State of New York OPINION
Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 6
Stacy Greene, &c., et al.,
Appellants,
v.
Esplanade Venture Partnership, et
al.,
Respondents,
et al.,
Defendant.
Ben B. Rubinowitz, for appellants.
Jonathan P. Shaub, for respondents Esplanade Venture Partnership, et al.
Katherine Herr Solomon, for respondents Blue Prints Engineering, P. C. et al.
Defense Association of New York, Inc., amicus curiae.
FAHEY, J.:
This case begins with the heart-breaking death of a child. Our responsibility is to
determine whether plaintiff-grandparent Susan Frierson, who was in close proximity to the
decedent-grandchild at the time of the death-producing accident, may pursue a claim for
bystander recovery under a “zone of danger” theory.
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We have applied the settled “zone of danger” rule to “allow[] one who is . . .
threatened with bodily harm in consequence of the defendant's negligence to recover for
emotional distress” flowing only from the “viewing [of] the death or serious physical injury
of a member of [that person’s] immediate family” (Bovsun v Sanperi, 61 NY2d 219, 228
[1984] [emphasis added]). Unsettled at this juncture, however, are “the outer limits” of the
phrase “immediate family” (id. at 233 n 13). Once again, we are not asked to fix permanent
boundaries of the “immediate family.” Instead, our task simply is to determine whether a
grandchild may come within the limits of her grandparent’s “immediate family,” as that
phrase is used in zone of danger jurisprudence.
We conclude that the grandchild comes within those limits. Consistent with our
historically circumspect approach expanding liability for emotional damages within our
zone of danger jurisprudence, our increasing legal recognition of the special status of
grandparents, shifting societal norms, and common sense, we conclude that plaintiff’s
grandchild is “immediate family” for the purpose of applying the zone of danger rule.
I.
A.
On May 17, 2015, plaintiff Susan Frierson and her two-year-old granddaughter,
decedent Greta Devere Greene, were in front of a building when they were suddenly struck
by debris that fell from the facade of that edifice. Emergency measures taken to save
Greta’s life failed, and she died the next day.
Susan and Greta’s mother, plaintiff Stacy Greene, subsequently commenced this
action seeking damages for injuries sustained in that accident. The complaint was quickly
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superseded by an amended pleading in which plaintiffs alleged, among other things, that
defendant Esplanade Venture Partnership owned the building, and that the remaining
defendants were negligent with respect to the inspection of the facade of that structure.
The amended complaint also alleged that the facade was in a dangerous condition, and that
as a result, a piece of the facade broke, fell, struck Greta, and caused her to die.
Based on those allegations, plaintiffs asserted two causes of action; the first
sounding in negligence, and the second in wrongful death. Nowhere in that amended
pleading, however, did plaintiffs assert a cause of action for negligent infliction of
emotional distress on behalf of Susan under the “zone of danger” doctrine.
B.
Plaintiffs sought to cure that deficiency through a motion for leave to amend the
amended complaint, and that application lies at the core of this appeal. In that motion,
plaintiffs sought permission to “assert an additional cause of action on behalf of Susan
under the ‘zone of danger’ doctrine.” That cause of action, plaintiffs contended, was
appropriate in view of the “unique and special” nature of “the relationship between a
grandparent and a grandchild.”
To the extent the grandparent-grandchild relationship between Susan and Greta is
not alone enough to bring Greta into Susan’s “immediate family,” plaintiffs maintained
that the nature of the relationship warrants that classification. Susan, plaintiffs alleged,
participated in Greta’s birthing process, helped to care for Greta during the first few weeks
of Greta’s life, and subsequently developed a “powerful” “emotional bond” with Greta.
By the time Greta was one year old, plaintiffs further alleged, Greta began to have
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overnight visits with Susan. It was during one of those visits that Susan was struck by
debris that fell from the subject building, and Greta was struck and killed.
C.
The motion to amend the amended complaint was granted. Relying on the
combination of our reasoning in Bovsun (61 NY2d at 232), this State’s “specific
recognition of the custody rights of grandparents with respect to their grandchildren,” and
the progression of zone of danger jurisprudence in other jurisdictions, Supreme Court
concluded that Susan “should be considered an ‘immediate family member’ and afforded
a right to recover for her emotional injuries caused by this tragic accident” (2017 NY Slip
Op 32335[U], at *4).
A divided Appellate Division reversed that order insofar as appealed from and
denied the “branch of plaintiffs’ motion which was for leave to amend the amended
complaint to add a cause of action sounding in negligent infliction of emotional distress”
(172 AD3d 1013, 1014 [2d Dept 2019]). The majority ruled that leave to amend should
have been denied (see id. at 1015) based on its interpretation of Bovsun (61 NY2d 219) and
Trombetta (82 NY2d 549). Bovsun saw us hold “that a plaintiff may recover damages for
emotional distress ‘occasioned by [the plaintiff’s] witnessing injury or death caused by the
defendant’s conduct to a member of the plaintiff’s immediate family’ (emphasis added)”
(172 AD3d at 1015, quoting Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 224). That case, the Appellate Division
believed, thus “stands for the proposition that spouses and their children are immediate
family members” (172 AD3d at 1015, citing Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 233-234).
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Bovsun was not an exercise in line-drawing. Although it identified certain
relationships that come within the class of “immediate family members,” Bovsun did not
establish exhaustive boundaries with respect to the universe of “immediate family
members.” For that reason, the Appellate Division analogized this case—involving a
grandmother and a granddaughter—to Trombetta (82 NY2d 549). There, we concluded
that the plaintiff-niece of a woman who was killed in the plaintiff’s presence and with
whom the plaintiff had a significant emotional bond was not entitled to “bring suit as a
bystander for the negligent infliction of emotional injuries under the . . . ‘zone of danger’
rule” (id. at 550) because the decedent-aunt was not part of the plaintiff-niece’s immediate
family (see id. at 553; see also 172 AD3d at 1015-1016, citing Jun Chi Guan v Tuscan
Dairy Farms, 24 AD3d 725, 725 [2d Dept 2005], lv dismissed 7 NY3d 784 [2006]).
The dissenters at the Appellate Division would have affirmed Supreme Court’s
order. Though mindful of “the importance of precedent in our common-law system,” the
dissenters noted that the “ ‘living nature’ ” of the common law sometimes requires a
“ ‘respon[se] to the surging reality of changed conditions’ ” (172 AD3d at 1016, quoting
Gallagher v St. Raymond’s R. C. Church, 21 NY2d 554, 558 [1968]) and maintained that
the law should recognize that Greta was part of Susan’s “immediate family” for the purpose
of permitting a zone of danger claim (see 172 AD3d at 1028). The dissenters also rejected
what they characterized as the majority’s “use of consanguinity as a crude proxy for
emotional harm” given the likelihood that “arbitrary and unjust results that will inevitably
follow when, for instance, a child is denied recovery because [the child] does not live
within a traditional family structure” (id. at 1030). “To be sure,” the dissenters continued,
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“line drawing is often an inevitable element of the common-law process, but [it] . . . does
not justify . . . clinging to a [boundary] that,” as sketched by the Appellate Division,
excludes Greta from the class of persons constituting Susan’s immediate family (id. at
1031).
The Appellate Division subsequently granted leave to appeal to this Court and
certified for our review the question whether its order was properly made. We now reverse
and answer that question in the negative.
II.
The past is always prologue. Our review of the merits begins with the underpinnings
of our modern bystander zone of danger law.
A.
In the nineteenth century, Mitchell v Rochester Ry. Co. (151 NY 107 [1896]) saw
us conclude that “no recovery can be had for injuries sustained by fright occasioned by the
negligence of another where there is no immediate personal injury” (id. at 110). That now-
outdated rule fittingly arose from antiquated circumstances; there the plaintiff was rendered
unconscious and suffered a miscarriage during a “near miss” with the defendant’s horse
car (see id. at 108). Even assuming that the defendant was negligent in the management of
its horses, however, we concluded that the plaintiff could not “recover for injuries
occasioned by fright, as there was no immediate personal injury” (id. at 109). Central to
that determination was the concern that recovery for emotional distress “would be contrary
to public policy because that type of injury could be feigned without detection and it would
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result in a flood of litigation where damages must rest on speculation” (Battalla v State of
New York, 10 NY2d 237, 240 [1961] [discussing Mitchell]).
By the 1930s, Mitchell had “been much discussed and frequently criticised by legal
scholars” (Comstock v Wilson, 257 NY 231, 234 [1931]). In a point that carries weight
today, we acknowledged that Mitchell had been shaped by views of policy rooted in the
outlook of the times in which that case had been decided. We also noted that there are
times in which “[p]ractical considerations must . . . determine the bounds of correlative
rights and duties” (Comstock, 257 NY at 235). At that juncture, we believed that those
practical concerns continued to require that a plaintiff be physically impacted in order to
recover. Still, in Comstock we recognized that damages for “a mental disturbance” might
be recoverable where the “fright” or “nervous shock” is produced by a concurrent physical
impact (see id. at 237-239).
B.
As time marched on, the law continued to drift away from Mitchell. By the early
1960s, we acknowledged that the core of the Mitchell conclusion—namely, that recovery
for injury resulting from “mere fright” is not permitted—had been “demolished many
times” (Battalla, 10 NY2d at 240). We also reconsidered the public policy underlying
Mitchell (see Battalla, 10 NY2d at 240). The review was circumspect, to be sure; we
balanced the possibility that “fraud, extra litigation and a measure of speculation are, of
course, possibilities” in the event of a claim for fright against our awareness of the folly of
denying “a logical legal right and remedy in all cases because in some a fictitious injury
may be urged as a real one” (id. at 241). Against the backdrop of those competing
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considerations, and while mindful of factors including “just[ice],” “experience[,] and
logic” (id. at 239), we concluded that a plaintiff “subjected to the fear of physical injury as
a direct result of the tortious conduct” (Howard v Lecher, 24 NY2d 109, 111 [1977]) may
state a claim that he or she was “negligently caused to suffer ‘severe emotional and
neurological disturbances with residual physical manifestations’ ” when the defendant
owed the plaintiff a direct duty, such as the one owed to the plaintiff by the ski-lift operator
at issue in that case (Battalla, 10 NY2d at 238-239). By the late 1960s, we crystallized that
point. There was “no longer any question” that, in some circumstances, “one may have a
cause of action for . . . negligently induced mental trauma without physical impact” (Tobin
v Grossman, 24 NY2d 609, 613 [1969]).
C.
By the time Tobin was decided, we came to consider the issue whether a cause of
action for negligent infliction for emotional distress might lie in favor of a bystander who
did not suffer physical injury and who was owed no “direct duty” (see id.). Although we
acknowledged developments in the law—including landmark developments in other areas
in the tort field—we declined to recognize a cause of action for harm sustained by a “third
person” parent as a result of injuries negligently inflicted directly upon her child when the
parent was not in the zone of danger (see id. at 615-619; see also id. at 614, citing
MacPherson v Buick Motor Co., 217 NY 382 [1916]). Stating the practical difficulties and
the goal for the law to “limit the legal consequences of wrongs to a controllable degree,”
we observed that “[t]he risk of indirect harm from the loss or injury of loved ones is
pervasive and inevitably realized at one time or another” (Tobin, 24 NY2d at 619).
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In words that have failed the test of time, however, we also said that “[o]nly a very
small part of that risk is brought about by the culpable acts of others” and that “[t]his is the
risk of living and bearing children” (id.). That logic, and a concern with “[t]he problem of
unlimited liability” (id. at 616), led us to conclude that it was “enough that the law
establishes liability in favor of those directly or intentionally harmed” (see id. at 619).
Fifteen years later, we revisited the question and our policy consideration in Tobin
to recognize a cause of action for bystander liability in part. Bovsun (61 NY2d 219)
recognized that a plaintiff negligently “expose[d] . . . to an unreasonable risk of bodily
injury or death . . . may recover . . . damages for injuries suffered in consequence of the
observation of the serious injury or death of a member of his or her immediate family—
assuming, of course, that it is established that the defendant’s conduct was a substantial
factor in bringing about such injury or death” (id. at 230-231). “Traditionally,” we
observed, “courts ha[d] been reluctant to recognize any [such] liability for . . . mental
distress which may result from the observation of a third person’s peril or harm” (id.).
However, by then, the “zone-of-danger rule, which” renders compensable emotional harm
caused by the negligent infliction of injuries upon another person in certain cases, had
“become the majority rule in this country” (id. at 228-229).1
Consequently, we incorporated the zone of danger rule into our jurisprudence (see
id. at 230-231; see also id. at 224). That rule “allows one who is . . . threatened with bodily
1
We further observed that, “[i]n disposing of the appeal in Tobin we were not,
however, required to confront the precise issue presented . . . inasmuch as the plaintiff in
Tobin had not been within the zone of danger of bodily harm” (id. at 228).
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harm in consequence of the defendant’s negligence to recover for emotional distress”
flowing only from the “viewing [of] the death or serious physical injury of a member of
his or her immediate family” (id. at 228).
D.
At the time Bovsun (61 NY2d 219) was decided, other courts had taken a more
expansive view of liability for emotional distress resulting from viewing the death or
serious physical injury of a relative. In Dillon v Legg (68 Cal 2d 728 [1968]), for example,
the Supreme Court of California held “that damages may be recovered for the emotional
trauma caused when the plaintiff witnesses the injury or death of a close relative even
though the plaintiff is not . . . within the zone of danger of physical injury, provided that
the emotional injury is reasonably foreseeable” (Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 227 [discussing
Dillon]). Bovsun’s approach, of course, was more circumscribed. As in Tobin (24 NY2d
at 618), the Bovsun Court expressly rejected adoption of the rule in Dillon, explaining that
for those in the zone of danger,
“[r]ecognition of this right to recover for emotional distress
attributable to observation of injuries suffered by a member of
the immediate family involves a broadening of the duty
concept but—unlike the Dillon approach—not the creation of
a duty to a plaintiff to whom the defendant is not already
recognized as owing a duty to avoid bodily harm” (id. at 229).
We emphasized that “the zone-of-danger rule provides a circumscribed alternative to the
apparently sweeping liability recognized in Dillon . . . and does so within the framework
of traditional and accepted negligence principles by using an objective test of whether the
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plaintiff was unreasonably threatened with bodily harm by the conduct of the defendant”
(id. at 230).
Bovsun is also remarkable for what it did not say. While Bovsun recognized a zone
of danger rule with an objectively defined class of bystanders as “immediate family,” the
Court did not list or enumerate “immediate family members.” In fact, consistent with the
caution with which we have historically approached this issue, we expressly declined to
define the “outer limits” with respect to “the immediate family” element of the zone of
danger rule (see id. at 233 n 13). “Inasmuch as all [of the] plaintiffs [at issue in Bovsun]
were married or related in the first degree of consanguinity to the injured or deceased
person,” we left for another case the decision as to “where lie the outer limits of ‘the
immediate family’ ” (id.).
III.
Our evolving zone of danger field jurisprudence is not the only development in the
law relevant to our analysis.
In the 1990s we concluded that an unmarried, same-sex partner could adopt the
partner’s biological child (see Matter of Jacob, 86 NY2d 651, 655-656 [1995], citing
Domestic Relations Law § 110 and 18 NYCRR 421.16 [h] [2]). Same sex marriage was
codified in 2011 (see Domestic Relations Law § 10-a [1] [added by L 2011, ch 95 § 3) and
affirmed in 2012 (see New Yorkers for Constitutional Freedoms v New York State Senate,
98 AD3d 285, 287 [4th Dept 2012], lv denied 19 NY3d 814 [2012]).
More recently we acknowledged that the definition of parent—which previously
excluded a partner without a biological or adoptive relation to the subject child—had
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“become unworkable when applied to increasingly varied familial relationships” (Matter
of Brooke S.B. v Elizabeth A.C.C., 28 NY3d 1, 14 [2016]). This analysis emphasized the
point that roles and perspectives change, and that what once was accepted as a basic social
premise has to be carefully examined in a way that reflects the realities of our lives.
Even more important in the context of this case is the legislative recognition of the
changing nature of society’s understanding of family and the special relationship between
grandparents and grandchildren. In the 1960s the legislature established a vehicle for
grandparents to obtain visitation rights with minor grandchildren (see Domestic Relations
Law § 72; L 1966 ch 631 § 1). Although section 72 originally addressed only grandparent
visitation, the statute was amended in 2003 “to provide guidance regarding the ability of
grandparents to obtain standing in custody proceedings involving their grandchildren” (L
2003, ch 657, § 1). Following the amendment, section 72 now provides “that grandparents
may demonstrate standing to seek custody based on extraordinary circumstances where the
child has lived with the grandparents for a prolonged period of time, even if the child had
contact with, and spent time with, a parent while the child lived with the grandparents”
(Matter of Suarez v Williams, 26 NY3d 440, 444 [2015]).
The 2003 amendment was enacted based on an express legislative finding
illustrative of the policy choice here. Namely, the legislature acknowledged that
“grandparents play a special role in the lives of their
grandchildren and are increasingly functioning as care givers
in their grandchildren[’s] lives. In recognition of this critical
role that many grandparents play in the lives of their
grandchildren, the legislature finds it necessary to provide
guidance regarding the ability of grandparents to obtain
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standing in custody proceedings involving their grandchildren”
(L 2003, ch 657, § 1).
Thus, this Court recognized the “special status” of grandparents and that the unique
path embodied in section 72 to establish extraordinary circumstances was enacted “in
recognition of the important role of grandparents and the increasing number of
grandparents raising their grandchildren” (Suarez, 26 NY3d at 446). As we have
recognized in other contexts (see e.g. Brooke S.B., 28 NY3d at 14), concepts of the creation
and composition of family units have evolved beyond traditional legal notions of blood
relation or consanguinity. What once was accepted as a basic social premise must be
carefully examined in a way that reflects the realities of both our changing legal landscape
and our lives.
IV.
It is here that the evolution of New York law with respect to bystander claims and
the shifting understanding of varied familial relationships intersect.2 As noted, this case
presents the question whether Susan, as the grandmother of Greta, may assert a viable cause
2
We note that New York appears to be an outlier in terms of limiting bystander
recovery to those with a familial relationship, but not permitting grandparents to recover
(see Philibert v Kluser, 385 P3d 1038 [Or. 2016]; Smith v Toney, 862 NE2d 656 [Ind.
2007]; Dickerson v Lafferty, 750 So 2d 432 [La Ct App 2000] [same] Fernandez v
Walgreen Hastings Co., 968 P.2d 774 [1998]; Bowen v Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co., 517
NW2d 432 [Wis 1994]; Hayes v Illinois Power Co., 587 NE2d 559 [Ill. App. 1992];
Thing v La Chusa, 771 P.2d 814 [1989]; Genzer v City of Mission, 666 SW2d 116 [Tex
App 1983] Barnhill v Davis, 300 NW2d 104 [Iowa 1981]; Leong v Takasaki, 520 P2d
758 [Haw. 1974]; Wyo Stat. Ann. §§ 1-38-102; 2-4-101). As plaintiffs argue, our case
law in this regard is in tension with New York’s public policy recognizing the special
status of grandparents.
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of action for negligent infliction of emotional distress under the “zone of danger” theory
based upon the emotional harm stemming from witnessing at close proximity the incident
in which Greta was killed. There is no dispute that Susan was within the zone of danger at
the time of that incident, meaning that the question whether she may assert that cause of
action for negligent infliction of emotional distress turns on whether Greta was part of
Susan’s “immediate family” (see Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 228).
We have not established an outer boundary for “the immediate family” element of
the zone of danger rule (see id. at 233 n 13). Here, we simply conclude that a grandchild
is within our understanding of what is meant by “immediate family.” That is, given the
recognition by this Court and the legislature that the relationship of grandparent and
grandchild enjoys a “special status” among familiar relationships (Suarez, 26 NY3d at 448;
see L 2003, ch 657 § 1), inclusion of grandparents in the common-law term “immediate
family” under these circumstances is more than warranted.
This circumspect approach is consistent with our post-Bovsun decision in Trombetta
v Conkling (82 NY2d 549 [1993]). There, we concluded that the decedent-aunt was not
“immediate family” of the plaintiff-niece for the purpose of the zone of danger rule (see id.
at 550). That determination was borne not of an investigation into the nature of the bond
between the decedent and the plaintiff, but of our historical precision and prudence in this
area (see id. at 553). We adhered to our articulated policy of “limiting the availability of
recovery for the negligent infliction of emotional distress to a strictly and objectively
defined class of bystanders” (id.). Critically, we also recognized that Bovsun did not
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“define the boundaries of ‘the immediate family’ ” (id. at 553) and we did not do so in
Trombetta either. Likewise, it is unnecessary to do so here, and that issue remains open.
This case calls upon us to blend the prudence we have shown in the course of many
decades, including in Bovsun (61 NY2d 219) and that yielded Trombetta (82 NY2d 549)
with recognition of reshaped societal norms and everyday common sense. We simply
clarify that a discrete, limited class of persons that enjoys a special status under modern
New York family law comes within the “narrow avenue to bystander recovery”
(Trombetta, 82 NY2d at 552), and conclude that a grandchild is the “immediate family” of
a grandparent for the purpose of applying the zone of danger rule.
V.
The motion for leave to serve and file a second amended complaint should have
been granted. “Permission to amend pleadings should be ‘freely given’ (CPLR 3025 [b])”
(Edenwald Contr. Co. v City of New York, 60 NY2d 957, 959 [1983]), and the decision
whether “to allow . . . the amendment is committed to the court’s discretion” (id.). Here,
inasmuch as the proposed amendment is not “patently devoid of merit” (172 AD3d at
1015), there was no reason to deny that application.3
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs,
plaintiffs’ motion to serve and file a second amended complaint granted in its entirety, and
the certified question answered in the negative.
3
To the extent defendants contend that the motion should have been denied for the
independent reason that plaintiffs failed to comply with the submission requirements of
CPLR 3025 (b), that contention should be rejected.
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RIVERA, J. (concurring):
“[W]hile legislative bodies have the power to change old rules of law,
nevertheless, when they fail to act, it is the duty of the court to bring the law
into accordance with present day standards of wisdom and justice rather than
‘with some outworn and antiquated rule of the past.’ No reason appears why
there should not be the same approach when traditional common-law rules
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of negligence result in injustice” (Woods v Lancet, 303 NY 349, 355 [1951],
quoting Funk v United States, 290 US 371, 382 [1933]).
The Court has missed the moment. In Bovsun v Sanperi (61 NY2d 219 [1984]), the
Court adopted the zone-of-danger rule that limits recovery for infliction of emotional
distress to certain family members put within harm’s way by defendants’ conduct. On this
appeal, we could have discarded that rule, which the Court knew then to be arbitrary and
which served merely as a legally sanctioned excuse for “holding strict rein on liability” (id.
at 230, quoting Tobin v Grossmand, 24 NY2d 609, 618 [1969]). We could have explained
that basing a right of recovery on whether a plaintiff was physically near to the injured or
killed person leads to absurd results.
On this appeal, we could have discarded the Court’s additional limitation that a
person within the zone of danger must be the third party’s “immediate family” member,
defined strictly by marriage and degrees of consanguinity (see Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 233 n
13; Trombetta v Conkling, 82 NY2d 549, 553 [1993]). We would be justified in rejecting
this outdated, patriarchal, and parochial definition, because families are formed not solely
by matrimony and blood but also with bonds of friendship and love.
Lastly, we could have acknowledged that our rule was formed around the Court’s
assumption that a less stringent rule would lead to “unduly burdensome liability” (Tobin,
24 NY2d at 615), and then recognized that—as the experiences of other jurisdictions have
proven—this concern is overstated. Regardless, such liability is merely “a kind of dollars-
and-cents argument” (id. at 617) that neglects the dual purposes of tort law, which is to
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make wrongfully injured parties whole and provide a sufficient economic disincentive for
injurious negligent conduct. We should have taken this opportunity to “reject[] as a ground
for denying a cause of action that there will be a proliferation of claims” (id. at 615). “It
suffices that if a cognizable wrong has been committed that there must be a remedy,
whatever the burden of the courts” (id.). Having freed ourselves from the constraints of a
retrograde and deeply flawed jurisprudence, the Court could have adopted a rule premised
on the fundamentals of tort law—foreseeability, causation, and discernable harm—rather
than a rule overwhelmingly concerned with assumed “unduly burdensome liability” (id.).
Yes, the majority holding is a long overdue, though modest, expansion of the class of
plaintiffs that are eligible to recover for emotional injuries sustained from watching loved
ones suffer injury or death. And so I concur in the result. But the majority adheres to a legal
framework that is arbitrary to the point of being contrary to public policy and blatantly
unjust. The majority’s small step is inadequate and solidifies an indefensible jurisprudence
for the unforeseen future.
I write separately to explain why our rule should be that a person may recover for
the emotional distress caused by perceiving the serious injury or death of any person with
whom they shared a strong personal and loving bond. Alternatively, a person may recover
if they contemporaneously observed the serious injury or death of another, regardless of
their relationship, if they were at risk of immediate and serious physical harm from the
defendant’s conduct. This rule would eliminate the requirement that the plaintiff be related
to the victim by marriage or consanguinity. The rule would also allow “strangers” to
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recover if the defendant violated a duty owed to them by putting them at risk of immediate
and serious physical harm.
I.
The majority has described with a broad brush the development of our common law
that led to this Court’s adoption of a standard that permits recovery for infliction of
emotional distress caused by observing a defendant’s harm to an immediate family member
(majority op at 6-11). There are some additional observations and conclusions within these
seminal cases worth noting, which illustrate why we should adopt a new rule as I have
articulated.
In Battalla v State of New York (10 NY2d 237, 242 [1961]), the Court first
recognized a claim for damages based on mental distress without physical injury. Battalla
involved an infant that was placed in a chairlift by an employee of a ski resort and not
properly secured (id. at 239). The infant “became frightened and hysterical” while riding
on the chairlift and suffered severe emotional disturbance with residual physical
manifestations as a result (id. 238-239). In finding that the plaintiff had stated a legally
cognizable claim, the Court noted the well-understood principle, “fundamental to our
common-law system[,] that one may seek redress for every substantial wrong” (id. at 240).
Battalla overruled Mitchell v Rochester Railway Co. (151 NY 107, 110 [1896]),
which prohibited recovery for emotional disturbance without physical injury. The Court
explained that “a rigorous application of” the rule articulated in Mitchell “would be unjust,
as well as opposed to experience and logic” (Battalla, 10 NY2d at 239).
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Unlike the majority here, the Court in Battalla extolled our role in developing the
common law. That role is not contingent upon legislative enactments, for as the Court
explained, “‘[w]e act in the finest common-law tradition when we adopt and alter
decisional law to produce common-sense justice. . . . Legislative action there could, of
course, be, but we abdicate our own function, in a field peculiarly nonstatutory, when we
refuse to reconsider an old and unsatisfactory court-made rule’” (id., quoting Woods v
Lancet, 303 NY 349, 355 [1951]).
Fidelity to the development of common law as the duty of an independent judiciary
was well established long before its reaffirmation in Battalla and Woods. Aligning the
common law with an evolving sense of justice is essential to the judicial exercise of this
authority. Almost a century ago the United States Supreme Court explained that
“as it was the characteristic principle of the common law to draw its
inspiration from every foundation of justice, we are not to assume that the
sources of its supply have been exhausted. On the contrary, we should expect
that the new and various experiences of our own situation and system will
mould and shape it into new and not less useful forms. . . .
To concede this capacity for growth and change in the common law by
drawing ‘its inspiration from every fountain of justice,’ and at the same time
to say that the courts of this country are forever bound to perpetuate such of
its rules as, by every reasonable test, are found to be neither wise nor just,
because we have once adopted them as suited to our situation and institutions
at a particular time, is to deny to the common law in the place of its adoption
a ‘flexibility and capacity for growth and adaptation’ which was ‘the peculiar
boast and excellence’ of the system in the place of its origin. . . . It has been
said so often as to have become axiomatic that the common law is not
immutable, but flexible, and, by its own principles, adapts itself to varying
conditions” (Funk, 290 US at 383).
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In the same vein, the Battalla Court rejected the traditional arguments against
expanding liability to include emotional injuries (10 NY2d at 240). Specifically, it
questioned the Court’s preoccupation in Mitchell with the possibility that emotional injury
“could be feigned without detection” and the risk that expanding liability would lead to “a
flood of litigation where damages must rest on speculation” (id.). The Court reasoned that,
“[a]lthough fraud, extra litigation and a measure of speculation are, of course, possibilities,
it is no reason for a court to eschew a measure of its jurisdiction” (id. at 240-241). In
addition, the Court noted that “fraudulent accidents and injuries are just as easily feigned
in the slight-impact cases and other exceptions wherein New York permits recovery, as in
no-impact cases which it has heretofore shunned” (id. at 241). Thus, the Court rejected the
view that it was too difficult to discern the genuine from the fraudulent claim for
nonphysical harm. That was the right choice because, as the Court observed, an “argument
from mere expediency cannot commend itself to a Court of Justice, resulting in the denial
of a logical legal right and remedy in all cases because in some a fictitious injury may be
urged as a real one” (id., quoting Green v Shoemaker & Co., 111 Md 69, 81, 73 A 688, 692
[1909] [internal quotation marks omitted] [emphasis in the original]).
A few years later, California adopted a “bystander” recovery rule in Dillon v Legg
(68 Cal 2d 728, 747, 441 P2d 912, 924-925 [1968]). In that case, California permitted a
mother to recover for her emotional harm caused by observing the defendant’s car hit her
son. The court applied a foreseeability test, concluding that the emotional harm to the
plaintiff was foreseeable even if the mother was not at risk of physical harm because the
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mother and victim shared a strong emotional bond and she was in close proximity to the
events (id. at 741). The court rejected arguments that emotional harm was easily feigned,
that its holding would encourage false claims, and that the defendant owed a duty of care
solely to those in danger of physical harm (id. at 746-747).1
The court noted legal commentators’ observations that emotional injury should be
treated as any other negligently inflicted injury (id. at 746, citing 2 Harper & James, The
Law of Torts 1039 [1956] and Archibald H. Throchmorton, Damages for Fright, 34 Harv
L Rev 260, 277 [1921]). For example, one commentator argued that,
“Nervous shock resulting from fright is just one species of physical injury,
and the rules of law, governing the right of recovery therefor, and the
measure of recovery, are, or should be, the same as in all other cases of
physical injury. The refusal to apply these general rules to actions for this
particular kind of physical injury is nothing short of a denial of justice”
(Throchmorton, 34 Harv L Rev at 277).
William L. Prosser described Dillon as a movement away from the zone-of-danger
limitation, which he regarded as “no great triumph of logic,” given the inconsistencies that
it created within tort law (Prosser and Keeton, Torts § 54 at 366 [5th ed 1984]). Indeed,
“[i]t is the business of the courts to make precedent where a wrong calls for redress, even
if lawsuits must be multiplied” (id. at 360). And, “where the concern is to avoid imposing
excessive punishment upon a negligent defendant, it must be asked whether fairness will
permit leaving the burden of loss instead upon the innocent victim” (id. at 361; see also
1
California has refined its rule and now limits recovery “to relatives residing in the same
household, or parents, siblings, children, and grandparents of the victim” absent
exceptional circumstances (Thing v La Chusa, 48 Cal 3d 644, 668 n 10 [1989]).
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Leong v Takasaki, 55 Haw 398, 404, 520 P2d 758, 763 [1974] [describing limitations like
the zone-of-danger requirement as “artificial devices” that “may actually foreclose relief
to a genuine claim” that were unnecessary under the rule developed in Dillon]; Dunphy v
Gregor, 136 NJ 99, 112, 642 A2d 372, 378 [1994] [noting that the need to put a limit on
liability “does not outweigh the need to recognize claims that are legitimate and just”]).
New York did not follow Dillon’s lead, although many other jurisdictions did.2 Less
than a year after California’s pathbreaking holding, our Court decided Tobin, which refused
to allow recovery for emotional and mental damages incurred as a result of a defendant’s
injury to another (24 NY2d at 619). Like Dillon, Tobin involved a mother who sought
recovery for her emotional and mental injuries caused by perceiving defendant’s negligent
harm to her child. Unlike in Dillon, the mother was not an eyewitness to the events; she
heard the screech of automobile brakes and then discovered moments later that her infant
child had been struck by a car and seriously injured (id. at 611).3 In rejecting the mother’s
claim for recovery, the Court acknowledged that “the common law is not circumscribed by
syllogisms, however constructed out of precedents” (id. at 614).
2
See e.g. Sacco v High Country Indep. Press, Inc., 271 Mont 209, 228-229, 896 P2d 411,
423 (1995); Paugh v Hanks, 6 Ohio St 3d 72, 80, 451 NE2d 759, 767 (1983); Sinn v
Burd, 486 Pa 146, 172-173, 404 A2d 672, 686 (1979); Leong, 55 Haw at 404-410, 520
P2d at 763-766.
3
This distinction was an odd one to note. The Court in Battalla had rejected the
requirement that the plaintiff actually be impacted so it should not have mattered in Tobin
whether the plaintiff was in a position to be impacted (10 NY2d at 239).
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However, the Court in Tobin erred in framing the issue as whether to create a new
cause of action, which according to the Court required a “radical change in policy” that it
was unwilling to make (id. at 615). Yet, all that was necessary was for the Court to employ
the same logic of Battalla to extend the cause of action recognized therein to an individual
who asserts emotional and mental injuries, leaving it to traditional principles of tort law to
address that person’s entitlement to recovery. As Judge Keating explained in dissent, the
holding was unsupported by reason given that the majority “ha[d] shown that every element
necessary to build a case for tortious liability in negligence is here present” (id. at 619
[Keating, J., dissenting]). Specifically, “[t]here is an important interest worthy of
protection, there is proximate cause, there is injury, and there is foreseeability” (id.).
As both the Tobin majority and dissent recognized, withholding recovery from the
mother was patently arbitrary (id. at 618, 620). In rejecting recovery nonetheless, the Tobin
majority reviewed “several [policy] factors most often considered” in the development of
the law governing recovery for emotional injury. These factors “overlap in various
degrees” (id. at 615).
The Court had previously rejected the threat of a proliferation of claims and an
increase in fraudulent litigation as outcome-determinative factors, and so handily rejected
these as bases for deciding whether plaintiff should recover in Tobin (id. at 615-616). The
Court concluded, however, that the remaining “factors”—foreseeability, the
“inconsistency of the zone of danger rule, unlimited liability, unduly burdensome liability,
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and the difficulty of circumscribing the area of liability”—all weighed against plaintiff (id.
at 615).
The Court noted that section 313 of the Second Restatement and several states had
adopted the zone-of-danger rule, although it acknowledged that Dillon viewed that rule as
a “rather arbitrary limiting rule which has the unpalatable consequence that a mother who
also fears for herself may recover while, if she does not or has no such similar opportunity,
she may not recover” (id. at 616, citing Dillon, 68 Cal 2d at 747, 441 P2d at 924-925).
While unlimited and unduly burdensome liability were constants under any theory of
recovery, the “most difficult factor” to resolve, according to the Court, was the “reasonable
circumscription, within tolerable limits required by public policy, of a rule creating
liability” (id. at 617).
As the Court recognized, a parent need not witness the events that caused harm to
their child for the parent “to sustain grievous psychological trauma” (id.). “The sight of
gore and exposed bones is not necessary to provide special impact on a parent” (id.). And
apart from the irrationality of conditioning recovery on whether the parent was an
eyewitness to the harm, there is “the logical difficulty of excluding the grandparents, the
relatives, or others in loco parentis, and even the conscientious and sensitive caretaker,
from a right to recovery, if in fact the accident had the grave consequences claimed,
rais[ing] subtle and elusive hazards in devising a sound rule in this field” (id.).
The Tobin dissent argued that arbitrariness alone warranted discarding the limitation
on recovery. The majority justified its holding as necessary to limit defendants’ liability
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(id. at 618). But the Court rejected the limitations adopted in Dillon because, according to
the Court, “none of these standards are of much help if they are to serve the purpose of
holding strict rein on liability and if the test is to be a reasonably objective one” (id.).
It was not until Bovsun that the Court finally held that third parties could recover
“damages for injuries suffered in consequence of the observation of the serious injury or
death” of another in certain circumstances (61 NY2d at 231). The Bovsun Court correctly
viewed the issue as an expansion of the plaintiff’s right to recover and not the creation of
a new duty of the defendant (id. at 229). Nor did the Court create a new cause of action:
“There may be an enlargement of the scope of recoverable damages; there is
no recognition of a new cause of action or of a cause of action in favor of a
party not previously recognized as entitled thereto. In conformity with
traditional tort principles, the touchstone of liability in these cases is the
breach by the defendant of a duty of due care owed the plaintiff” (id. at 233).
Nevertheless, in its quest to limit liability, the Court adopted two requirements
intended to circumscribe the class of plaintiffs who could assert this right of recovery (id.
at 230-231). Under the first, a plaintiff may recover if they are within the zone of danger
created by the defendant’s conduct (id. at 223-224). This requirement does not require
direct infliction of physical harm to the plaintiff, as the Court long ago rejected what had
come to be known as the physical impact test (see Tobin, 24 NY2d at 613 [citation
omitted]). As the analysis goes, a defendant who has placed a plaintiff in the zone of danger
created by the defendant’s conduct has violated a duty of reasonable care owed to the
plaintiff, who may recover for emotional harm, even if the plaintiff is not physically
impacted or injured (Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 229). Notwithstanding the rule’s detractors, the
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Court viewed it “as comporting with the requirements set out in Tobin of a ‘reasonably
objective’ standard which will ‘serve the purpose of holding strict rein on liability’” (id. at
230, quoting Tobin, 24 NY2d at 618).
The second requirement limits recovery only to persons who are members of the
third-party victim’s “immediate family” (id. at 230-231). Because the plaintiffs in Bovsun
and its companion case “were married or related within the first degree of consanguinity
to the injured or deceased person,” the Court had no occasion to opine at the time on “the
outer limits of ‘the immediate family’” (id. at 233 n 13).
It would not be long before the Court defined the boundary of “immediate family”
in Trombetta. In that case, the Court denied a niece recovery as a bystander to her aunt’s
death, though the niece “shared a long and strong emotional bond” with her aunt who had
cared for her and acted as her mother since she was a child (82 NY2d at 554). The Court
held that the definition of “immediate family” was “confine[d] . . . to only the immediate
family as surveyed in Bovsun” and “defined and limited by Bovsun” (id. at 553, 554).
“Immediate family,” limited to spouses, parents, and children, was “a strictly and
objectively defined class” that was “discrete [and] readily determinable” (id. at 553-554).
The Court noted that, regardless of the quality of the plaintiff’s bond with her aunt,
and “[a]lthough plaintiff suffered a personal tragic loss,” those facts could not “justify the
significant extension of defendants’ obligation to be answerable in damages for [plaintiff’s]
emotional trauma” (id. at 553). “On firm policy grounds,” bystander recovery was
foreclosed to individuals “who may be able to demonstrate a blood relationship coupled
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with significant emotional attachment or the equivalent of an intimate, immediate familial
bond” but were not “immediate family” as defined by Bovsun (id.).
The Court’s limiting of the meaning of “immediate family” to the relationships
“surveyed” in and “defined and limited” by Bovsun, and its further admonition that the
definition did not include others “who may be able to demonstrate” the “equivalent of an
intimate, immediate familial bond[,]” was intended to close the door on further expansion
of the plaintiff class. Thus, and contrary to the majority view, I agree with Judge Garcia
that Trombetta is properly understood as holding that only spouses, parents, and children
can recover for their emotional injuries caused by observing defendant’s third-party harm
(compare Garcia, J., concurring op at 2, with majority op at 14). However, the
Bovsun/Trombetta approach, and the majority’s inclusion of grandparents and
grandchildren within the definition of “immediate family,” removes any rational ground
for excluding other close bonds that are functional equivalents.4
As this discussion illuminates, the zone of danger and “immediate family”
limitations suffer from analytic and practical deficiencies. I now turn to approaches broader
than New York’s to assist in designing a truly “objectively reasonable test.”
II.
4
Bovsun included the additional requirement that an emotional injury be “serious and
verifiable” (61 NY2d at 231, citing the Restatement [Second] of Torts § 436, subd [3],
Comment g [1965]). This requirement also acts as a check on unlimited liability and a
flood of litigation, further undermining the necessity of the other two limitations.
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Many jurisdictions have acknowledged the lack of sound policies justifying harsh
limitations on a plaintiff’s recovery for emotional distress and have adopted more flexible
or permissive rules. Oregon has adopted bystander recovery exactly as it is articulated in
the Third Restatement of Torts, which allows recovery by close family members who
perceive accidents even if they are not within the zone of danger (Philibert v Kluser, 360
Or 698, 711, 385 P3d 1038, 1046 [2016]). And several other states have adopted tests with
only slight differences from the Third Restatement rule (see e.g. La Chusa, 48 Cal 3d at
647 [allowing bystanders “closely related” to direct victims to recover for “emotional
distress beyond that which would be anticipated in a disinterested witness”]; Jones v City
of Houston, 294 SW3d 917, 920 [Tex App 2009] [allowing bystanders who have “suffered
shock as a result of a direct emotional impact” and are “closely related” to the direct victim
to recover]; Cameron v Pepin, 610 A2d 279, 284-285 [Me 1992] [requiring that the
plaintiff be “closely related to the victim”]; Satchfield v R.R. Morrison & Son, 872 So 2d
661, 664 [Miss 2004] [same]; Portee, 84 NJ at 101, 417 A2d at 528 [requiring “a marital
or intimate, familial relationship between plaintiff and the injured person”]; Clifton v
McCammack, 43 NE3d 213, 218 [Ind 2015] [requiring the plaintiff to have witnessed the
death or injury of “a loved one with a relationship to the plaintiff analogous to a spouse,
parent, child, grandparent, grandchild, or sibling caused by the defendant’s negligent or
otherwise tortious conduct”]; Graves v Easterbrook, 149 NH 202, 818 A2d 1255, 1261-
1262 [2003] [requiring that the plaintiff and physically injured victim share a “relationship
that is stable, enduring, substantial, and mutually supportive” and “cemented by strong
emotional bonds and provid(ing) a deep and pervasive emotional security”]).
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Some states that require strict familial relationships between bystander plaintiffs and
injured third parties are still less restrictive than New York (see e.g. Barnhill v Davis, 300
NW2d 104 [Iowa 1981] [requiring that the “bystander and the victim were husband and
wife or related within the second degree of consanguinity or affinity”]; La Civ Code Ann
art 2315.6 [A] [allowing spouses, children, siblings, grandparents, and grandchildren to
recover as bystanders]; Grotts v Zahner, 115 Nev 339, 989 P2d 415 [Nev 1999] [employing
a tri-partite scheme in which nuclear family members have a sufficient relationship to assert
a bystander claim, non-family members may not, and relationships between non-nuclear
family members are submitted to the jury to decide if the relationship is sufficiently close
to permit recovery]).
Other states use Dillon’s foreseeability test, which is more permissive of recovery
than the Third Restatement’s test. “The touchstone” of that test “is not a rigid requirement
of sensory and contemporaneous observance of the accident” or strict relational criteria,
“but rather” whether there is a “reasonable foreseeability that the plaintiff-witness would
suffer emotional harm” (Tommy’s Elbow Room, Inc. v Kavorkian, 727 P2d 1038, 1043
[Alaska 1986]; accord Leong, 55 Haw at 408; Sinn v Burd, 486 Pa 146, 172-173173, 404
A2d 672, 686 [1979]; Wages v First Nat. Ins. Co. of Am., 2003 MT 309, ¶ 25, 318 Mont
232, 239, 79 P3d 1095, 1100 [2003]; Paugh v Hanks, 6 Ohio St 3d 72, 78, 451 NE2d 759,
765 [1983]; James v Lieb, 221 Neb 47, 55, 375 NW2d 109, 115 [1985] [adopting the
foreseeability rule but adding that plaintiffs must show a “marital or intimate familial
relationship”]; Heldreth v Marrs, 188 W Va 481, 493, 425 SE2d 157, 169 [1992] [adopting
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a foreseeability test but limiting recovery to “close relatives”]; Hegel v McMahon, 136
Wash 2d 122, 136, 960 P2d 424, 431 [1998] [adopting a foreseeability test but requiring
“objective symptoms of distress that are susceptible to medical diagnosis and proved
through qualified evidence”]).
While there are other holdouts throughout the country that have adopted rules that
are as similarly harsh as New York’s, or deny bystander recovery altogether,
“as is plain from approaches such as those employed by the New York courts,
especially in Trombetta v Conkling, the concentration on difficulties in
‘reasonably circumscribing the area of liability’ represents a policy
perception betokening greater concern with the burdens of imposing liability
than with compensating loss, even where clearly attributable to the fault of
another. Separating out the underlying philosophical orientations, that
concern seems more apparent than real, especially when, to date, there is no
sense of explosive expansion of tort liability either in those jurisdictions that
have recognized the bystander’s claim or in those that have established a
generally available tort for the negligent infliction of emotional distress”
(Howard H. Kestin, The Bystander’s Cause of Action for Emotional Injury:
Reflections on the Relational Eligibility Standard, 26 Seton Hall L Rev 512,
542 [1996]).
New York’s failure to reconsider and reject these unsupported policy justifications
has rendered us an outlier. The Court has used those policies to shield its strict limitations
and kept us from joining jurisdictions like California, Texas, and New Jersey in devising a
rule better suited to address negligently inflicted harm. As jurisdictions adopt a more
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permissive rule without experiencing a flood of litigation, the more the policy foundation
upon which New York’s rule is built erodes.5
III.
The Second Restatement provided that if an actor’s conduct is negligent and creates
“an unreasonable risk of causing bodily harm to another,” and where that harm “results
from . . . shock or fright at harm or peril to a member of” the plaintiff’s “immediate family
occurring in” the plaintiff’s “presence,” the plaintiff could recover (Restatement [Second]
of Torts § 436 [1965]).
The comments to this section noted that the rule applied “even though the plaintiff’s
shock or fright is not due to any fear for” the plaintiff’s safety, “but to fear for the safety
of” the plaintiff’s “wife or child” (id. at Comment f). In a caveat to the rule, the
Restatement’s commentators noted that, due to an absence of sufficient decisions, they
“expresse[d] no opinion as to whether the rule” would allow for recovery for “shock or
fright at harm or peril to a third person who is not a member” of a plaintiff’s “immediate
family, or where the harm or peril does not occur in” the plaintiff’s “presence” (id. at
Caveat; Comment on Caveat h).
5
Courts are on shaky justificatory ground to begin with when they shape substantive law
to avoid an increase in their workloads (see Marin K. Levy, Judging the Flood of
Litigation, 80 U Chi L Rev 1007, 1057 [2013]). “[T]he concern with court-centered
floodgates arguments is precisely about volume—that the . . . courts will have additional
cases to decide (which is, of course, precisely their official obligation)” (id. at 1065).
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Similarly, section 46 of the Second Restatement provided that, where a person
injures or kills a third person, the actor is subject to liability if they “intentionally or
recklessly cause[] severe emotional distress (a) to a member of such person’s immediate
family who is present at the time, whether or not such distress results in bodily harm, or
(b) to any other person who is present at the time, if such distress results in bodily injury”
(Restatement [Second] of Torts § 46 [1965]). Thus, under section 46, the Second
Restatement recognizes two classes of “bystander” plaintiffs: the immediate family
member and any person whose distress results in bodily harm.
As with the commentators’ caveat to section 436, Comment l to section 46 of the
Second Restatement explains that the language “leave[s] open the possibility of situations
in which presence at the time may not be required.” Further, although the cases decided up
to the point of the Second Restatement’s publishing involved a plaintiff who was at least a
close associate with the person harmed, the analysis could extend to strangers: “there
appears to be no essential reason why a stranger who is asked for a match on the street
should not recover when the [person] who asks for it is shot down before [their] eyes, at
least where the stranger’s emotional distress results in bodily harm” (Restatement [Second]
of Torts § 46 at Comment l [1965]).
The Third Restatement, Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm, first published
in 2012 and updated in 2020, reflects the further evolution of the rules governing
“bystander recovery” in the ways left open by the Second Restatement. Under the Third
Restatement, “[a]n actor who negligently causes sudden serious bodily injury to a third
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person is subject to liability for serious emotional harm” caused to “a person who: (a)
perceives the event contemporaneously, and (b) is a close family member of the person
suffering the bodily injury” (Restatement [Third] of Torts: Phys & Emot Harm § 48 [Oct
2020 update]).
The bystander recovery rule articulated in the Third Restatement differs from the
rule developed in Bovsun and Trombetta. It mandates that the plaintiff perceived the harm
to the third party as it occurred. The comments to the Third Restatement explain that the
contemporaneous-perception requirement “is not limited to sight” and give the example of
a blind person hearing a close family member suffer harm as an instance where recovery
would be permitted (id. at Comment e).
In addition, the Third Restatement requires only that the plaintiff and injured or
killed third party are “close family member[s]” as opposed to “immediate family.” The
Third Restatement commentators urged courts to adopt flexible definitions for “close
family.” As the Third Restatement commentators explained, “[s]ometimes people live
functionally in a nuclear family without formal legal family ties” (id. at Comment f). Thus,
“[w]hen defining what constitutes a close family relationship, courts should take into
account changing practices and social norms and employ a functional approach to
determine what constitutes a family” (id.).
That view is supported by studies of human relations and modern family structures.
For example, the percentage of children living with unmarried, cohabitating parents more
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than doubled between 1997, the first year that census data on cohabitation was available,
and 2017; and in 2018 approximately one-third of children were living with an unmarried
parent (Gretchen Livingston, Pew Research Center About one-third of U.S. children are
living with an unmarried parent [last accessed February 5, 2021],
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/04/27/about-one-third-of-u-s-children-are-
living-with-an-unmarried-parent/; see also Rebecca L. Melton, Note, Legal Rights of
Unmarried Heterosexual and Homosexual Couples and Evolving Definitions of “Family”,
29 J Fam L 497, 499 [1991] [surveying statistical data indicating that American families
take many varied forms, including group living and unmarried cohabitation]; Mary Patricia
Treuthart, Adopting A More Realistic Definition of “Family”, 26 Gonz L Rev. 91, 91-92
[1991] [noting that most families are not organized around a married man and woman
occupying traditional gender roles]; Michael J Rosenfled, Young Adulthood as a Factor in
Social Change in the United States, 32 Population & Dev R 27, 40-47 [2006] [describing
a trend away from traditional family structures dominant before and during the industrial
revolution towards alternative family structures, including unmarried cohabitation, and
attributing the shift to a less oppressive culture]; Benjamin Currentz, Living with an
Unmarried Partner Now Common for Young Adults, United States Census Bureau [last
accessed February 5, 2021] https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2018/11/cohabitaiton-
is-up-marriage-is-down-for-young-
adults.html#:~:text=How%20Times%20Have%20Changed,to%20the%20Current%20Po
pulation%20Survey [In 1968, only “0.2 percent of 25- to 34-year-olds lived with an
unmarried partner[;]” in 2018, 14.8% did]).
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Moreover, since this Court’s decision in Tobin, multigenerational households have
almost doubled in number; one in five Americans—20% of the United States population—
live in these arrangements (D’Vera Cohn and Jeffrey S. Passel, A record 64 million
Americans live in multigenerational households, Pew Research Center [last accessed
February 5, 2021], https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018/04/05/a-record-64-
million-americans-live-in-multigenerational-households/; see also Frank F. Furstenberg,
Fifty Years of Family Change: From Consensus to Complexity, 654 Annals Am Acad Pol
Soc Sci 12, 13-15 [2014] [describing the increasing complexity in types of familial
structures throughout the world]).
Unsurprisingly, the revolution in awareness of the diversity of family arrangements
has worked its way into many areas of our jurisprudence. As a constitutional matter, for
zoning purposes, unrelated individuals living together may be the “functional and factual
equivalent” of a family (see e.g. Baer v Town of Brookhaven, 73 NY2d 942, 943 [1989]
[finding that five unrelated elderly women who lived together in a home were a family];
McMinn v Town of Oyster Bay, 66 NY2d 544, 551 [1985] [holding unconstitutional a town
zoning ordinance that defined “family” to exclude households consisting of more than two
unrelated or unmarried persons younger than 62]; Group House of Port Washington, Inc.
v Bd. of Zoning & Appeals of Town of N. Hempstead, 45 NY2d 266, 272 [1978] [holding
that a group home in which two surrogate parents cared for seven foster children was a
family]; City of White Plains v Ferraioli, 34 NY2d 300, 303 [1974] [finding that, for
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purposes of a city’s zoning regulations, a group home consisting of a married couple, their
two biological children, and 10 foster children constituted a single family]).
Other cases similarly demonstrate that when tasked with recognizing the bonds that
comprise family, the Court has adopted an approach that does not depend solely upon the
rigid familial markers of birth or marriage. For example, in Braschi v Stahl Associates
Company (74 NY2d 201 [1989]), Judge Vito J. Titone, writing for the Court, explained the
proper test for interpreting the word “family” in New York’s rent-control code. The Court
rejected the Appellate Division’s holding that the rent-control code limited tenant
succession rights to “family members within traditional, legally recognized familial
relationships” (id. at 207). Instead, in order to serve the broad remedial aims of the rent-
control law,
“the term family, as used in 9 NYCRR 2204.6(d), should not
be rigidly restricted to those people who have formalized their
relationship by obtaining, for instance, a marriage certificate or
an adoption order. The intended protection against sudden
eviction should not rest on fictitious legal distinctions or
genetic history, but instead should find its foundation in the
reality of family life” (id. at 211).
To aid in recognizing the “reality of family life,” the Court described a non-exhaustive list
of factors for courts and juries to consider, including the “longevity of the relationship, the
level of emotional and financial commitment, the manner in which the parties have
conducted their everyday lives and held themselves out to society, and the reliance placed
upon one another for daily family services” (id. at 212-213). Braschi, acknowledged that
the lower courts had already ably applied those factors in a variety of cases to determine
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whether “the totality of the relationship as evidenced by the dedication, caring and self-
sacrifice of the parties” demonstrate that two people were family (id. at 213).
Scores of cases decided before and after Braschi prove that New York courts are
well-equipped to apply a functional mode of analysis in order to identify strong and caring
bonds, when the important remedial purposes of New York law so require (e.g. 2-4 Realty
Assoc. v Pittman, 137 Misc 2d 898, 899 [Civ Ct 1987], affd 144 Misc 2d 311 [App Term
1989] [two men developed a father-son relationship after supporting each other through 25
“long years of life, poor health, and eventual death”]; Zimmerman v Burton, 107 Misc 2d
401, 401 [Civ Ct 1980] [recognizing the tenant succession rights of unmarried partners and
noting that “(t)he law must keep abreast of changing moral standards”]; Fleishman Realty
Corp. v Garrison, 27 Misc 3d 1202(A) [Civ Ct 2010] [finding that over a decade a tenant
formed “loving, committed, long-term relationships” with his boyfriend and boyfriend’s
mother]).
IV.
Thus, we come to the foundational error of Tobin that continues to taint this Court’s
analysis. The specter of unlimited liability is a weak justification for our tort rule, especially
when it is unproven and when its application leads to irrational results. As the Tobin dissent
observed,
“Not one piece of evidence is offered to prove that the ‘dollar-and-cents’
problem [of unlimited liability] will have the dire effects claimed. More
important, the manner in which the argument about infinite liability is
explicitly rejected one day only to be revived the next is indicative of what
may be described as a rather erratic method of decision. One can easily
recognize the ad hoc nature of the argument by comparing passages in our
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opinions where we have chosen to do what modern concepts of justice
demand[] with those cases where we have hesitated to follow through on the
basic currents in the law of torts for the past generation. The statements in
these opinions cannot be reconciled. . . . [T]here has been an expanding
recognition that the argument concerning unlimited liability is of no merit,
yet the aberrations persist. One would imagine that we were here involved
with a catastrophic loss. There have already been decisions imposing liability
of far greater dimension than can ever arise if we should embark upon a
search for ‘essential justice’ in the bystander class of cases” (24 NY2d at
620).
The dissent is not alone.
“Too many respectable commentators have dismissed the ‘flood of litigation’
argument for it to detain us. The problem of imposing ‘unlimited and unduly
burdensome liability’ is no greater as the jurisprudence relating to this cause
of action develops than it has classically been in the past as causes of action
have been articulated and have matured. As we gain familiarity with the
various elements of any cause of action, our concerns about the burdens of
coping with them are usually allayed. Typically, it is not a new development
expanding a cause of action that itself creates problems of understanding and
administration but, rather, the sense of unfamiliarity with its requirements.
By now, with respect to typical factual issues concerning the existence and
extent of emotional injury, this is no longer a real problem” (Howard H.
Kestin, The Bystander’s Cause of Action for Emotional Injury: Reflections
on the Relational Eligibility Standard, 26 Seton Hall L Rev 512, 542 [1996]).
Moreover, as others have observed, “rigid doctrinal limitations on liability to
bystanders produce arbitrary, incongruous and indefensible results. Plaintiffs in
substantially the same position have been treated differently” (Bowen v Lumbermens Mut.
Cas. Co., 183 Wis 2d 627, 651-652-652, 517 NW2d 432, 442 [1994]). Consider the
following examples.
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A parent stands on a street corner with their child waiting for a car service, when
the defendant negligently loses control of their car and fatally strikes the child. The parent
suffers emotional trauma from losing their child and has nightmares of the accident in
which the parent relives the moment when they saw the car hit the child.
As a person within the zone of danger created by the defendant’s conduct and a
person who was the “immediate family” member of the decedent, as defined in Trombetta,
the parent may recover for the physical and emotional injuries suffered as a direct cause of
the defendant striking them as well as the emotional trauma caused by observing the
defendant strike and kill their child.
Incongruously, if the parent is a block away from the child waiting on the corner,
and the child is at all times within the parent’s line of sight, the parent cannot recover in
New York because they were not within the zone of danger, although they are an
“immediate family” member. Where is the fairness in this outcome? Why is the defendant
in this example more worthy of protection from liability than the defendant in the first
example? In both scenarios the defendant killed a child on a public street in plain view of
the child’s parent. The plaintiff’s injury and the defendant’s culpability are the same in
both examples. The measure of deterrence required is also identical. There is no defensible
justification for denying recovery to a plaintiff simply because of where they stood relative
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to the accident that they apprehended. Only blind adherence to a doctrine grounded in an
unproven concern for limiting liability explains the difference in outcome.6
Take the further example of a parent estranged from their minor child, who has not
seen the child since the child’s birth. The child lives with the other parent who has sole
legal and physical custody pursuant to a court order, and who has raised and cared for the
child since birth. The estranged parent seeks to reconnect and finds the child on the street
as the child waits for a school bus, while the custodial parent watches from the window of
their second-story apartment, directly above the bus stop. At that moment, the defendant’s
car fatally strikes the child.
Under New York’s rule, the custodial parent may not recover, despite losing the
child they nurtured since birth. This result, on its own, is indefensible. As with the prior
example, this parent experiences injurious emotional distress over the loss of their child
that is in no way lessened merely because the custodial parent was outside the zone of
danger. But it further contravenes public policy by allowing the noncustodial parent to
recover, in disregard of both society’s and the law’s recognition of the longstanding bond
between the custodial parent and their child.
Or assume, as in Trombetta, a woman within the zone of danger created by the
defendant’s negligence watches a car strike and kill her aunt, who has been the woman’s
6
Further emphasizing the trend in favor of a broader rule, the parent could recover under
the Third Restatement because the parent perceived the accident contemporaneously with
its occurrence and the parent is a close family member of the child (Restatement [Third]
of Torts: Phys & Emot Harm § 48 [Oct. 2020 update]).
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caretaker and a parental figure since childhood. The niece could not recover under
Trombetta. And the majority’s limited expansion of bystander recovery to grandparents
and grandchildren would not expressly apply. Yet one cannot seriously argue that
grandparents are intimate family members (based on presumptions of their role within a
family), but the parental figure in this hypothetical should not be considered an intimate
family member.7
Marriage and blood relationships have served for too long as the primary measure
for a strong human bond based on affection and connectedness. By its own terms, this
measure is overinclusive, as it assumes a reaction that may not be accurate given the actual
nature of the relationship. It is a strange principle that seeks to circumscribe liability but
allows for recovery on such an assumption. But that is not the real problem because our
system already disallows recovery without actual injury and the plaintiff must still provide
proof of real emotional trauma.
The real problem is that this limitation is underinclusive because it assumes that
only spouses and certain relatives have the type of emotional attachment to the third-party
victim that justifies recovery. That assumption cannot stand the cold light of reality. Human
beings have strong, loving connections to non-relatives and non-spouses that are at least as
meaningful as those between spouses and to grandparents (Restatement [Third] of Torts:
Phys & Emot Harm § 48, Comment f [Oct 2020 update] [urging a functional as opposed to
7
Again, showing the trend towards flexibility and recovery for plaintiffs based on their
actual relationships with victims, under the Third Restatement rule, the niece could
recover (Restatement [Third] of Torts: Phys & Emot Harm § 48 [Oct 2020 update]).
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formal definition of family]; Rebecca L. Melton, Note, Legal Rights of Unmarried
Heterosexual and Homosexual Couples and Evolving Definitions of "Family", 29 J Fam L
497, 499 [1991]; Mary Patricia Treuthart, Adopting A More Realistic Definition of
"Family", 26 Gonz L Rev 91, 91–92 [1991]). In the past we have not hesitated to reject
outdated holdings and adopt standards and rules that better reflect life and family structures
(Brooke S.B. v Elizabeth A.C.C., 28 NY3d 1, 26 [2016] [overruling a strict definition of
“parent” that excluded non-biological and non-adoptive caregivers]).
We are also now well past the point of denying rights to persons who could not
marry or who decide that it best serves them and their families not to marry (see e.g. Public
Health Law § 2805-q [prohibiting hospitals from barring domestic partners from visiting
one another]; 22 NYCRR 24.4 [defining “close family member” for purposes of paid sick
leave under the Medical Leave Act as an “employee’s spouse; domestic partner; natural,
foster or step child; natural, foster or step parent; or any relative residing with the employee
or an individual for whom the employee is the primary caregiver”]; 12 NYCRR 380-4.4
[providing that proof of domestic partnership is sufficient in part to establish a non-birthing
parent’s right to take leave to bond with their child]). These legislative changes are no less
powerful than the ones upon which the majority relies to expand tort liability to include
grandparents, yet the majority offers no principle to distinguish legislative recognition of
the familial relationship of grandparents from domestic partners.
The plaintiff in Trombetta is a prime example of the way many families are
structured. But even without a blood relation, people form bonds, for example, based on a
shared culture and a mutual experience born of shared struggle. We cannot ignore that
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unrelated children who grow up together consider themselves siblings in every sense, or
that individuals who have grown close through shared experiences may be family in every
sense of the word save for biology. Our rule should no longer preclude recovery by persons
whose lives are intertwined but choose not to marry because their families would ostracize
them for marrying someone of the same gender, or because they are of a different race or
ethnicity, or from outside of their religious community, or because they simply choose not
to marry. Our rule denying recovery in these situations cannot withstand the logic by which
the Court extends bystander recovery today.
Further, the immediate family requirement should be eliminated for persons within
the zone of danger whose emotional distress caused by observing the serious injury or death
of another manifests in physical harm. In that case, the defendant owes a duty directly to
the plaintiff and traditional rules of foreseeability and proof of actual injury should apply
to all aspects of the claim and demands for recovery. Under those rules, it is foreseeable
that a person within the zone of danger who fears for their life would suffer a particular
serious emotional trauma if they survive but observe another’s severe or fatal injuries. The
third-party victim’s harm is a constant reminder of the plaintiff’s own close call. In
contrast, a bystander across the street may be horrified by what they see, but they will not
associate that memory with their own near-death encounter or harm.
Allowing recovery is not arbitrary in this circumstance because someone in physical
proximity to the victim has a meaningfully different experience from that of someone who
perceives no risk to themselves and suffers no injury (Restatement [Second] of Torts § 46
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at Comment l [1965]). Thus, there is a logical basis for allowing a stranger who is within
the zone of danger to recover while denying liability to any other bystander who happens
to observe the injury or death of another.
As a final point, a rule that excuses a defendant—like the ones sued by plaintiff
here—of the consequences of their negligence is bereft of justice. The defendants failed to
remedy the building façade’s structural weaknesses and thus risked harm to any pedestrians
that walked beneath the building. While the majority holding allows this plaintiff to
recover, if she had stood in a slightly different relationship or was a stranger to the deceased
child, the defendants would not have to compensate her for a part of the harm caused by
their inexcusable negligence. Causing defendants like these to internalize the full cost of
the harm that they cause, and making those harmed by them whole, promotes the important
societal goal of public safety. Second, it encourages potential defendants to acquire
appropriate insurance coverage; this, too, promotes public safety, as these individuals and
entities will likely undertake risk-reduction measures to avoid hefty insurance premiums.
For those concerned that society (renters in the building, for instance) will pay the price for
increased insurance, the costs are unlikely to be greater than for any other type of tort
recovery that we already permit, and defendant can contain increased insurance costs by
taking the legally prescribed steps to reduce the likelihood that their buildings crumble and
kill passersby.
V.
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The majority’s expansion of the definition of “immediate family,” while significant
for this plaintiff and others like her, repeats the errors of the past. It has taken over a quarter
century since Trombetta for the Court to get this far. “I can only hope it will not take as
long for New York to” finally “correct this error” (Tobin, 24 NY2d at 618 [Keating, J.,
dissenting]).
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GARCIA, J. (concurring):
What’s past is precedent. Here, that means this Court’s decision in Trombetta v
Conkling (82 NY2d 549, 554 [1993]) and by reversing the Appellate Division, we overrule,
at least in part, that decision. While the majority is correct that this Court declined to set
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the “outer limits of immediate family” in Bovsun v Sanperi (61 NY2d 219, 233 n 13 [1984]
[“Inasmuch as all plaintiffs in these cases were married or related in the first degree of
consanguinity to the injured or deceased person, we need not now decide where lie the
outer limits of ‘immediate family’”]), we did so in Trombetta. In that case we held that
“sound policy and strong precedents justify our confinement and circumspection of the
zone of danger rule to only the immediate family as surveyed in Bovsun” (82 NY2d at 553)
That “survey” – covering only those married or related in the first degree of consanguinity
-- did not include the relationship at issue here.
Six of my colleagues agree that we should overrule our precedent and expand the
pool of potential plaintiffs. Although, I question the wisdom of that conclusion (see
Bovsun, 61 NY2d at 234 [Kaye, J. dissenting] [noting that “sound policy considerations
supported this court’s decisions consistently denying” recovery for “emotional distress
from observing physical injury to another” and that the “artificial and arbitrary” limitation
imposed would eventually “give way to far-reaching liability affecting the public
generally”]), I see no value in dissenting. Accordingly, acknowledging the proper context
of what we do today—overturning in part our decision in Trombetta—I concur in the
narrow holding that “a grandchild is the ‘immediate family’ of a grandparent for the
purpose of applying the zone of danger rule” (majority op at 15).
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Order reversed, with costs, plaintiffs’ motion to serve and file a second amended complaint
granted in its entirety and certified question answered in the negative. Opinion by Judge
Fahey. Chief Judge DiFiore and Judges Stein and Feinman concur. Judge Rivera concurs
in result in an opinion in which Judge Wilson concurs. Judge Garcia concurs in result in a
separate concurring opinion.
Decided February 18, 2021
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