Brown v. Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital

395 N.W.2d 18, 153 Mich. App. 300
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1986
DocketDocket 83307
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 395 N.W.2d 18 (Brown v. Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital, 395 N.W.2d 18, 153 Mich. App. 300 (Mich. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Plaintiff appeals as of right from the trial court’s summary judgment order in favor of defendants Pill Sang Yoo, Romeo Flores, Ernest Travis and Madge Cline. Those defendants are two doctors, a psychologist and a social worker who treated the decedent at defendant Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital prior to his discharge and death. Wayne Circuit Court Judge John H. Gillis, Jr., held that plaintiff had failed to plead facts in avoidance of governmental immunity. GCR 1963, 117.2(1). Judge Harold Ryan, who had the case on his docket before his retirement, had denied the same motion two years earlier. Defendants Michigan Department of Mental Health, Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital, C. Patrick Babcock, Director of the Department of Mental Health, and John Reynolds, Director of North- *303 wile, had been previously granted an accelerated judgment and that order is not at issue on appeal. 1 We reverse the summary judgment order in part and, as to the individual defendants Yoo, Flores, Travis and Cline, remand for further proceedings.

A motion for summary judgment under GCR 1963, 117.2(1) tests the legal basis of the complaint, not whether it can be factually supported. The motion is tested by the pleadings alone and may not be granted unless a claim is so clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development can possibly justify a right to recover. Rathbun v Starr Commonwealth for Boys, 145 Mich App 303, 307-308; 377 NW2d 872 (1985). Although defendants suggest on appeal that plaintiff cannot factually support her claim and point to certain documents and depositional testimony in support of their position, defendants’ motion was brought under GCR 1963, 117.2(1) and must be judged on the basis of the pleadings alone.

In her complaint plaintiff alleged that on July 28, 1981, she filed a petition in the Wayne County Probate Court requesting treatment for decedent, her son, because he was suffering from schizophrenia. That same day decedent was examined at the Detroit Receiving Hospital pursuant to court order and diagnosed as suffering from chronic undifferentiated schizophrenia. The following day decedent was transferred to Northville Regional Psychiatric Hospital where he was treated by the individual defendants. On August 6, 1981, the probate court *304 ordered decedent admitted to Northville for sixty days.

According to the complaint, defendant Yoo suggested to decedent that he could receive treatment at the VA Hospital, rather than Northville. On August 13, 1981, defendant Travis saw decedent and suggested that decedent was ready to be discharged. On August 14, 1981, plaintiff came to visit decedent and discovered that defendants were discharging him without his medication or a prescription for his medication, with instructions that he should go to the VA Hospital because he could get governmental benefits. On August 15, 1981, decedent was found dead in a hotel of an apparent narcotics overdose.

The complaint alleges that defendants Yoo, Flores, Travis and Cline had all treated decedent and had committed professional malpractice. With minor variations, plaintiff alleged that defendants Yoo and Flores, both psychiatrists, had departed from the applicable standard of care in the following ways:

a. Failure to treat plaintiffs decedent, and/or to recognize that the deceased was not suitable for separation from a hospital setting.
b. Failure to transfer or recommend to his superiors to transfer the deceased to the Veterans Administrative Hospital in order to continue necessary treatment and hospitalization.
c. Failure to discharge plaintiffs decedent with his medication or prescription for his medication, or failure to authorize, instruct and/or recommend the discharge of plaintiffs decedent with his medication to prevent him from becoming a serious threat to himself or others.
d. Failure to follow the appropriate rules for the discharge of patients, including but not limited to discharge examination, notice to the court, plaintiff and other interested individuals to determine *305 whether the deceased continued to require hospitalization.
e. Suggesting to a patient who continues to require treatment, namely Grover Cleveland Brown, Jr., that he could receive treatment at another hospital under veterans benefits and encouraging or acquiescing in a discharge for that purpose.

The counts against defendant Travis, a psychologist, and defendant Cline, a social worker, did not include paragraph c above, but were otherwise substantially the same, except that the counts against Travis did include the additional following alleged breach:

c. Failure to follow the ethical standards promulgated by the Department of Mental Health and/or the American Psychological Association, in violation of MCL 338.1001.

The trial court’s ruling that plaintiff failed to plead, facts in avoidance of governmental immunity was made without the benefit of the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in Ross v Consumers Power Co (On Rehearing), 420 Mich 567; 363 NW2d 641 (1984). Thus, to the extent that our application of Ross dictates a different result, we cannot say that the trial court "erred,” given the confused state of the pre-Ross case law. Tobias v Phelps, 144 Mich App 272, 279; 375 NW2d 365 (1985), lv den 424 Mich 859 (1985).

Under Ross, defendants are immune from tort liability if they were

1) acting during the course of their employment and acting, or reasonably believe[d] they [were] acting, within the scope of their authority;
2) acting in good faith; and
*306 3) performing discretionary, as opposed to ministerial acts. [420 Mich 633-634.]

Plaintiff admittedly does not claim that defendants were acting outside the scope of their authority or employment or that they were acting in bad faith. Rather plaintiff contends that defendants were engaged in "ministerial-operational” acts as opposed to "discretionary-decisional” acts.

The Supreme Court explained the difference in Ross, supra, pp 634-635:

"Ministerial” acts have been defined as those which constitute merely an obedience to orders or the performance of a duty in which the individual has little or no choice. . . . We believe that this definition is not sufficiently broad. An individual who decides whether to engage in a particular activity and how best to carry it out engages in discretionary activity. However, the actual execution of this decision by the same individual is a ministerial act, which must be performed in a nontortious manner. In a nutshell, the distinction between ”discretionary”

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395 N.W.2d 18, 153 Mich. App. 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-northville-regional-psychiatric-hospital-michctapp-1986.