On December 13, 2000, Appellant received an HIV test after
he learned that his girlfriend was being treated for HIV. Blood was drawn at the
Clinic and sent to American Medical Laboratories, Inc. for testing. Appellant's
test results were negative. However, the Clinic erroneously interpreted the
results, and informed the Appellant he was HIV-positive. It was undisputed that
Appellant was never HIV-positive.
Until the Appellant underwent a second HIV test five years
later, the Appellant continued to believe he was HIV-positive. Appellant alleged
that he grew very depressed and that his depression affected all aspects of his
life. Appellant lost his job, attempted suicide, and started using illegal drugs
heavily. He became estranged from his family and his relationship with his
daughter suffered. Appellant developed an eating disorder and engaged in
"protected sex" with an HIV-positive woman "because there was no reason for him
to live."
Appellant learned that he was not HIV-positive after he
visited the Abundant Life Clinic in mid-2005 for a second HIV-test. Thereafter,
he filed suit against the Clinic claiming negligent infliction of emotional
distress ("NIED"). The lower court granted summary judgment for the Clinic
because there was no evidence the Appellant was in a "zone of physical danger."
The zone of physical danger test requires that the plaintiff
be placed in physical danger as a result of the defendant's negligence, but
stops short of requiring a direct physical impact. District of Columbia case law
has carved out the parameters for this test. For example, the zone of danger
test was satisfied when a plaintiff feared she had consumed worms after she saw
worms in her food, most of which she had already consumed. Similarly, the zone
of physical danger could be satisfied if the mother could prove that her
physical health, or that of her unborn twins, was threatened when the hospital
failed to determine she was pregnant before administering x-rays. On the other
hand, the court found the plaintiffs were not within the zone of physical danger
when a funeral home allegedly mishandled a corpse or when the plaintiff received
a letter from the hospital informing her she may have been exposed to
contaminated syringes.
Appellant presented evidence that he suffered genuine and
severe emotional distress, but failed to present any evidence demonstrating that
he was placed in physical danger as a result of plaintiff's negligence. In other
words, the Appellant failed to show that the erroneous HIV test results created
a threat of physical harm. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed
the summary judgment in favor of the Clinic and denied recovery because there
was no evidence Appellant was placed in a zone of physical danger.
Associate Judge Ruiz, concurring, noted that this case
warrants reconsideration by the full court. The Court of Appeals overruled the
prior "impact rule" and adopted the "zone of danger" rule intending to expand
upon plaintiffs' ability to recover on NIED claims. Doctors have the benefit of
extremely advanced medical diagnostic capabilities that can verify objectively
and assess emotional distress. To some extent, this alleviates the burden on the
courts in assessing the merit of emotional distress claims. Accordingly, Judge
Ruiz wrote that there ought to be little concern about the need to safeguard
against fraudulent claims and the zone of danger test should not be so strictly
construed.