IIED was created in tort law to address a problem that would arise when applying the common law form of
assault. The common law tort of assault did not allow for liability when a threat of
battery was not imminent. A common case would be a future threat of harm that would not constitute common law assault but would nevertheless cause emotional harm to the recipient. IIED was created to guard against this kind of emotional abuse, thereby allowing a victim of emotional distress to receive compensation in situations where he or she would otherwise be barred from compensation under the common law form. According to the first doctrine articulated by common law courts, a plaintiff could not recover for physical injury from fright alone absent a physical impact from an external source ("shock without impact"), even if the fright was proven to have resulted from a defendant's negligence, with the case on point referring to the negligent operation of a railroad in Australia, as decided by the imperial
Privy Council. Even with intentional conduct, absent material damage, claims for emotional harm were similarly barred. "Mental pain or anxiety, the law cannot value and does not pretend to redress, when the unlawful act causes that alone. Though where a material damage occurs, and is connected with it, it is impossible a jury, in estimating it, should altogether overlook the feelings of the party interested." Courts had been reluctant to accept a tort for emotional harm for fear of opening a "wide door" to frivolous claims. A change first occurred in the
Irish courts, which repudiated the Australian railroad decision and recognised liability for "nervous shock" in the
Byrne (1884) and
Bell (1890) cases. In England, the idea that physical/mental shock without impact from an external source should be a bar to recovery was first questioned at the Queen's Bench in
Pugh v. London, etc. Railroad Co. In the following year, the Court of Queen's Bench formally recognised the tort, for the first time, in the case of
Wilkinson v Downton, although it was referred to as "intentional infliction of mental shock".
Wilkinson has been subsequently approved by both the Court of Appeal (
Janvier v Sweeney [1919] 2 KB 316) and House of Lords (). Citing
Pugh and the Irish courts as precedent, the
Wilkinson court noted the willful nature of the act as a direct cause of the harm. ==Elements==