Smith v. Fishkill Health-Related Center, Inc.

169 A.D.2d 309, 572 N.Y.S.2d 762, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10404
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 25, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 169 A.D.2d 309 (Smith v. Fishkill Health-Related Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Fishkill Health-Related Center, Inc., 169 A.D.2d 309, 572 N.Y.S.2d 762, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10404 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Levine, J.

Plaintiffs decedent was murdered March 10, 1987 in the parking lot of defendant Fishkill Health-Related Center, Inc. in the Town of Fishkill, Dutchess County. The alleged perpetrator of the crime was Michael Macklin, who was then under treatment for mental illness as a voluntary outpatient of defendant Dutchess County Department of Mental Hygiene (hereinafter DMH). Plaintiff, decedent’s husband, sued, among others, defendants Dutchess County, Dutchess County Department of Health and DMH (hereinafter collectively referred to as the Dutchess County defendants) for wrongful death, pain and suffering, and derivative damages. Liability against the Dutchess County defendants was asserted on the basis of negligent supervision, counseling, medicating, release and/or control of Macklin. The Dutchess County defendants in turn commenced a third-party action against Werner Cohn, a consulting psychiatrist who periodically saw Macklin for evaluation and prescription of medication at DMH’s clinic in the City of Beacon, Dutchess County.

After complete joinder of issue and extensive pretrial discovery, Cohn moved for summary judgment dismissing the third-party complaint. Plaintiff submitted papers in opposition, cross-moved for further discovery and depositions, and also sought leave to amend his complaint to add Cohn as a defendant. The Dutchess County defendants then cross-moved for summary judgment. Supreme Court granted the motions for [312]*312summary judgment of Cohn and the Dutchess County defendants and denied plaintiffs motion. Plaintiff then moved to renew. The court granted plaintiffs motion and, upon renewal, adhered to its original decision. Plaintiff appeals from the orders entered upon both decisions.

There should be an affirmance. The underlying and largely uncontested facts from the depositions and documentary evidence were that Macklin, age 24 at the time of the murder, was first referred to the Beacon clinic of DMH in early January 1985 after displaying paranoid symptoms and slashing a mattress with a knife at the emergency room of a local hospital. He was involuntarily admitted to a State psychiatric hospital for several days and then released for outpatient treatment. At that time Cohn made a diagnosis of "[sjchizophreniaform psychosis”. Macklin was then seen by Cohn every two weeks as an outpatient. However, he was again committed to the State hospital for short periods in March and June 1985 because of suicidal ideations and hallucinations. Following discharge from the hospital in July 1985, he was referred to a Special Services Team of DMH for intensive outreach services to keep him functioning in the community. Part of the service plan was to see Cohn once every four weeks. His initial service plan reported poor impulse control and some drug substance abuse.

In January 1986, Macklin was arrested for robbery in the second degree, released on bail and eventually sentenced to local jail time during the summer of 1986. Nevertheless, between July 1985 and November 1986, Macklin was maintained in the community by the Special Services Team. Except during the period of his incarceration, he reported regularly to the clinic, had only one occasion when his blood or urine tests showed use of any drugs (i.e., marihuana), worked part time and displayed no psychotic symptoms.

Macklin’s last hospitalization before the murder was in November 1986. He was involuntarily admitted after expressing concern over his desire to "hurt someone”. During the two weeks he was in the psychiatric hospital he assaulted another patient. However, the hospital records described rapid improvement and cooperativeness, including indicating remorse for the assault on the patient.

His apparent progress toward stabilization continued upon discharge from the State psychiatric hospital in late November 1986. He lived in the same building as his parents, was in [313]*313regular contact with his caseworker from the Special Services Team and was in regular attendance at a sheltered workshop. Although on one occasion the workshop reported some "confusion of thought”, his general performance there was extremely satisfactory. Macklin last saw Cohn on February 13, 1987. He told Cohn he was taking his antipsychotic medication regularly and denied any hallucinations or feelings of anger. He was neatly dressed and free of any psychotic symptoms. Cohn assessed him "definitely” as not then being a danger to himself or others.

The Special Services Team learned on March 3, 1987 that Macklin had again been arrested and then remanded to jail when the unit supervisor received telephone calls from a Beacon City Court Judge relating that Macklin was in custody as a result of throwing a rock through a plate glass window at a local bar. The Judge voiced concern as to Macklin’s dangerousness and passed on information from his family that he had not been taking his medication. A request was made for Macklin to be seen and evaluated at the jail. The unit supervisor replied in substance that Macklin was the primary responsibility of the criminal justice system while in custody and suggested that the court could get Macklin evaluated by ordering a psychiatric examination to determine his competency to stand trial. The Judge replied that he could not order such an examination because Macklin appeared calm and coherent in court. Nevertheless, Macklin’s caseworker visited him in jail and requested that the jail psychiatrist see him and prescribe his medication.

Macklin was released from jail March 6, 1987. He called his caseworker on March 9, 1987, informed her that he was back working at the sheltered workshop and made an appointment to see the caseworker March 11, 1987. The murder took place before that appointment could be kept.

The foregoing evidence presented a prima facie defense to plaintiffs essential theory of liability against Cohn and the Dutchess County defendants that they were negligent in failing to have recognized that Macklin was homicidal following the rock-throwing incident and then in failing to have decisively intervened by committing him before the murder. Cohn was never notified of Macklin’s arrest for breaking the window of the bar until after the murder. He last saw Macklin February 13, 1987. At that time, Cohn thought Macklin free of psychotic symptoms and not dangerous. There was little if anything in that visit, or the earlier periodic appointments [314]*314after Macklin was discharged from the State hospital in November 1986, which would have alerted Cohn to his instability and dangerousness. This proof presented a classic, defense under the doctrine that a mental health practitioner is not responsible for harm inflicted by a patient so long as the faulty treatment, if any, is at most an error in the exercise of professional judgment (see, Schrempf v State of New York, 66 NY2d 289, 295).

Likewise, the proof before Supreme Court supported the defense of the Dutchess County defendants based upon the exercise of professional judgment of Macklin’s caseworker, a registered nurse with two years of clinical experience in psychiatric services, and the unit supervisor, a certified social worker with a Master’s degree. The duty of the Dutchess County defendants to control Macklin’s behavior was limited inasmuch as he was only a voluntary outpatient at the time of the murder (see, supra, 66 NY2d, at 296).

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Bluebook (online)
169 A.D.2d 309, 572 N.Y.S.2d 762, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-fishkill-health-related-center-inc-nyappdiv-1991.