAUSE OF ACTION FOR INTENTIONAL INFLICTION OF EMOTIONAL DISTRESS, IT MUST BE SHOWN THAT: 1) THE PLAINTIFF WAS DIRECTLY PHYSICALLY INVOLVED IN THE INCIDENT; 2) THE PLAINTIFF WAS DAMAGED FROM ACTUALLY VIEWING THE INJURY TO ANOTHER RATHER THAN FROM LEARNING OF THE ACCIDENT LATER; AND 3) A FAMILIAL OR OTHER CLOSE PERSONAL RELATIONSHIP EXISTED BETWEEN THE PLAINTIFF AND THE PARTY WHOSE INJURY GAVE RISE TO THE PLAINTIFF’S MENTAL ANGUISH.

The husband argues that because he was struck by the driver’s truck in the accident which led to his wife’s death, he should be allowed to recover for the emotional injuries which he suffered as a result of witnessing the life-ending injuries to his wife. The driver and Hartford contend that the husband was a mere bystander, and that he cannot recover for mental distress arising from witnessing injuries to his wife.

To support an actionable claim for negligence, a plaintiff must establish the concurrent existence of: a duty on the part of the defendant to protect the plaintiff from injury; a failure of the defendant to perform that duty; and an injury to the plaintiff resulting from the failure of the defendant.7 Oklahoma has never recognized an action for mental suffering caused by witnessing an injury to another. However, none of the cases in which we denied recovery involved circumstances in which the plaintiff was actually injured in the accident.8 We recognized [246]*246in Slaton v. Vansickle, 872 P.2d 929, 931 (Okla.1994) that a plaintiff may recover on a claim for physical injury if it is accompanied by mental stress or when metal distress is accompanied by physical injury if the negligent act created a breach of duty to the party.9

Mental anguish cases focus on the duty of care the defendant owes to a particular class of plaintiffs. There are two categories of parties in actions to collect for emotional distress — “bystander” and “direct victim” plaintiffs. Recovery is allowed based on whether a duty is imposed on the defendant to avoid inflicting emotional harm to the party.10 Bystanders are those plaintiffs seeking damages for witnessing the injury of another. In bystander cases, there is no pre-existing relationship between the plaintiff and the defendant, and the defendant has not voluntarily assumed any responsibility relating to the bystander’s welfare.11 Bystander liability is premised upon the defendant’s infliction of emotional distress on a party not directly involved in the accident but which causes mental suffering by the observer,12 i.e. where the mental pain or suffering is caused from viewing acts which result in another’s suffering rather than from the plaintiffs own personal physical involvement.

Direct victims are those plaintiffs which are involved directly in an accident but whose emotional damages are caused by the suffering of another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
916 P.2d 241, 1996 WL 132212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kraszewski-v-baptist-medical-center-of-oklahoma-inc-okla-1996.