IHS CEDARS TREATMENT CTR OF DESOTO, TEXAS, INC. v. Mason

143 S.W.3d 794
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 2004
Docket01-0926
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 143 S.W.3d 794 (IHS CEDARS TREATMENT CTR OF DESOTO, TEXAS, INC. v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IHS CEDARS TREATMENT CTR OF DESOTO, TEXAS, INC. v. Mason, 143 S.W.3d 794 (Tex. 2004).

Opinion

143 S.W.3d 794 (2004)

IHS CEDARS TREATMENT CENTER OF DeSOTO, TEXAS, INC., The Cedars Mental Health Center Innovative Healthcare Systems, Inc., Teofilo Moses V. Ramos, Jr., M.D., and Sandra J. Duryea Marx, R.N., Petitioners,
v.
Jodi Marie MASON, Individually and as Next Friend of Ashley Ladon Mansfield, a Minor, and as Next Friend of Courtney Marie Mason, a Minor, and Karen Rudd, Respondents.

No. 01-0926.

Supreme Court of Texas.

Argued September 3, 2003.
Decided June 18, 2004.
Rehearing Denied September 24, 2004.

*795 Andrew A. Bergman, Bergman Yonks & Stein, Dallas, Michael Lawrence Cronig, Austin, for Party In Interest.

Wendy Ann McMillon, Cowles & Thompson, Dallas, for other interested party.

Darrell G-M Noga, Roberts & Smaby, PC, Michelle E. Robberson, Cooper & Scully, P.C., Matthew Roy Scott, Bell Nunnally & Martin LLP, Sidney L. Murphy, Law Office of Joel J. Steed, Dallas, Michael C. Freden, Hall & Freden, Fort Worth, David C. McCue, Lawson Fields McCue Lee & Campbell, Addison, and Stephanie *796 S. Bascon, Reagan Burrus Dierksen Lamon & Blutzer, PLLC, New Braunfels, Andrea M. Kuntzman, Gregory J. Lensing, Alan L. Campbell, and Charles T. Frazier Jr., Cowles & Thompson, P.C., Kevin E. Oliver, Cooper & Scully, Dallas, for Petitioner.

Tony D. Crabtree, Randall R. Moore, Hyatt Crabtree & Moore, Charles W. McGarry, Law Office of Charles McGarry, Dallas, Steven J. Williams, Steven J. Williams, P.C., Irving, for Respondent.

Justice WAINWRIGHT delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, we again consider the limits of the causal nexus between conduct and harm that is necessary to support liability in tort.

Jodi Marie Mason voluntarily entered a mental health care facility seeking treatment for depression. Three weeks later, Mason's physician discharged her at her request. A little over a day after Mason's discharge, she was severely injured while a passenger in a single-car accident. Mason's roommate at the facility, the driver of the car, was discharged by a different physician at the same time as Mason. Mason sued her physician, her roommate's physician, the charge nurse, and the mental health care facility. Assuming that the defendants owed Mason a duty to prevent her injuries under these circumstances, we conclude that Mason's injuries are too remote from the conduct of her medical caregivers to be the proximate cause of her injuries. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals' judgment in part and render judgment in favor of Mason's physician, the charge nurse, and the mental health care facility.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Mason voluntarily admitted herself to the Minirth-Meier Unit of Cedars Hospital on July 26, 1993 and remained a patient there until her discharge on August 16, 1993. Her scheduled release date was August 20, 1993. At the time of her admission, Mason suffered from depression. She was placed on suicide precautions and close observation. On July 27, Dr. Teofilo Moses Ramos, a staff psychiatrist at Cedars Hospital, examined Mason. During the examination, Mason expressed a desire to participate in treatment and entered into a personal contract with Ramos not to cause harm to herself. After the exam, Ramos discontinued close observation and suicide precautions for Mason.

During her stay at the hospital, Mason's roommate was Cynthia Thomas. Mason described Thomas as manipulative and controlling. Mason's hospital records reflect that she told a staff member that Thomas wrought fear in her. She reported to the staff, "I feel she's the devil and looking into my soul." Notwithstanding Mason's impression of Thomas, they became friends during an outing to a local shopping mall.

On the evening of August 16, Thomas approached Nurse Sandra Duryea Marx, the supervising charge nurse on duty, to request that both she and Mason be discharged. Neither Mason nor Thomas was scheduled to be discharged that day. Marx informed Thomas's physician, Dr. Paul Meier, of the request for discharge and, after taking the order from Meier, discharged Thomas. No action was taken on Thomas's request for Mason to be discharged. Mason made her own request to Marx for an early discharge. Marx talked to Mason about continuing treatment, asked Mason why she wanted to leave, and assessed Mason's physical and mental condition by observing her behavior and mannerisms. She asked Mason what she planned to do after discharge, and Mason said that she intended to spend some time *797 relaxing with Thomas. Marx then notified Ramos by telephone of Mason's desire to leave. Marx stated that she told him that Mason intended to spend time with Thomas after discharge. Pursuant to Ramos's order, Marx discharged Mason, who left the hospital in the company of Thomas. Both of them were met at the hospital by members of Thomas's family, but no one in Mason's family was informed of her discharge. Mason's diagnosis on discharge was the same as admission; she suffered from depression. Marx noted that Mason made "[l]imited success in attaining [Mason's] discharge goals."

Twenty-eight hours later, Mason was involved in a single-car accident with Thomas and Richard Cleveland, another patient at Cedars Hospital. While driving her Corvette at a very high speed, Thomas flew into an angry rage. Mason's expert witness, Dr. Stephen Kramer, opined that "Thomas experienced a psychotic episode." In the midst of this episode, Thomas swerved to miss a dog in the road and lost control of the vehicle. The Corvette flipped more than once, Cleveland was killed, and Mason was left paralyzed. Thomas also sustained injuries in the accident.

Mason, individually and as next friend of Ashley Ladon Mansfield, a minor, and as next friend of Courtney Marie Mason, a minor, and Karen Rudd brought suit against Ramos, Marx, Meier, Cedars Hospital, and the Minirth-Meier Clinic. Mason did not sue Thomas. Mason claimed that Ramos was negligent for failing to provide her with adequate care and treatment, for negligent discharge, and for failing to initiate involuntary commitment proceedings against her when she asked to leave. Mason alleged that Marx was negligent for failing to provide adequate care and treatment, for failing to adequately assess her mental condition for discharge, for failing to report an inappropriate discharge order on the part of Ramos to her superiors, and for failing to act as an advocate for Mason's welfare. Mason also brought a claim against Meier, Thomas's attending physician and head of the Minirth-Meier Clinic, for negligent discharge, for negligently failing to promulgate adequate policies and procedures and follow existing hospital policies and procedures, for failing to provide adequate care and treatment for Mason, for failing to insure the competency of and adequately train physicians and nurses, and for failing to warn Mason of the danger posed by Thomas. Mason asserted identical claims against Cedars Hospital and the Minirth-Meier Clinic as against Meier and additional claims for failing to adequately train nurses, for negligently granting staff privileges to Ramos, for failing to evaluate the competency of Ramos, Meier, and Marx, and for failing to initiate commitment proceedings against Mason. She also claimed that the hospital and clinic were liable for the acts and omissions of Ramos and Marx under theories of respondeat superior, agency, ostensible agency, and agency by estoppel.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W.3d 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ihs-cedars-treatment-ctr-of-desoto-texas-inc-v-mason-tex-2004.