Genao v. State

178 Misc. 2d 512, 679 N.Y.S.2d 539
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedSeptember 24, 1998
DocketClaim No. 89949
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 Misc. 2d 512 (Genao v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genao v. State, 178 Misc. 2d 512, 679 N.Y.S.2d 539 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1998).

Opinion

[513]*513OPINION OF THE COURT

Alan C. Marin, J.

Jacqueline Genao brings this action for damages arising from her rape on November 6, 1992, at a time when she was a patient at South Beach Psychiatric Center in Richmond County.

The claim was tried September 8 and 9 of 1997 and January 12 of 1998. Genao testified on her own behalf. She called as witnesses Dr. Lorenzita Dionisio, her treating psychiatrist at South Beach; nurse Gloria Braithwaite; mental therapy aide Harvey Providence; and Dr. Felix Ellis, an examining psychiatrist. The defendant called one witness, psychiatrist Dr. Stephen Weisblatt. The parties submitted briefs by May 1, 1998, as scheduled.

Genao was 20 years of age at the time of the rape, and had a history of psychiatric problems, including several hospitalizations. She was hospitalized at South Beach in 1990 after trying to jump from a window. Other probable suicide attempts include setting the bathroom and her bathrobe on fire, drowning in the bathtub, and choking herself with a cloth while being transported in an ambulance. In 1990, she apparently attacked her father over whether she could leave the house late one night.

In August of 1992, Genao had been admitted to South Beach after she had spoken about suicide, been unable to sleep, had bouts of crying and told of hearing voices. At the time she had been attending the Sunset Park Mental Health Center. After nearly a three-week hospitalization, Genao was discharged on September 9, 1992; the discharge note described her stay as “uneventful”.

On October 31, 1992, Genao, who was “not sleeping well, was walking the streets in [pajamas], and throwing eggs out of grocery stores,” was readmitted to South Beach and assigned to an acute care ward known as SBAU-1 (claimant’s exhibit 5, at 1). The medical staff at South Beach placed the claimant under the standard level of observation which means observing the patient, and so recording, every 30 minutes. The other levels of observation are every 15 minutes and one-to-one, or continuous observation. In addition, there is also a structured treatment unit for patients who are difficult to manage and who exhibit violent behavior.

This time, claimant’s hospitalization time was not uneventful. Her first morning, claimant became agitated, refused to eat [514]*514and attempted to attack the staff. She was placed in four-point restraint for two hours. On Genao’s second full day at South Beach, November 2, 1992, she was placed in seclusion for striking another patient and in restraints again for shouting and banging on doors and windows. Later that day, she was again screaming loudly and “punching and kicking and was physically threatening to staff and other patients”. Genao was once more put in restraints (claimant’s exhibit 5, at 8, 8A).

Claimant became agitated and disruptive on November 3 and was put in locked seclusion. The next day she was subject to four-point restraint after throwing a chair at staff when she was refused the use of a telephone. On November 5, she hit a staff member in the face and was placed in restraints.

On the day in question, Friday, November 6, claimant awoke at 6:00 a.m. in an agitated state — shouting, banging on doors and unable to follow directions. Genao was administered medication which had a calming effect.

At about 3:00 or 3:30 that afternoon, Genao who was yelling and threatening the staff was given an injection of Haldol and placed for observation in what is known as the quiet room. By that time, lithium, Ativan and Cogentin, as well as the Haldol, had been administered; all but Cogentin can cause drowsiness and/or lethargy. There was no documentation or testimony from the hospital staff as to when Genao was released from the quiet room. The claimant testified that she was tired and sleepy after receiving the Haldol injection, and went to the first empty room on the unit and fell asleep — room 814. Genao’s drowsiness lasted the rest of the day; the emergency room record of Staten Island Hospital, where claimant was taken after the rape, contained the entry that she “sleeps @ intervals” (claimant’s exhibit 12-A).

In theory, a document known as the patient accountability record (PAR), which is intended to record the location of every patient on the unit, subject to the general 30-minute level of observation, would provide evidence of Genao’s whereabouts in the critical late afternoon hours. Testimony was elicited thereon:

“Q. Now, at four o’clock when you came on shift, how did you go about preparing this patient accountability record?

“A. [Harvey Providence, therapy aide] you go around and you eyeball every patient to know where they’re at.” (Trial transcript, at 477.)

Between 4:00 and 6:30 p.m., each of the six entries in the PAR lists claimant as “U”, meaning on the unit. This unit cov[515]*515ers the area on two floors, other than the quiet room, the first floor dining room (but could include the area just outside the dining room), and the patients’ own rooms or the bathrooms. Providence testified that he would write “U” on the report if he found a patient sleeping in an unoccupied room.

The 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. notations were made by Providence who testified that “I don’t remember knowing her before that time [November 6].” (Ibid.) Moreover, he could not recollect Genao’s location on the unit. Dennis Kennedy, a mental hygiene therapy aide, made the 4:30 p.m. entry. Kennedy, who was not called to testify, was not usually assigned to SBAU-1; nor could nurse Braithwaite recall if Kennedy had ever been assigned there before. Braithwaite made the last three PAR entries before the attack, at 5:30, 6:00 and 6:30 p.m. In contrast to Providence’s testimony, the nurse stated that she did not rely on direct, visual observation: “I go around to the different areas and I check the patients. If I didn’t hear, I called out for the names” (id., at 270). Nor could she recall Genao’s specific whereabouts on the unit for any of the three times.

When the large majority of the unit’s patients went to dinner at 5:30 p.m., Genao was still listed as being in the unit. Providence testified that according to the PAR, Genao had not been at dinner, and he could not explain her absence. Room 814, like the other patient rooms, has no windows. The patient rooms had locks that could only be locked from the outside — by the staff. Obviously, staff members cannot see into room 814 from the corridor; in fact the door to room 814 cannot be seen from the front desk or the chart room, which is utilized for various record-keeping functions.

At 6:45 p.m., Providence heard whimpering in room 814 and discovered claimant in the room. Genao had been raped by John T., another patient.

The most reasonable conclusion to be drawn from the credible evidence is that Genao, supposedly on a 30-minute watch, sleepily wandered into room 814 just before 4:00 p.m., where she remained unobserved by the South Beach staff until some three hours later, following her rape. It is insufficient, in the view of contradictory evidence, to infer a specific fact from the general policy, i.e., Braithwaite testified that she would not allow a patient to sleep in a room that was not assigned to her.

The defendant argues that Dr. Dionisio, who was also John T.’s treating psychiatrist, testified that she was unaware of any prior violent or sexually inappropriate behavior on his part. The defendant’s duty of care to protect Genao extends to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 Misc. 2d 512, 679 N.Y.S.2d 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genao-v-state-nyclaimsct-1998.