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Liability for Negligently Inflicted Psychiatric Harm: Justifications and Boundaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 November 2009
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The devastating impact that psychiatric illness can have on people's lives is beyond dispute. It would be absurd to contend that such harm is somehow intrinsically less serious than physical injury; indeed, over many years, medical research has pointed to the artificiality of characterising it as lacking physical manifestations. Its destructive potential is brought into sharper focus as mental attributes become ever more integral to everyday functioning. Yet, to this day, neither popular nor judicial opinion is noticeably receptive to a cause of action based on proof of a “recognised psychiatric disorder”, which is still often trivialised by the label “nervous shock”. This negative attitude is most apparent when claimants are not, or are not regarded as, the direct victims of someone else's conduct. The very notion of compensating people whose suffering derives from their reaction to the injuring of others often evokes surprise, indignation and disdain.
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References
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127 Except for the appellant who was not on duty at the ground, but at the local hospital.
128 See especially Judge L.J. (dissenting).
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161 See, Kidner, R., “Resiling from the Anns principle: the variable nature of proximity in negligence”, (1987) 7 Legal Studies 319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
162 Coates (1995) 36 N.S.W.L.R. 1.
163 See, e.g. Brice v. Brown [1984] 1 All E.R. 997 and Jaensch v. Coffey (1984) 155 C.L.R. 549.
164 [1996] A.C. 155. Contrast Lord Keith, at pp. 169–170 and Lord Jauncey, at pp. 179–180, with Lord Ackner, at p. 170.
165 Above, at pp. 102–103.
166 Wigg v. British Railways Board (1986) 136 N.L.J. 446, per Tucker J.
167 See Lord Oliver's reference to Lord Bridge's speech in Caparo: Akock [1992] 1 A.C. 310, at p. 415.
168 Law Com. Consultation Paper No. 137, op. cit., n. 2 above, at paras. 5.21–5.27.
169 J.G. Fleming (1994) 2 Tort L.Rev. 202, at p. 204.
170 According to a member of the Hillsborough solicitors' steering committee, everyone who sought legal advice about a “nervous shock” claim following the disaster had a relative at the ground. Among the claimants were a fiancee and a “particular friend”, but no strangers to the primary victims, other than the police officers on duty: The Independent, 4 October, 1991.
171 Cf. Jones, , op. cit., n. 11 above, at p. 10.Google Scholar
172 Stapleton, , op. cit., n. 22 above, at p. 83.Google Scholar
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