Personal injury may involve more than just physical harm. One possible claim arising from a personal injury situation is an emotional distress claim. Often, the plaintiff must show some physical manifestation of the emotional distress. In other circumstances, a plaintiff may have a viable emotional distress claim, if she can show that she was subjected to extreme or outrageous conduct. Take this short quiz to learn more about emotional distress claims.
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1.        âEmotional distressâ is the same as: ____
                   a.        pain and suffering
                   b.        loss of consortium
                    c.        mental anguish
                   d.        inordinate worry
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2.        Which of the following items is not considered emotional distress? ____
                     a.        fright
                    b.        headaches
                    c.        dismay
                    d.        humiliation
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3.        To prove emotional distress, the plaintiff must show: ____
                    a.        the distress is more than fleeting
                     b.        the defendantâs conduct caused the distress
                    c.        the distress is medically significant
                    d.        all of the above
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4.        Damages for emotional distress can be awarded for: ____
                     a.        seeing your child being hit by a car
                     b.        mistreatment of a corpse
                     c.        the plaintiffâs fear of contracting a terrible disease
                     d.        all of the above
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5.        To protect against frivolous and fraudulent claims, some states require the plaintiff to:   ____
                      a.        produce psychiatric records
                      b.        present disinterested testimony from an objective witness
                      c.        prove he or she was physically injured
                      d.        take the Fifth
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6.        Emotional distress may be pursued as a separate and independent claim when: ____Â
                      a.        the judge says itâs okay
                      b.        the defendant acted intentionally and outrageously
                      c.         the plaintiff was physically injured
                       d.          none of the above
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7.        Intentional infliction of emotional distress occurs when the defendantâs conduct: ____
                      a.        exceeded all boundaries of conduct tolerated by decent society
                      b.        was especially calculated to cause, and did cause, mental distress
                      c.        caused distress of substantial or enduring quality that no reasonable person should be expected to endure
                      d.        all of the above
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8.        A finding of liability for intentional infliction of emotional distress is legally supported by the fact that:  ____
                        a.        the plaintiff had been treated for mental illness
                        b.        the defendant knew of plaintiffâs peculiar susceptibility to emotional distress
                        c.        the judge shook his head during the plaintiffâs testimony
                       d.        (b) and (c)
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9.        When a parent claims he or she suffered emotional distress when his or her child was injured, the parent must have been:  ____
                      a.        an eye witness to the accident
                      b.        a custodial parent
                      c.        at the hospital when the child arrived in ambulance
                      d.        (a) or (c)
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10.      A person has a claim for emotional distress when he or she witnesses an accident involving: ____
                       a.        a good friend
                      b.        another pedestrian
                      c.        a close relative
                      d.        (a) and (c)
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11.      A judge can refuse to send a claim for emotional distress to the jury if: ____
                      a.        the judge doesnât think that the defendantâs conduct was sufficiently outrageous
                      b.        the plaintiff never sought counseling
                      c.        the plaintiff doesnât look like he or she is up to it
                      d.        all of the above
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12.      Finish this quotation from the treatise Prosser on Torts, âIt is not difficult to discover in the earlier opinions a distinctly masculine astonishment that any woman would ever be so silly as to allow herself to be: ____
                     a.        âoverwhelmed by sadness after a broken promise to marryâ
                     b.        âfrightened or shocked into a miscarriageâ
                     c.        âfrightened by someone tapping on the window at nightâ
                     d.        âconvinced by her doctor that she was crazyâ
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13.      Since the old cases are so much fun, try this one. According to a judge in an article he wrote for the Harvard Law Review in 1936, why is it not an infliction of emotional distress to proposition a woman for illicit sex? ____
                     a.        thereâs no insult
                      b.        women take pleasure in refusing
                     c.        the womanâs dignity is not compromised
                      d.        thereâs no harm in asking
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14.      Which of the following is not an intentional infliction of emotional distress? ____
                      a.        spectacular rudeness
                      b.        having hot coffee spilled in your lap
                      c.        having someone âflip the birdâ at you
                       d.        all of the above
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15.      The âzone of dangerâ refers to: ____
                       a.        an imaginary boundary around the plaintiff during the accident
                      b.        being in the presence of the accident injuring a family member
                       c.        a 300 foot radius from a family memberâs accident
                      d.        within the arm-span of the defendant
1.        c
2.        b
3.        d
4.        d
5.        c
6.        b
7.        d
8.        b -- Option (c) is more of a mistake in judging, it is not âlegal support.â
9.        a
10.      c
11.      a
12.      b
13.      d
14.      d -- These items are just an unfortunate part of being out in public.
15.      b
Emotional distress can be difficult to understand from a legal standpoing, and assigning a dollar value to this distress can be even trickier. But make no mistake, emotional distress is a legitimate injury with serious consequences. If you are planning on filing a claim for emotional distress, you may want to consider speaking with a personal injury attorney in your area today.Â