Robinson v. Mount Logan Clinic, LLC

2008 UT 21, 182 P.3d 333, 2008 Utah LEXIS 24, 2008 WL 539251
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 29, 2008
Docket20061168
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2008 UT 21 (Robinson v. Mount Logan Clinic, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Mount Logan Clinic, LLC, 2008 UT 21, 182 P.3d 333, 2008 Utah LEXIS 24, 2008 WL 539251 (Utah 2008).

Opinion

DURRANT, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

T1 In this case we are called upon to decide whether section 78-14a-102(1) of the *334 Utah Code 1 shields from lability a therapist who erroneously informs a police officer that a client is not armed when the client is in fact armed. That section provides as follows: "A therapist has no duty to warn or take precautions to provide protection from any violent behavior of his client or patient, except when that client or patient communicated to the therapist an actual threat of physical violence against a clearly identified or reasonably identifiable victim." 2 Because the client here made no actual threat of physical violence to the responding police officer, the statute precludes any duty on the part of the therapist to warn or protect the officer. However, a therapist who, despite being under no obligation to act, undertakes to act has a common-law duty to do so nonnegli-gently. We therefore reverse the order of the district court granting summary judgment in favor of Mount Logan Clinic (the "Clinic").

BACKGROUND

12 Because this matter was decided on summary judgment, we review all facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. 3 Ms. Charlotte Harris, a therapist at the Clinic, called upon Logan City Police to assist her with a suicidal patient she was treating in her office. Ms. Harris was aware that the patient had a history of threatening violent behavior and had sometimes waved a gun around at home, threatening himself and his family. She also knew that the patient sometimes kept a gun in his truck. At one point during his therapy session the patient returned to his truck. At another point during the session Ms. Harris asked the patient if he had a weapon, to which the patient replied, "Maybe I do, maybe I don't."

18 Ms. Harris called the Logan City Police Department and requested that officers escort the patient to a secure behavioral modification unit at Logan Regional Hospital. The police dispatch asked Ms. Harris if the patient had "any weapons or anything like that?" Ms. Harris replied, "No." Two officers, including Officer Mark Robinson, were dispatched to the Clinic. Upon arriving at the Clinic, the officers entered the office with the patient, whereupon the patient became confrontational. At that time Ms. Harris orally informed the officers that the patient might have a weapon. A struggle ensued when the officers attempted to escort the patient out of the clinic. During the struggle, a handgun in the patient's pocket discharged, striking Officer Robinson in the foot.

T4 Officer Robinson and his wife filed a complaint against the Clinic, alleging negligently inflicted personal injury and loss of consortium. The Clinic moved to dismiss, arguing that, pursuant to Utah Code section 78-l4a-102(1), it owed no duty to Officer Robinson. The Clinic also argued that public policy or the "fireman's rule" bars a suit for injuries sustained by law enforcement officers summoned as part of their duties. The district court treated the motion as one for summary judgment under rule 12(c) of the Utah Rule of Civil Procedure, which provides as follows: "If, on a motion for judgment on the pleadings, matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded by the court, the motion shall be treated as one for summary judgment and disposed of as provided in Rule 56. ..." The district court did not reach the issue of whether public policy or the "fireman's rule" barred the suit because it granted summary judgment in favor of the Clinic on the grounds that the statute precluded a finding of duty.

15 The Robinsons appeal the district court's grant of summary judgment and its legal conclusion that Utah Code section 78-14a2-102(1) removes any duty on the part of the Clinic to exercise reasonable care to protect Officer Robinson. This court has jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78-2-

STANDARD OF REVIEW

16 Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is no genuine issue of mate *335 rial fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 4 We review the district court's order granting summary judgment for correctness. 5

ANALYSIS

T7 We begin our discussion with a plain language analysis of Utah Code section 78-142-102(1). After we analyze the first clause in that section, which broadly precludes any duty on the part of a therapist to warn or take precautions to protect against a patient's violent behavior, we analyze the see-ond clause, which provides a specific exception to this broad preclusion of duty as to actual threats of physical violence against a clearly identified or reasonably identifiable victim. As we explain below, we conclude that regardless of whether this exception triggers a duty on the part of therapists to their patients as identifiable victims of their own threatened suicide, it clearly does not trigger a duty to a third party such as Officer Robinson, whom the patient had neither threatened nor identified as a victim.

T8 We then discuss whether, notwithstanding the fact that the therapist was excused by the statute of any duty to warn or take precautions, the therapist nevertheless had a duty to exercise reasonable care, given that she did undertake to warn or take precautions. We hold that under the common law, a duty does arise by virtue of a therapist's affirmative act and that the statute does not obviate the duty to exercise reasonable care in such a case.

I. THE THERAPISTS STATUTORY DUTY TO WARN OR PROTECT

19 "Our objective in interpreting a statute is to effectuate legislative intent, and that intent is most readily ascertainable by looking to the plain language of the statute." 6 In addition, we construe a statute so "'as to render all parts thereof relevant and meaningful, and interpretations are to be avoided which render some part of a provision nonsensical or absurd.' " 7

10 In plain language, Utah Code section 78-14a-102(1) clearly delineates when a therapist has a duty to warn a potential victim about a patient's threat:

A therapist has no duty to warn or take precautions to provide protection from any violent behavior of his client or patient, exeept when that client or patient communicated to the therapist an actual threat of physical violence against a clearly identified or reasonably identifiable victim. That duty shall be discharged if the therapist makes reasonable efforts to communicate the threat to the victim, and notifies a law enforcement officer or agency of the threat. 8

The first clause of the first sentence of this section broadly precludes any duty on the part of a therapist to warn or take precautions to provide protection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2008 UT 21, 182 P.3d 333, 2008 Utah LEXIS 24, 2008 WL 539251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-mount-logan-clinic-llc-utah-2008.