Court Opinion

ID: 9759882
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-29 00:31:43.68161+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:29:05.773339
License: Public Domain

OPINION
BOURCIER, Justice.
This case comes before us on appeal from a final judgment of the Superior Court following summary judgment in favor of Narragansett Television, L.P.
I
Facts and Travel
On the morning of May 17, 1993, a tragic series of events began to unfold. Early that morning, from his home in Chepaehet in the town of Glocester, Bruce E. Clift (decedent) telephoned his wife, Judith A. Clift (Clift), who was at work to tell her that “it’s over” and that he was going to commit suicide.
It appears that it was known that her husband was a mentally ill person, and so Clift left her workplace and returned home, which was to a small single family house on Route 44 in the town of Glocester. When she arrived, she saw her husband perched in an upstairs window. He had turned on a gas jet inside the house, intending thereby to carry out his previously announced intention to commit suicide. He was at that time also firing guns which he kept in the house. Clift tried unsuccessfully to convince her husband to put down his guns and to stop his self-destructive behavior and threats of suicide, but to no avail. Ignoring his wife’s requests, he continued his threats of suicide and, in an apparent attempt to convince his wife of the sincerity of his threats, he then proceeded to cut his throat with a shard of glass from a broken window, causing blood to gush out. At that point, a police vehicle drove up to the house, causing him to become especially irate, whereupon he again began firing his weapons into the shrubbery surrounding the house as well as into the house ceilings. His wife, in fear, immediately exited the house and waited outside for further police assistance to arrive.
Within a short time thereafter, the Chepa-chet Police and the State Police surrounded the house and cordoned it off, setting up a police barrier. A State Police officer trained to deal with hostage situations was summoned to the scene, and he telephoned the decedent in an attempt to dissuade him from committing suicide. During the sensitive negotiation period that followed, an exponentially growing press contingency began to gather at the scene but was kept back from the house by the police barrier. Hours later, shortly after 5 p.m., an enterprising reporter from Narragansett Television, L.P. (Narragansett), doing business here in Rhode Island through its local television station, Channel 12, telephoned the Clift home. She did so without first having informed the police or the Clift family of her intentions, and she spoke to the decedent, who then agreed to a recorded telephone interview. The reporter told the decedent that the taped interview would be played later, sometime during the 6 p.m. television station news broadcast. At 6:04 p.m. the reporter, while still at the scene, appeared on the 6 p.m. news telecast and reported from the scene that,
“it’s obvious we’re dealing with a very troubled man right now. When I spoke to Bruce Clift on the telephone he sounded very disoriented. I asked him if he wanted us to broadcast a message for him. He agreed. What you’re about to hear is a man who is angry at the world and could be on the verge of suicide. It’s an interview you’ll see only on Channel 12.”
The telephone colloquy reported after that introduction was as follows:
“REPORTER: If your wife is watching right now, what would you say to your wife so she would understand?
“DECEDENT: Only that I love her, that anything she has done* * * I apologize ‘cause I know it’s my fault. Hey, you know, the whole nine yards, right. This is suicide.
“REPORTER: Do you realize what is going on outside your house?
“DECEDENT: Yeah, I know everything.
“REPORTER: And what do you think about this?
“DECEDENT: I really don’t care what’s going on outside my house.
“REPORTER: Are you scared?
*807“DECEDENT: I don’t give a [beep inserted by Channel 12] if the National Guard comes out here.
“REPORTER: Did you mean to hold your wife hostage? Did you.
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“DECEDENT: No, I don’t want my wife hostage.
“REPORTER: Did you want to harm her in any way?
“DECEDENT: No.
“REPORTER: Did you harm her in any way?
“DECEDENT: No.
“REPORTER: Are you sick? Do you have some kind of sickness?
“DECEDENT: No, I don’t want no help no more. I’m done trying to play help.
“REPORTER: Are you going to give yourself up sir and try to work.
“DECEDENT: No, I’m not giving myself up anywhere. This is it. This is the final stand.
“REPORTER: Mr. Clift told me he would not surrender, and after he made that very clear to me, he hung up the ‘phone.’ ”
The decedent carried out his previous suicide threats at approximately 6:07 p.m. The police immediately entered the Clift home, and noted that the television sets in the home were operating and were tuned to Channel 12, the channel that had just previously broadcast the exclusive report of the reporter’s telephone call to the decedent.
On February 14,1994, Clift, as administra-trix of her husband’s estate; for herself, as a surviving widow; and as surviving parent of decedent’s three minor children, commenced a civil action against the defendant, Narragansett. In her complaint, as finally amended on March 1,1994, she alleged nine causes of action, which were designated therein as “negligence,” “wilful, wanton misconduct,” “intentional tort of trespass,” “right of privacy,” “negligent infliction of emotional distress,” “intentional infliction of emotional distress,” “violation of wrongful death statutes, “loss of consortium,” and “loss of companionship.”
Narragansett responded to Clift’s complaint by motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, asserting therein a failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Clift’s objection and response to that motion was supported by the affidavit of Stanley Cath, M.D. (Dr. Cath), a Massachusetts psychoanalyst retained for purposes of litigation by Clift. Narragansett’s motion was then, because- of that affidavit, treated by the hearing justice as a motion for summary judgment.1 After hearing thereon, the hearing justice rendered a written decision on September 21, 1994 in which she granted Narragansett’s motion. On September 29, 1994, final judgment was entered dismissing Clift’s complaint. This appeal followed.
II
Negligence
Blackstone describes suicide as
“Self-Murder, the pretended heroism, but real cowardice, of the stoic philosophers, who destroyed themselves to avoid those ills which they had not the fortitude to endure, though the attempting it seems to be countenanced by the civil law, yet was punished by the Athenian law * * *. And also the law of England wisely and religiously considers, that no man hath a power to destroy life, but by commission from God, the author of it: and, as the suicide is guilty of a double offense; one spiritual, in invading the prerogative of the Almighty, and rushing into his immediate presence uncalled for; the other temporal, against the king, who hath an interest in the preservation of all his subjects; the law has therefore ranked this among the highest crimes, making it a peculiar species of felony, a felony committed on one’s self. * * * The law very rationally judges, that every melancholy or hypoehondriác fit does not deprive a man of the capacity of *808discerning right from wrong; which is necessary, as was observed in a former chapter, to form a legal excuse. And therefore if a real lunatic kills himself in a lucid interval, he is a felo de se as much as another man.” Tate v. Canonica, 180 Cal.App.2d 898, 5 Cal.Rptr. 28, 31-32 (1960) (quoting 4 Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, ch. 14 at 189 (8th ed. 1778)).
Rhode Island, a common law state, also considers suicide a felony. In re Marlene B., 540 A.2d 1028 (R.I.1988).
The first civil action cases in this country involving suicide claims allegedly resulting from a defendant’s negligent act were strongly influenced by the common law classification of suicide as a felony. As a result, the courts in those earlier cases found that the act of suicide normally terminated, all civil liability of a defendant. • The judicial reasoning was that suicide, being a criminal act, was typically not the foreseeable result of any alleged negligence. See Scheffer v. Railroad Co., 105 U.S. (15 Otto) 249, 26 L.Ed. 1070 (1881). From this early restricted view there emerged, however, a line of cases that came to recognize a right of recovery in certain limited factual instances.
The new rule that developed in those cases was that the act of suicide could permit a civil action for damages but only if the particular suicide was the
“result-of an uncontrollable impulse, or is accomplished in delirium or frenzy caused by the * * * [defendant’s negligent act], and without conscious volition to produce death, having knowledge of the physical nature and consequences of the act. An act of suicide resulting from a moderately intelligent power of choice, even though the choice is determined by a disordered mind, should be deemed a new and independent, efficient cause of the death that immediately ensues.” Bogust v. Iverson, 10 Wis.2d 129, 102 N.W.2d 228, 232 (1960)(quoting Daniels v. New York N.H. & H.R. R., 183 Mass. 393, 67 N.E. 424 (1903)).
See also Brown v. American Steel and Wire Co., 43 Ind.App. 560, 88 N.E. 80 (1909); Freyermuth v. Lutfy, 376 Mass. 612, 382 N.E.2d 1059 (1978); Cauverien v. De Metz, 20 Misc.2d 144, 188 N.Y.S.2d 627 (N.Y.Sup.1959); Falkenstein v. City of Bismarck, 268 N.W.2d 787 (N.D.1978). The Daniels rule relied upon in Bogust later emerged in the Restatement (Second) Torts, § 455 (1965) which states:
“If the actor’s negligent conduct so brings about the delirium or insanity of another as to make the actor liable for it, the actor is also liable for harm done by the other to himself while delirious or insane, if his delirium or insanity
(a) prevents him from realizing the nature of his act and the certainty or risk of harm involved therein, or
(b) makes it impossible for him to resist an impulse caused by his insanity which deprives him of his capacity to govern his conduct in accordance with reason.”
The right to civil recovery for negligent. conduct allegedly resulting in suicide was considered, and some contend further expanded,2 by the California court in 1960.
In Tate, 5 CaLRptr. at 40, perhaps the most cited case on the issue, that court held that
“where the negligent wrong only causes a mental condition in which the injured person is able to realize the nature of the act of suicide and has the power to control it if he so desires, the act then becomes an independent intervening force and the wrongdoer cannot be held liable for the death. On the other hand, if the negligent wrong causes mental illness which results in an uncontrollable impulse to commit suicide, then the wrongdoer may be held liable for the death.”
The California court additionally noted that there could be liability even if the deceased knew what he was doing, that is, when he knew the nature of his act, but did not have the ability to decide against the suicide and to refrain from killing himself. Id. That California rule is essentially the *809same as the view adopted by the majority of other courts that have been confronted with the civil-liability-for-suicide issue. It permits recovery when a deceased knew and was aware of the nature of his or her act but was unable to completely abandon or overcome the “uncontrollable impulse” to carry it out. See Tucson Rapid Transit Co. v. Tocci, 3 Ariz.App. 330, 414 P.2d 179, 186-87 (1966).3 The reasoning of Tate has been followed in many of the later decisions. See Exxon Corp. v. Brecheen, 526 S.W.2d 519, 524 (Tex.1975)(interpreting uncontrollable impulse rule as applying in situations in which the deceased had knowledge of the nature of his suicidal act but was unable to control his actions); Orcutt v. Spokane County, 58 Wash.2d 846, 364 P.2d 1102, 1105 (1961)(where medical test establishes uncontrollable impulse to commit suicide, it is of no consequence that the deceased knew the nature of the act or used reasoning to accomplish the act). See also Jamison v. Storer Broadcasting Co., 511 F.Supp. 1286 (E.D.Mich., S.D.1981).
Although the holding in Tate did not extend beyond the well-established uncontrollable impulse rule, the court did, however, proceed to question, in dicta, whether in cases involving a voluntary suicide not committed under the influence of an uncontrollable impulse “ ‘the intervening act of a third person * * * relievefs] the original wrongdoer of liability if the intervening act was a reasonably foreseeable result of the original actor’s wrongdoing.’” Tate, 5 Cal.Rptr. at 42. However, the California court specifically stated that they “need not and do not now decide” that question. Id.
The closest any court has yet come to adopting the broad view suggested by the dicta in Tate was Zygmaniak v. Kawasaki Motors Corp., 131 N.J.Super. 403, 330 A.2d 56 (1974), dismissed, 68 N.J. 94, 343 A.2d 97 (1975), in which the New Jersey court reversed a grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendant. That court in that case held that a finding of an irresistible impulse to commit suicide was unnecessary so long as the other necessary elements of the plaintiffs negligence claim were satisfied. Because that ease centered upon an appeal from a summary judgment grant, the court, in sustaining the appeal, did not undertake to discuss the merits of the case but only determined that the case pleadings and affidavits considered by the hearing justice raised a question of fact that should have prevented summary judgment. No later negligence case in New Jersey has followed that precedent, and no other state has adopted such a liberal right of recovery in suicide cases. Some later cases have, however, indicated a willingness to adopt such a rule but, as in Tate, have only expressed that willingness in dicta. See Halko v. New Jersey Transit Rail Operations, Inc., 677 F.Supp. 135 (S.D.N.Y.1987); Fuller v. Preis, 35 N.Y.2d 425, 363 N.Y.S.2d 568, 322 N.E.2d 263 (1974). Cf. Pigney v. Pointer’s Transport Services, Ltd., 1 W.L.R. 1121 (1957)(an English case allowing recovery for a suicide without a preliminary showing of an uncontrollable impulse, insanity, or delirium).
It is important to note that to this point in our opinion we have only addressed those cases concerning claims based solely upon common law negligence principles and not cases that involved intentional acts or conduct by a civil defendant that were intended to bring about the final act of suicide. That distinction between the negligent action of a defendant and the intentional action of a defendant is significant because in those intentionally caused suicide cases, an entirely different rule of liability comes into play. We are also not herein addressing case-fact instances wherein a special relationship existed between a defendant and a suicide-deceased in a civil action later commenced by representatives of the deceased. In those particular cases, the courts, because of the special relationship factor, have uniformly noted the existence of a duty of ordinary care. In such cases, a defendant could be held liable for the suicide, notwithstanding the absence of any uncontrollable impulse, if *810the suicide was a foreseeable risk stemming from the defendant’s negligent acts. See Hickey v. Zezulka, 439 Mich. 408, 487 N.W.2d 106, 119 (1992) (prisoner in a holding cell hanged himself and court held that the defendant owed a duty of ordinary care to give aid to and protect the prisoner from harm because of the special relationship that existed between jailer and his prisoner and the prisoner’s claim brought by his legal representatives was premised upon the theory that the defendant was negligent in failing to prevent his prisoner’s suicide or in creating a stimulus for the commission of his suicidal act, and the suicide was not a superseding intervening cause of his injury); Falkenstein v. City of Bismarck, 268 N.W.2d 787, 791 (N.D.1978)(inmate of city jail committed suicide and court held that “notice of propensity to commit suicide would result in an obligation to exercise greater care in preventing the suicide”). See also Meier v. Ross General Hospital, 69 Cal.2d 420, 71 Cal.Rptr. 903, 445 P.2d 519 (1968)(a hospital was potentially hable because a hospital patient who was at a high risk for suicide was placed near an open window from which she later jumped).
With regard to civil claims alleging, as a basis for liability, the negligence of a defendant as being the proximate cause of a decedent’s suicide, the majority rule that has evolved is that unless a special relationship existed between the defendant and the deceased that created an increased or higher duty of care to protect a potentially suicidal person from foreseeable injury, the Restatement (Second) Torts § 455 (1965) rule is the most favored and applied.4 That rule recognizes liability for negligent conduct (1) that brings about delirium or insanity in another and (2) if while that condition of delirium or insanity continues to exist, it prevents the affected person from realizing the nature of his or her condition or makes it impossible for him or her to resist the suicidal impulse by depriving that person of the capacity to reasonably control his or her conduct and not carry out the suicidal impulse.
We believe that the application of the uncontrollable impulse rule is especially compelling in regard to the facts present in this appeal because in addition to the negligence liability issue, there is interwoven into those facts fundamental First Amendment considerations.
In DeFilippo v. National Broadcasting Co., 446 A.2d 1036 (R.I.1982), we there held that a television station was not liable for the hanging death of a child allegedly inspired by the showing of a stunt on the “Tonight Show” similar to the one used by the child to hang himself. After establishing that the First Amendment applies to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, we began our legal analysis in that case with a discussion of the extent to which First Amendment rights may be proscribed. We found that only speech falling into certain specifically defined areas could be controlled. Those controllable areas included obscenity, fighting words, defamatory invasions of privacy, and words likely to produce imminent lawless action (incitement). In DeFilippo we considered the program-stunt-descriptive-speech leading to the hanging suicide to be incitement speech. Id. at 1040. Although potentially subject to regulation, we nonetheless held that the speech displayed on the “Tonight Show” did not permit recovery under either a negligence or a recklessness theory because
“the incitement exception must be applied with extreme care since the criteria underlying its application are vague. Further, allowing recovery under such an exception would inevitably lead to self-censorship on the part of broadcasters, thus depriving both broadcasters and viewers of freedom *811and choice, for ‘above all else, the First Amendment means that government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter or its content.’” Id. at 1042 (citing Police Department of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92, 95, 92 S.Ct. 2286, 2290, 88 L.Ed.2d 212, 216 (1972)).
As has been previously noted, courts generally have refused to expand the right of recovery for a suicide alleged to have been negligently caused beyond the uncontrollable impulse rule explained in Bogust and Tate. That right of recovery certainly should not be expanded in fact situations when fundamental First Amendment rights of the press are involved, as they are in this case and appeal.
“[T]he right to publish is central to the First Amendment and basic to the existence of constitutional democracy. * * * No less important to the news dissemination process is the gathering of information. News must not be unnecessarily cutoff at its source, for without freedom to acquire information the right to publish would be impermissibly compromised.” Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665, 727-28, 92 S.Ct. 2646, 2672-73, 33 L.Ed.2d 626, 667 (1972)(Stewart, J., dissenting).
Although the press “ ‘has no special immunity from the application of general laws,’ ” id. at 683, 92 S.Ct. at 2657, 33 L.Ed.2d at 640, we certainly should not adopt, where fundamental rights of the press are involved, a broader rule than that followed in the overwhelming majority of other state jurisdictions. For us to do so would subject the members of the Rhode Island press, as well as the citizenry of Rhode Island, to greater civil liability than other press persons and citizens in the majority of our sister states. Such a rule would impermissibly inhibit the Rhode Island press in its efforts to gather and disseminate the news. We believe that the uncontrollable impulse rule, which is generally applied in negligence cases involving suicide in which the press is not involved, should also be the rule in cases in which the press is involved. Any rule expanding liability in cases involving the press, such as suggested in Tate, Halko, Fuller, and Zygman-iak, would in our view unfairly create a dual standard of care that would actually impinge on fundamental First Amendment rights of the press.
In light of scientific advances constantly being made in the study of the cause and the prevention of suicide, we conclude that even though the press is not entitled to any greater protection than that afforded by the uncontrollable impulse rule, it is likewise not deserving of anything less. That approach we believe strikes the proper balance between the right of a person to recover for a suicide allegedly caused by the negligence of the press and the constitutional requirement to protect the press from the chilling effect of overly broad regulations of speech. That is not to say that we believe the press is immune from liability for its negligence or that the First Amendment is an impenetrable shield from a negligence claim. To the contrary, we believe that notwithstanding First Amendment constitutional protections, everyone, including the press, should be answerable for unprivileged negligent actions that proximately result in suicide. We realize in expressing that belief that there are those both in and out the press-media field who insist that the First Amendment is an impenetrable shield from both press criticism and civil liability. We also realize that First Amendment rights of the press are as much endangered by its zealots as by its critics. Accordingly, the uncontrollable impulse rule that we believe to be fair to all, as explained earlier, will hereinafter be applied in Rhode Island to all negligence actions seeking recovery for suicide regardless of who a defendant might be or whether the press is involved.
Applying the uncontrollable impulse rule to the facts of this appeal, we conclude that the trial justice erred in granting summary judgment on the negligence count. There were facts alleged in the medical affidavit of Dr. Cath, the plaintiffs’ medical expert, that suggest that the decedent’s suicide resulted from an uncontrollable impulse that was brought about by a delirium or insanity caused by Narragansett’s negligence. It appears that the trial justice undertook to evaluate the opinions expressed by Dr. Cath in *812his affidavit. He was not permitted to do so. That fact evaluation constituted a matter that is reserved for the trial jury. The role of the hearing justice in summary judgment proceedings is limited to issue finding and not issue determination. Saltzman v. Atlantic Realty Co., 434 A.2d 1343, 1345 (1981). In this case, the trial justice was not permitted to evaluate Dr. Oath’s opinions but was instead required to view them in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, accepting as true the medical opinion that the telephone call exacerbated the already existing “self-destructive impulses” of the decedent and that absent the reporter’s telephone call it was “unlikely” that the decedent would have committed suicide “when he did.” That affidavit presented an issue of material fact earmarked for the trial jury to decide. See Holliston Mills, Inc. v. Citizens Trust Co., 604 A.2d 331, 334 (R.I.1992); Rustigian v. Celona, 478 A.2d 187, 189-90 (R.I.1984); Steinberg v. State, 427 A.2d 338, 340 (R.I.1981).
III
Wrongful Death, Loss of Consortium, Loss of Companionship
Because summary judgment was improper on the plaintiffs’ negligence count, it was accordingly improper in regard to the wrongful death, loss of consortium, and loss of companionship claims and counts.
IV
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
The analysis of whether a defendant is liable for a suicide allegedly caused by intentional conduct differs from the analysis of liability for negligent conduct because there is no superseding-cause concept applicable to intentional torts. Kimberlin v. De-Long, 637 N.E.2d 121 (Ind.1994). See also Victor E. Schwartz, Civil Liability for Causing Suicide: A Synthesis of Law and Psychiatry, 24 Vand.L.Rev. 217 (1971). Thus “[a] defendant who intentionally subjected another to mental distress without intending to cause bodily harm would nevertheless be liable for resulting bodily harm if he should have foreseen that the mental distress might cause such harm.” Tate, 5 Cal.Rptr. at 34 (citing State Rubbish Collectors Ass’n v. Siliznoff, 38 Cal.2d 330, 240 P.2d 282 (1952)). See also Restatement (Second) Torts § 306 (1965). However, foreseeability is not, in and of itself, sufficient to establish liability in cases involving suicide. There must in addition be proof that a defendant’s intentional conduct was a “substantial factor” in bringing about the suicide, certainly a more stringent test than that employed in typical intentional infliction of emotional distress cases. Rowe v. Marder, 750 F.Supp. 718, 724 (W.D.Pa.1990), aff'd, 935 F.2d 1282 (3d Cir.1991); Tate, 5 Cal.Rptr. at 36; Kimberlin, 637 N.E.2d at 127; Mayer v. Town of Hampton, 127 N.H. 81, 497 A.2d 1206 (1985). The stricter substantial factor rule is inherently necessary in suicide cases because “the final cause of death always appears as an independent act of a separate will, always raising the very real possibility that the suicide was truly unrelated to the defendant’s actions.” Rowe, 750 F.Supp. at 724. Additionally, there must be proved an intent to cause injury and not just an intent to act. Thus, liability can only be found where “the actor intended to cause injury, and the injury is a substantial factor in bringing about the suicide.” Tate, 5 Cal.Rptr. at 36.
Notwithstanding our acknowledgment of the substantial factor rule, as well as our prior adoption of Restatement (Second) Torts, § 46 (1965), in Champlin v. Washington Trust Co. of Westerly, 478 A.2d 985, 988 (R.I.1984), the instant ease is not a substantial factor case, and the plaintiffs have failed to allege in their complaint the necessary elements of a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.5 That failure entitled *813Narragansett to summary judgment. In order for the plaintiffs to have avoided summary judgment, they were required to allege in their complaint and demonstrate not only extreme and outrageous conduct on the part of Narragansett, but also the existence of resulting physical symptomatology. Reilly v. United States, 547 A.2d 894 (R.I.1988). Other than a general conclusory statement in the amended complaint, the plaintiffs allege.no physical ills caused by the defendant’s conduct. In fact, they ignore Rhode Island’s physical symptomatology requirement and cite instead in their brief to this Court a Maine case that merely requires severe mental pain. Vicnire v. Ford Motor Credit Co., 401 A.2d 148 (Me.1979). The Maine court distinguished between negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims by holding that physical symptoms are necessary only when the infliction of emotional distress is negligent. However, this Court has specifically stated that in Rhode Island no difference exists between negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims in respect to the need for physical symptomatology. We have recognized “the right to recover damages by one who has been subjected to the intentional or the negligent infliction of mental distress as long as the distress [is] * * * accompanied by physical ills.” (Emphasis added.) Reilly, 547 A.2d at 896.
The unsupported conclusory assertions of physical ills contained in the plaintiffs’ complaint were insufficient in our view to have successfully resisted the defendant’s motion for summary judgment. “The opposing party [to a summary judgment motion] may not rest upon allegations contained in the pleadings alone to establish a genuine issue of material fact.” Sisters of Mercy v. Wilkie, 668 A.2d 650, 652 (R.I.1996)(citing Nichola v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., 471 A.2d 945, 948 (R.I.1984)). The memoranda and briefs submitted to this Court and to the Superior Court below did not add any substantive meaning to the assertions made in the plaintiffs’ complaint. It fails to state a viable claim for the intentional infliction of emotional distress. The motion justice did not err in granting summary judgment for the defendant on count 6. It was for the Court in the first instance to determine whether the defendant’s alleged conduct, set out in the complaint, could reasonably be regarded as so extreme and outrageous to result in liability. Restatement (Second) Torts § 46, comment h (1965).
As the Court in Howell v. New York Post Co., 81 N.Y.2d 115, 596 N.Y.S.2d 350, 612 N.E.2d 699 (1993) stated:
“The 1948 Restatement expressly provided that privileged conduct could not be the basis for liability (Restatement of Torts § 46 [1948 Supp.]), and the comments to the current version signify an intent to continue the privileged-conduct exception: ‘The conduct, although it would otherwise be extreme and outrageous, may be privileged under the circumstances. The actor is never liable, for example, where [the actor] has done no more than to insist upon his [or her] legal rights in a permissible way, even though he [or she] is well aware that such insistence is certain to cause emotional distress.’ (Restatement [Second] of Torts § 46, comment g.)
“A newspaper’s publication of a newsworthy photograph is an act within the *814contemplation of the ‘privileged-conduct’ exception (compare, Hustler Mag. v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46, 56, 108 S.Ct. 876, 882, 99 L.Ed.2d 41.[sic]) Thus, even if defendants were aware that publication would cause plaintiff emotional distress (see, Restatement [Second] of Torts § 46, comment f), publication — without more — could not ordinarily lead to liability for intentional infliction of emotional distress. We do not mean to suggest, however, that a plaintiff could never defeat the privilege and state a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress.” Howell, 596 N.Y.S.2d 350, 612 N.E.2d at 705.
Y
Invasion of Privacy
An action for invasion of privacy was not maintainable at common law, Kalian v. PACE, 122 R.I. 429, 431, 408 A.2d 608, 609 (1979), and the only available mechanism by which such an action may be maintained is G.L.1956 § 9-1-28.1. That statute provides that
“every person in this state shall have a right to privacy which shall be defined to include any of the following rights individually:
(1) The right to be secure from unreasonable intrusion upon one’s physical solitude or seclusion;
(A) In order to recover for violation of this right, it must be established that:
(i) It was an invasion of something that is entitled to be private or would be expected to be private;
(ii) Such invasion was or is offensive or objectionable to a reasonable man; although,
(B) The person who discloses such information need not benefit from such disclosure.
(2) The right to be secure from an appropriation of one’s name or likeness;
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(3) The right to be secure from unreasonable publicity given to one’s private life;
(A) In order to recover for violation of this right, it must be established that:
(i) there has been some publication of a private fact;
(ii) The fact which has been made public must be one which would be offensive or objectionable to a reasonable man of ordinary sensibilities;
(B) The fact which has been disclosed need not be of any benefit to the discloser of such fact.
(4)The right to be secure from publicity that reasonably places another in a false light before the public.”
Subsection (1) of that statute is the portion relevant to this appeal.
In respect to the invasion of privacy claim asserted on behalf of the decedent, we conclude that that claim is without merit since the right to privacy dies with the person. Henry v. Cherry & Webb, 30 R.I. 13, 73 A. 97 (1909). See also Providence Journal Co. v. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 460 F.Supp. 778, 793 (D.R.I.1978), rev’d on other grounds, 602 F.2d 1010 (1st Cir.1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 1071, 100 S.Ct. 1015, 62 L.Ed.2d 752 (1980); Restatement (Second) Torts § 6521, comments a, b (1977).
As pertains to the invasion of privacy claim asserted by the Clift family, we conclude that the one telephone call by the reporter did not invade any area of the family’s seclusion that could reasonably have been expected to remain private. Certainly no one can question the newsworthiness of the sad but public incident. Only one telephone call during that publicity-charged incident was made by the reporter, and that single telephone call was insufficient to sustain an invasion of privacy claim. See Burris v. South Central Bell Telephone Co., 540 F.Supp. 905 (S.D.Mss.1982); Lynn v. Allied Carp., 41 Ohio App.3d 392, 536 N.E.2d 25 (1987). Moreover, a telephone conversation with a reporter in which a person voluntarily participated has been held insufficient to sustain an invasion of privacy claim. Wolf v. Regardie, 553 A.2d 1213 (D.C.App.1989). There was nothing in the act of telephoning the decedent in this case that revealed to the public anything that would not have come to the public’s attention irrespective of the telephone call. It was already public knowledge *815that the decedent was threatening to commit suicide and that his wife had been inside the home earlier that fateful day attempting to dissuade the decedent from doing so. The defendant’s reporter by inquiring of the decedent if he was “sick” did not improperly invade the Clift family’s privacy since it was directed only to the decedent. In regard to the eventual later television broadcast report of the telephone call, it was well within the right of any news reporter to report such a newsworthy story. While perhaps lacking in good taste, the reporter’s conversation with the decedent did not, however, rise to the level of an actionable intrusion into the Clift family’s seclusion, and summary judgment was properly granted on the invasion of privacy claim. See Howell, supra.; Restatement (Second) Torts, § 46, comment g (1965).
Accordingly, for all the above reasons, the plaintiffs’ appeal as to counts 1, 7, 8 and 9 is sustained. Their appeal as to counts 4 and 6 is denied. With respect to counts 3 and 5, plaintiffs have waived their appeal. As regards count 2, claiming willful, wanton misconduct and punitive damages, we note that because of our disposition of the plaintiffs’ appeal on counts 4 and 6 and their waiver of appeal on count 3, punitive damages would be inappropriate on the counts remanded for trial. Accordingly the plaintiffs’ appeal on count 2 is likewise dismissed. The judgment is, thus, affirmed in part and vacated in part.
The papers in this case are remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

. Although the affidavit only addresses the effect of the telephone call on the decedent’s mental and emotional state, the complaint refers to the effect of both the telephone call and the eventual broadcast of that call.

. See Tucson Rapid Transit Co. v. Toed, 3 Ariz. App. 330, 414 P.2d 179, 186 (1966)(“the [Tate ] court adopts a rule that is more 'liberal' than the rule of the Restatement”).

. It is not clear why the Tucson court felt Tate expanded the rule set forth in the Restatement (Second) Torts § 455 (1965) since the Restatement permits recovery if the deceased’s mental state prevented realization of the nature of his act or if the deceased's mental state prevented him from overcoming his irresistible impulse to commit suicide.

. In the workers’ compensation field, liability for a decedent's suicide has been found when “ ‘the incontrovertible evidence shows that, without the injury, there would have been no suicide.’" Graver Tank & Manufacturing. Co. v. Industrial Commission, 97 Ariz. 256, 399 P.2d 664, 668 (1965); Burnight v. Industrial Accident Commission, 181 Cal.App.2d 816, 5 Cal.Rptr. 786, 793 (1960). That rule is essentially a "but-for" rule, a significantly more liberal rule than that set forth in Bogust, Falkenstein, Tate, and the Restatement (Second) Torts, § 455 (1965). However, the workers' compensation analysis has not been embraced by any court outside the workers' compensation field because the fault concept, so central in negligence cases, is absent and not essential in such cases. See Tucson Rapid Transit Co., supra, (rejecting the analysis in workers’ compensation cases and adopting instead the irresistible impulse rule).

. A concise explanation of the required elements for an intentional infliction of severe emotional distress claim is found in Burbridge v. Paschal, 239 N.J.Super. 139, 570 A.2d 1250 (A.D.1990).
"Generally speaking, to establish a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, the plaintiff must establish intentional and outrageous conduct by the defendant, proximate cause, and distress that is severe. Initially, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant acted intentionally or recklessly. For an intentional act to result in liability, the defendant must *813intend both to do the act and to produce emotional distress. Liability will also attach when the defendant acts recklessly in deliberate disregard of a high degree of probability that emotional distress will follow.
"Second, the defendant’s conduct must be extreme and outrageous. The conduct must be ‘so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond ah possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.' Third, the defendant’s actions must have been the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s emotional distress. Fourth, the emotional distress suffered by the plaintiff must be ‘so severe that no reasonable man could be expected to endure it.’ By circumscribing the cause of action with an elevated threshold for liability and damages, courts have authorized legitimate claims while eliminating those that should not be compensable.
"The severity of the emotional distress raises questions of both law and fact. Thus, the court decides whether as a matter of law such emotional distress can be found, and the jury decides whether it has in fact been proved.” Id., 570 A.2d at 1259-60 (quoting Buckley v. Trenton Saving Fund Soc., 111 N.J. 355, 544 A.2d 857 (1988)).