Falk v. Southern Maryland Hospital, Inc.

742 A.2d 51, 129 Md. App. 402, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 203
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 7, 1999
Docket1924, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished

This text of 742 A.2d 51 (Falk v. Southern Maryland Hospital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Falk v. Southern Maryland Hospital, Inc., 742 A.2d 51, 129 Md. App. 402, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 203 (Md. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

SONNER, Judge.

In this case, appellant, John Falk, acting as personal representative of the estate of his mother, Elene Seibert, filed a medical malpractice suit in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County against Dr. Martin Giller, Dr. Manouchehr Sadri, and Southern Maryland Hospital Center, Inc. The complaint alleged that on April 11, 1991, Daniel Ferguson, a twenty-one-year-old psychiatric patient who had been admitted involuntarily to Southern Maryland Hospital’s locked-down psychiatric ward eleven days earlier, struck psychiatric nurse Stanley Green with his fist, after two other nurses had refused to grant his request for medication. 1 Green then fell over and knocked down Elene Seibert, who, at that time, was a patient in the same unit. As a result of her fall, Seibert suffered a broken hip and had to have surgery. She died from surgery-related complications on April 30 th at the age of eighty-seven.

Falk’s suit alleged that it was Dr. Giller, Dr. Sadri, and Southern Maryland Hospital’s responsibility to supervise Ferguson and protect Seibert from Ferguson, and that Seibert’s death was a direct result of their failure to do so. 2 The defendants moved to dismiss, or in the alternative, for sum *405 mary judgment based on § 5-609 3 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings article of the Maryland Code, which governs the liability of mental health care providers for the behavior of their patients.

On September 27, 1996, the court granted Dr. Giller’s motion to dismiss, ruling that the plaintiff failed to show how Dr. Giller, as Seibert’s treating psychiatrist, could be responsible for Ferguson’s attack. The court ordered the suit to proceed against Dr. Sadri, who was Ferguson’s treating psychiatrist, and Southern Maryland Hospital to permit the parties to develop additional facts during discovery. On December 3, 1997, however, the court granted Dr. Sadri’s motion for summary judgment, finding that the plaintiff failed to make out a viable claim under § 5-609. And on October 1,1998, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Southern Maryland Hospital, based on the same statute. The sole issue now on appeal is whether the court properly applied this statute in granting summary judgment in favor of appellees, Dr. Sadri and Southern Maryland Hospital. 4

In reviewing the granting of summary judgment, we determine whether the trial court was legally correct. Imperial v. Drapeau, 351 Md. 38, 44, 716 A.2d 244 (1998). Summary judgment is proper when “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and ... the party in whose favor judgment is entered is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Md. Rule 2-501(e).

Section 5-609 in pertinent part provides:

(b) In general. — A cause of action or disciplinary action may not arise against any mental health care provider or administrator for failing to predict, warn of, or take precautions to provide protection from a patient’s violent behavior unless the mental health care provider or administrator knew of the patient’s propensity for violence and the patient *406 indicated to the mental health care provider or administrator, by speech, conduct, or writing, of the patient’s intention to inflict imminent physical injury upon a specified victim or group of victims.

(Emphasis added.)

When the language of a statute is clear, our role “is simply to construe the provision in accordance with the plain meaning of the text.” Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Gussin, 350 Md. 552, 562, 714 A.2d 188 (1998). Stated differently, “in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we assume that the words of the statute are intended to have their natural, ordinary and generally understood meaning.” Lombardi v. Montgomery County, 108 Md.App. 695, 702, 673 A.2d 762 (1996) (citations omitted). We read § 5-609 as stating that a mental health provider is not liable for the violent behavior of his or her patients unless he or she 1) had actual knowledge of the patient’s propensity for violence; and 2) the patient indicated to the mental health provider in some way that he or she intended to harm a specific victim.

Although there is no case law interpreting this fairly new statute, the wording of the statute is entirely consistent with the reasoning in three Maryland cases that have discussed this subject in depth. In Furr v. Spring Grove State Hosp., 53 Md.App. 474, 454 A.2d 414 (1983), this Court held that a state psychiatrist was not responsible for the rape and murder of a young boy by a patient who left the state hospital where he was receiving treatment for deviant sexual behavior. (The patient was entitled to leave the hospital without notifying the medical staff because he was a voluntary admittee.) In declining to adopt the reasoning in the seminal case of Tarasoff v. Regents of the University of California, 17 Cal.3d 425, 131 Cal.Rptr. 14, 551 P.2d 334 (1976), we held that the psychiatrist owed no duty to the victim because the victim was an unforeseeable plaintiff. In doing so, we pointed out that Tarasoff imposed a duty only when the mental health provider knew the identity of the specific victim who was threatened. Furr, 53 Md.App. at 487-88, 454 A.2d 414.

*407 Second, in the case of Shaw v. Glickman, 45 Md.App. 718, 415 A.2d 625 (1980), a decision that neither rejected nor applied the rationale of Tarasoff, this Court, speaking through Chief Judge Gilbert, declined to hold a psychiatrist or his staff liable for gunshot injuries inflicted by an irate cuckolded husband on his wife’s paramour. During a therapy session, the “psychiatric team” had learned that the irate husband had been acting in a bizarre way and wearing a gunbelt and a pistol. Since the husband did not reveal an intent to injure the paramour, we held that the paramour could not maintain a cause of action against the husband for his injuries. Id. at 725, 415 A.2d 625.

Likewise, in Hartford Ins. Co. v. Manor Inn of Bethesda, Inc., 335 Md. 135, 642 A.2d 219 (1994), the Court held that the State owed no duty toward a victim of a car accident between the victim and a psychiatric patient who had eloped from a state hospital.

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742 A.2d 51, 129 Md. App. 402, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/falk-v-southern-maryland-hospital-inc-mdctspecapp-1999.