Bryson v. Banner Health System

89 P.3d 800, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 54, 2004 WL 870125
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 2004
DocketS-10653, S-10673
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 P.3d 800 (Bryson v. Banner Health System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryson v. Banner Health System, 89 P.3d 800, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 54, 2004 WL 870125 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Family Recovery Center placed Diana Bryson and Laurence Kompkoff in the same continuing care substance abuse treatment group. According to Bryson, as part of the treatment, the Center encouraged all members of the group to contact and assist each other outside of the group setting. The Center knew that Kompkoff had an extensive criminal history of alcohol-related crimes of violence, including sexual assaults. Komp-koff relapsed into drinking while being treated. He called Bryson for a ride, attempted to rape her, and shot her in the ensuing struggle. Bryson sued the Center, alleging that it negligently failed to warn and protect her against harm from Kompkoff. The superior court ruled on summary judgment that the Center owed Bryson an actionable duty of due care to protect her from harm in the course of her treatment — including foreseeable harm by other patients. Both parties petitioned for review, contesting the superior court’s ruling on the existence and scope of the Center’s duty. We granted review, and now affirm the superior court’s decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS 1

The Family Recovery Center provides outpatient substance abuse treatment in Fairbanks. 2 The Center placed both Diana Bry-son and Laurence Kompkoff in its continuing care self-help group after each had independently completed an intensive substance abuse program. As part of their admission to the Center, each signed documents acknowledging that their records were confidential and that unauthorized disclosure was a crime under federal law.

When Kompkoff enrolled in the Center’s program, he had an extensive criminal history involving alcohol abuse and sexual violence:

• He was first convicted of felony assault with a dangerous weapon in 1973 for stabbing another person multiple times. Kompkoff was incarcerated for the offense until February 1976.
• In July 1976, about five months after his release, Kompkoff slashed his stepfather’s neck with a knife. He was again convicted of felony assault with a dangerous weapon, but received only five years of probation on the condition that he abstain from alcohol and complete substance abuse treatment.
• In April 1978 Kompkoff violated his probation by drinking and possessing a butcher knife.
• In July 1979 Kompkoff broke into the home of a woman he had met at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting and raped her. Upon conviction, Kompkoff was sentenced to fifteen years in prison. 3 He remained *802 incarcerated until August 1989, and then resided at halfway houses until August of 1990, when he was released on parole.
• Three months later, in December 1990, Kompkoff broke into a neighboring woman’s home, put a knife to her throat, and threatened to kill her. Kompkoff was convicted of first-degree burglary for this offense and was sentenced to serve ten years in prison, with two-and-a-half years suspended. After serving the unsuspend-ed portion of his sentence, he was released on probation in December 1995.
• Over the next four years, Kompkoff violated the conditions of his probation on at least three separate occasions.

Kompkoff decided to enroll in the Center’s program in September 1999 at the encouragement of his probation officer, after he was arrested for consuming alcohol and driving while intoxicated — his third probation violation. At a probation revocation hearing in November 1999, his probation officer reported that Kompkoff was in the final stages of his substance abuse treatment at the Center and seemed to be doing well. Based on this report, the superior court revoked only a short period of Kompkoffs total suspended term and allowed him to resume probation on the condition that he, 'complete the Center’s outpatient continuing care program.

The Center knew of Kompkoffs criminal history when it placed him together with Bryson in the same self-help group, but did not consider his history to rule out the placement because Kompkoff had successfully completed the Center’s intensive treatment program. In admitting Kompkoff to the program, the Center failed to warn Bryson or any other group members that he might be dangerous if he resumed drinking; nor did the Center take any other precautions to protect group members on account of Komp-koffs history of relapse and violence.

As part of its group treatment program, the Center encouraged all .members of the group — including Kompkoff — to rely on other group members for help and support between group meetings. To assist the group in maintaining contact outside of the group setting, the Center compiled and distributed a list of members and their telephone numbers. .

Bryson and Kompkoff participated in three self-help group sessions together: on December 28, 1999, December 30, 1999, and January 4, 2000. On January 10 or 11, Komp-koffs probation officer called and warned the Center of reports that Kompkoff might be drinking. The Center made no attempt to alert its group members concerning these reports.

On January 11 Kompkoff called Bryson for a ride to the bank and the credit union. Bryson agreed and arranged to pick him up at a local grocery store; when she arrived, Kompkoff asked if she would take him to his apartment first, so that he could make some phone calls. At Kompkoffs insistence, Bry-son accompanied him into his apartment. Kompkoff walked into his bedroom; Bryson stayed behind. She noticed a large bottle of vodka on a table; just as she saw the bottle, Kompkoff stepped out of the bedroom, armed with a gun. He ordered Bryson to get in the bedroom and take her clothes off. When she failed to comply, Kompkoff grabbed her by the jacket, threw her onto the bedroom floor, and struggled to remove her pants. As Bry-son fought Kompkoff for control of the gun, it fired; the bullet struck her hand, severing a finger. Bryson then managed to escape.

As a result of this incident, Bryson sued Kompkoff and the Center for damages. In her claim against the Center, she alleged negligence in failing to warn her that Komp-koff was dangerous and in failing to protect her from his assaultive behavior.

The Center moved for summary judgment, arguing that it had no duty to protect or warn Bryson about Kompkoff. Specifically, the Center maintained that federal regulations governing the confidentiality of its treatment records precluded it from divulging Kompkoffs criminal history, thus leaving the Center with no duty to warn other patients.

In response to the Center’s motion, Bryson cross-moved for summary judgment on the issue of duty. Advancing alternative legal theories, Bryson argued that, under the facts alleged in her complaint, the Center had an *803 actionable duty to warn her of and protect her from Kompkoff.

The superior court partly granted and partly denied the parties’ cross-motions. As a threshold matter, the court recognized that federal and Alaska law barred the Center from disclosing Kompkoffs treatment records.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P.3d 800, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 54, 2004 WL 870125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryson-v-banner-health-system-alaska-2004.