Eisel v. Board of Education

597 A.2d 447, 324 Md. 376, 17 A.L.R. 5th 957, 1991 Md. LEXIS 184
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 29, 1991
Docket139, September Term, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 597 A.2d 447 (Eisel v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eisel v. Board of Education, 597 A.2d 447, 324 Md. 376, 17 A.L.R. 5th 957, 1991 Md. LEXIS 184 (Md. 1991).

Opinions

RODOWSKY, Judge.

The legal theory advanced by the plaintiff in this wrongful death and survival action is that school counselors have a duty to intervene to attempt to prevent a student’s threatened suicide. The specific question presented is whether the duty contended for may be breached by junior high school counselors who fail to inform a parent of suicidal statements attributed to the parent’s child by fellow students where, when the counselors sought to discuss the subject, the adolescent denied ever making the statements. The circuit court granted summary judgment for the defendants, premised on the absence of any duty. As explained below, we shall hold that summary judgment was erroneously entered.

The decedent, Nicole Eisel (Nicole), was a thirteen year old student at Sligo Middle School in Montgomery County. She and another thirteen year old girl consummated an apparent murder-suicide pact on November 8, 1988. Nicole’s father, Stephen Eisel (Eisel), brought the instant action. His amended complaint alleges negligence on the part of two counselors at Nicole’s school, among others. In order to state the facts that are before us, and to determine [378]*378the scope of the issues for decision on this appeal, we must review the procedural history.

I

Eisel’s complaint, filed in March 1989, joined as defendants the Board of Education of Montgomery County (the Board), “Montgomery County Public Schools” 1 and three individuals, the Superintendent of Schools of Montgomery County, the principal of Sligo Middle School, and Dorothy Jones (Jones), Nicole’s counselor. The defendants filed an answer. Thereafter the parties engaged in discovery. Answers to interrogatories and documents produced are part of the record. Full copies of depositions were not filed in the court. Documents produced included the Board’s memorandum of a telephone call on November 10, 1988, from the identified mother of a child at Sligo Middle School. That parent reported that children in her car pool said that Deidre Morgan (Morgan), another school counselor, knew of Nicole’s suicide threats. Eisel amended his complaint to join Morgan as an additional defendant.

Shortly thereafter the defendants filed a “Motion to Dismiss the Amended Complaint and/or Motion for Summary Judgment.” Among other grounds, the motion asserted that the “[defendants owed no duty to the plaintiff or plaintiff’s decedent.”

The hearing on the defendants’ motion resulted in a final judgment entered on the docket as, “Order of Court ... granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss complaint with prejudice.” The transcript of the hearing reflects that a number of rulings were made. The circuit court ruled that allegations of negligence against the superintendent and school principal were insufficient. The court ruled that “Montgomery County Public Schools” was not an entity [379]*379separate from the Board of Education. These rulings are not challenged on this appeal.

With respect to the Board, Jones, and Morgan, counsel for the defendants accepted the allegations of the amended complaint as true, for purposes of the motion. On that basis defendants’ counsel argued, as a matter of law, the absence of any duty and the lack of proximate cause. The circuit court ruled that proximate cause was a question for the jury, but that public policy considerations precluded legally recognizing any duty on the remaining defendants to intervene for the purpose of attempting to prevent suicide.

Eisel appealed. We issued the writ of certiorari on our own motion prior to consideration of the matter by the Court of Special Appeals.

Eisel’s brief characterizes the appeal as one from the grant of summary judgment. The defendants view the judgment as one entered on the grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Eisel’s analysis is correct. Under Maryland Rule 2-322(b) it is permissive to raise, by motion to dismiss, the defense of failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, if the motion is made before answer is filed. If the defense is not made by a threshold motion, it “may be made in the answer, or in any other appropriate manner after answer is filed.” Id. “A defense of failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted ... may be made ... by motion for summary judgment under Rule 2-501 or at the trial on the merits.” Md.Rule 2-324(a). Here, the procedural tool used by the defendants was a motion for summary judgment, but the defendants chose to argue their motion as if it were one to dismiss for failure to state a claim.2 Because, [380]*380for purposes of the motion, the defendants and the trial court accepted the allegations of the amended complaint as true, we shall do the same. Nevertheless, because judgment was entered on summary judgment, we are free to state from the record, in addition to the accepted allegations, admissible facts which are favorable to Eisel’s claim. Further, because the appeal is from the grant of a summary judgment, our review of whether judgment was properly entered looks only to the ground relied upon by the trial judge for granting the motion, i.e., the absence of duty. See Boyer v. State, 323 Md. 558, 588 & n. 19, 594 A.2d 121, 136 & n. 19 (1991); Find v. American Casualty Co., 323 Md. 358, 381-82, 593 A.2d 1069, 1081 (1991).

II

The amended complaint avers that Nicole became involved in satanism, causing her to have an “obsessive interest in death and self-destruction.” During the week prior to the suicide, Nicole told several friends and fellow students that she intended to kill herself. Some of these friends reported Nicole’s intentions to their school counsel- or, Morgan, who relayed the information to Nicole’s school counselor, Jones. Morgan and Jones then questioned Nicole about the statements, but Nicole denied making them. Neither Morgan nor Jones notified Nicole’s parents or the school administration about Nicole’s alleged statements of intent. Information in the record suggests that the other party to the suicide pact shot Nicole before shooting herself. The murder-suicide took place on a school holiday in a public park at some distance from Sligo Middle School. The other party to the pact attended another school.

III

There is no direct Maryland precedent on the issue before us. We have not been cited to, nor have we found, any decision by any other court that deals with the issue of duty on substantially similar facts. Before the circuit court the defendants’ argument that the counselors owed no duty to [381]*381intervene rested largely on language in judicial decisions that defendants say are analogous.

On the issue of duty Eisel argued that, by the School Board’s own policy, counselors were required to contact the parents of any child who had expressed suicidal thoughts. Eisel pointed to deposition testimony on that subject by the principal, who said: “If the student is in danger, of course, you take care of that first. Then the next thing you do would be to notify a parent. If the student is in no apparent danger, you will notify the parent.”

There appear to be two broad categories of cases in which a person may be held liable for the suicide of another.

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Bluebook (online)
597 A.2d 447, 324 Md. 376, 17 A.L.R. 5th 957, 1991 Md. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eisel-v-board-of-education-md-1991.