Insistence that psychiatric damage must be reasonably foreseeable, coupled with clear recognition that a plaintiff must prove psychiatric damage as I have defined it, and not merely grief, sorrow or emotional distress, will in my view enable the good sense of the judge to ensure, adopting Lord Wright's language in Bourhill v Young 1943 AC 92, 110, that the thing stops at the appropriate point.
British | British Columbia | British Army | Order of the British Empire | British Museum | British Empire | British people | British Raj | British India | University of British Columbia | British Airways | British Council | British Isles | British Indian Army | British Malaya | British Library | British Royal Family | British Armed Forces | British Rail | British and Irish Lions | British Columbia Interior | British Aerospace | British Film Institute | natural gas | Legislative Assembly of British Columbia | British Academy of Film and Television Arts | British Virgin Islands | British sitcom | British West Indies | British Touring Car Championship |