Jacob Caples, et al. v. Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Inc., et al.
No. 1527
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF MARYLAND
September Term, 2024. Opinion by Ripken, J. Filed: May 1, 2026
Zic, Ripken, Eyler, James R. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned), JJ.
REPORTED; Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Case No. 24-C-24-001715
Section 5-609 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article generally shields certain mental health care providers from civil liability for failure to warn of a patient‘s violent behavior. Immunity under this statute does not extend to mental health providers or administrators if 1) the provider or administrator could have readily identified the victim as a potential target from interactions with the patient prior to the harm inflicted, and 2) the victim was in a foreseeable zone of danger. Where a patient expresses violent ideation toward those in their vicinity, at a minimum, the provider or administrator must warn those to whom the patient is being discharged.
Whether the circuit court erred in granting the motion to dismiss pursuant to
CJP section 5-609 .
For the reasons to follow, we shall reverse the judgment of the circuit court.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Underlying Facts6
November 19, 2020
Caples denied being suicidal or homicidal.
November 20, 2020
Caples was documented as positive for suicidal ideation without a plan or intent while hospitalized at Sinai. He voluntarily placed himself on a seventy-two-hour hold and agreed to stay at Sinai for further stabilization. He was not amenable to intensive outpatient or partial hospital programs.
November 21, 2020
Caples was documented as depressed and irritable with impaired judgment and impulse control. In addition, Caples was given an assessment form by Sinai staff on which Caples did not check the boxes indicating that he was not having suicidal or homicidal ideation.
November 22, 2020
At approximately 9:30 a.m., Caples verbalized that he was “always” suicidal and indicated that he had a plan to hurt himself with a knife. Caples was positive for homicidal ideation “towards anyone who comes close.” However, it was noted that he “does contract for safety[.]”9 In addition, Caples was given an assessment form by Sinai staff on which Caples again did not check the boxes indicating that he was not having suicidal or homicidal ideation.
November 23, 2020
Caples was suicidal without a plan or intent and denied being homicidal. He agreed to retract his seventy-two-hour hold, which was expiring, and was amenable to outpatient treatment. His insight was guarded, and judgment was fair. However, his impulse control was impaired.10
At 11:08 p.m., Caples was documented as showing no signs of psychological distress and denying all psychological symptoms.
November 24, 2020
At approximately 6:00 a.m., Caples expressed that he “always” has suicidal ideation and that he had a plan of hurting himself with a knife.11 Caples also had homicidal ideation “towards anyone who comes close[.]” However, it was noted that he “does contract for safety[.]”
At approximately 10 a.m., Caples denied suicidal and homicidal ideation and “[l]eft with his wife to return home.”
McKenzie completed and signed Caples’ discharge summary. In relevant part, it stated that Caples had been voluntarily admitted for observation and listed the treatment and medication he received while hospitalized. The summary also indicated that Caples’ mood had improved and that his suicidal ideation had remitted. However, Caples was noted to have had recent episodes of aggression for which he had to be medicated.12 In addition, the summary noted that Caples had a family call with his wife to discuss discharge and safety planning. While the summary indicated that Caples denied homicidal ideation, the summary made no mention that he had homicidal ideation while hospitalized.
On December 2, 2020, eight days after his release, Caples bludgeoned and stabbed Decedent to death in their home. Caples was subsequently charged with murder and entered an Alford plea.13 Following the entry of the plea, the court found Caples guilty of first-
Procedural History
In April of 2024, Decedent‘s Survivors filed the instant action, alleging that Sinai‘s negligence led to Decedent‘s death. In response, Sinai filed a motion to dismiss, primarily asserting that
DISCUSSION
THE CIRCUIT COURT ERRED IN GRANTING THE MOTION TO DISMISS.
A. Party Contentions
Decedent‘s Survivors assert that the circuit court erred in granting the motion to dismiss. Specifically, Decedent‘s Survivors contend that they pled sufficient facts to demonstrate that Sinai knew of Caples’ propensity for violence and the imminent risk to Decedent, thus stripping Sinai and McKenzie of
Sinai contends that the circuit court‘s dismissal of the complaint was legally correct. Specifically, Sinai argues that
B. Standard of Review
“[W]e review [de novo] the grant of a motion to dismiss[.]” Reiner v. Ehrlich, 212 Md. App. 142, 151 (2013) (alterations omitted) (quoting Gomez v. Jackson Hewitt, Inc., 427 Md. 128, 142 (2012). In so doing, “we must determine whether the complaint, on its
C. Analysis
In relevant part,
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 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.
In Shaw, a husband shot and injured his wife‘s paramour after discovering them in bed together. Shaw, 45 Md. App. at 719. The husband, although he had been informed of the identity of the paramour prior to the shooting, had never expressed an intent to kill or injure the paramour in counseling sessions with mental health professionals. Id. at 719, 725. Accordingly, we held that the paramour could not maintain an action against the mental health professionals for failure to warn. See id. at 725–26.
In Furr, a patient voluntarily committed himself to a state hospital for treatment of pedophilic urges. 53 Md. App. at 477–78. The patient later voluntarily left the hospital and
In Manor Inn, a patient—who was involuntarily committed to a state mental health hospital—escaped from the facility. 335 Md. at 139. The patient later stole a negligently unattended van that belonged to an inn and crashed it into an insured driver several days later,16 causing damages. Id. at 139–40. The Supreme Court of Maryland concluded that the insurance company could not recover because—while the State breached its duty to supervise the patient, and the inn breached its duty to manage its van—the instance of an escaped patient stealing a van and subsequently causing an accident days later was unforeseeable.17 See id. at 151, 153–54, 160–61.
After discussing Shaw, Furr, and Manor Inn, the Falk court likened the circumstances in the case to those of the plaintiff in Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Company, 162 N.E. 99 (N.Y. 1928). See Falk, 129 Md. App. at 407–08. In that case, employees of a railroad company dropped a package of explosives, which exploded and caused a set of scales to fall and injure a woman. 162 N.E. at 99. The New York Court of Appeals held that the railroad company was not liable for the injuries caused to the woman because she was not a foreseeable plaintiff. Id. at 101. Combining the principles discussed
D. Application
Decedent was a “readily identifiable” potential victim within the “zone of danger” such that Sinai had a duty to warn her of Caples’ homicidal ideation prior to her death. Falk, 129 Md. App. at 408. The Falk, Shaw, Furr, and Manor Inn courts declined to hold the mental health providers involved in those cases liable, concluding that it was unforeseeable that the victims in those cases faced a threat from the patients the providers treated. See Falk, 129 Md. App. at 408–09; Shaw, 45 Md. App. at 725–26; Furr, 53 Md. App. at 488–89; Manor Inn, 335 Md. at 150–51, 160–61. However, the victim in Falk was not the direct recipient of the patient‘s criminal conduct. 129 Md. App. at 404 (indicating that the patient struck a nurse who fell over and knocked the victim down, leading to her injury). In a similar vein, none of the patients in the cases mentioned above—during interactions with their medical providers—indicated that they would commit the specific criminal conduct in which they later engaged. See generally Falk, 129 Md. App. 402; Shaw, 45 Md. App. 718; Furr, 53 Md. App. 474; see also Manor Inn, 335 Md. at 151. Moreover, while the patients in Shaw, Furr, and Manor Inn directly caused harm to their victims, they were either free to roam the general public or otherwise escaped, such that the pool of potential victims was vast. See Shaw, 45 Md. App. at 719 (husband and wife were receiving outpatient counseling); Furr, 53 Md. App. at 477–78, 489 (patient was free to leave the
Here, unlike in Falk, Decedent was directly within the “zone of danger” and not the victim of an unforeseeable chain of events. See 129 Md. App. at 408–09. That is, the mother in Falk was not directly in harm‘s way (i.e., having direct contact with the patient under the hospital‘s care); she was an unintended victim who died as a result of surgical complications after being knocked over by a nurse whom the patient hit. Id. at 404. In other words, the mother was one step removed from the “zone of danger” and thus an unforeseeable victim. Id. at 408–09.
In this case, Decedent was one step closer. Caples twice expressed to Sinai Staff that he had homicidal ideation towards anyone in close proximity and twice failed to indicate on an assessment sheet that he was not having homicidal ideation. In addition, Caples’ discharge summary noted that he had to be medicated for “recent episodes of aggression.” Nonetheless, four hours after his second iteration of homicidal ideation, Sinai discharged Caples “with his wife to return home[,]” and he later killed her. We would be “hard-pressed to say, as a matter of law,” that Decedent was not in the “zone of danger” under those circumstances. See id. at 408.
Caples’ conduct was foreseeable. None of the patients in Shaw, Furr, or Manor Inn indicated—during interactions with their mental health providers—that they would have engaged in the violent conduct in which they ultimately did. See generally Falk, 129 Md. App. 402; Shaw, 45 Md. App. 718; Furr, 53 Md. App. 474; see also Manor Inn, 335 Md. at 151. For example, in Manor Inn, the Supreme Court of Maryland stated:
It does not appear, however, that [the patient‘s] dangerousness involved [escaping] from State mental institutions and stealing automobiles, which he then crashed into other automobiles. Moreover, it could not be foreseen that [the patient], having [escaped], would go to Bethesda, steal a van, and drive it negligently, thus causing an accident.
335 Md. at 151. Here, Caples twice vocalized that he had homicidal ideation while an inpatient at Sinai, including on the morning of discharge. Moreover, Caples twice failed to indicate that he was not having suicidal and homicidal thoughts on the assessment sheets provided to him by Sinai, and he also had episodes of aggression for which he had to be medicated. Accordingly, Sinai had an indication that Caples’ “dangerousness” included the potential to kill, making the later murder of Decedent a foreseeable event. See Manor Inn, 335 Md. at 151 (indicating that a patient‘s dangerousness is “an important ingredient in determining whether, and, if so, the extent to which, the [mental health provider] owed a duty to [the victim]“).
Decedent was in a “readily identifiable” group of potential victims whose identities were known in advance. Falk, 129 Md. App. at 408. In Shaw, Furr, and Manor Inn, the patients were either free to roam the general public or otherwise escaped, such that their providers had no idea whom to warn because the pool of potential victims was vast. See Shaw, 45 Md. App. at 719; Furr, 53 Md. App. at 477–78, 489; Manor Inn, 335 Md. at 139. Stated differently, even if the patients had stated an intent to violently harm someone, the providers in those cases could not ascertain which particular individuals would be in danger. The same is not true in the case before us.
Here, Sinai discharged Caples into the care of his wife to return home after he twice vocalized that he wanted to kill anyone who came close to him and twice failed to check
We recognize that the underlying facts in Furr have similarities to those here, in that both patients were free to leave the hospital, and both patients subsequently committed murder. See Furr, 53 Md. App. at 479–80. However, the cases are distinguishable. In Furr, while providers could have assumed that the patient would engage in pedophilic activities upon leaving because he voluntarily sought help for such urges, the patient did not voice an intention to do so, nor an intention to commit murder. Id. Moreover, the patient in Furr was not discharged by the hospital to a particular person or persons; he left into the general
Sinai invites us to read
In addition to the statutory limitations, we conclude that
Imminent Threat
We next turn to Sinai‘s assertion that we should affirm the circuit court‘s ruling because Caples’ expressions of homicidal ideation did not communicate an imminent threat. Sinai argues that 1) Caples did nothing “in furtherance of the ‘threat[s]‘” made while at Sinai; 2) Caples expressly denied having homicidal ideation three times before he was discharged; and 3) Caples denied having homicidal ideation at his outpatient appointment on November 30, 2020, a week following his discharge. Decedent‘s Survivors contend that Decedent faced an imminent threat, given that Sinai discharged Caples into her care the same day he expressed wanting to kill anyone who came close to him. Neither
Here, Decedent‘s Survivors pled in their complaint that Caples twice vocalized that he wanted to kill anyone who came close to him, including on November 24, 2020, the day he was discharged. Moreover, the Janofsky Attachment to the complaint notes that Caples twice failed to indicate that he was not homicidal on paper assessments provided by members of Sinai staff, and had to be medicated due to episodes of aggression. Additionally, an inference available from the complaint is that Caples knew he was being discharged to his wife that day, because he had retracted his seventy-two-hour notice, which was close to expiration. That Caples did not act in furtherance of the threat before discharge, subsequently denied having homicidal ideation while at Sinai, and denied having homicidal ideation at an appointment after Sinai discharged him, does not establish, as a matter of law, that Sinai was not obligated to inform the decedent of Caples’ threats. See Porter, 455 Md. at 245 (“[A]n imminent threat is not dependent on its temporal proximity[.]“).
Viewing the allegations in the complaint and its attachments, “as well as all inferences that may reasonably be drawn from them” in the light most favorable to Decedent‘s Survivors, we conclude that a jury could reasonably find that Caples’ conduct
Propensity for Violence
Last, we turn to Sinai‘s assertion that we should affirm the judgment of the circuit court because Caples did not show a propensity for violence. Decedent‘s Survivors posit that the homicidal statements themselves show that Caples had a propensity for violence. Neither
As discussed at length above, Caples had a history of suicidal ideation and expressed such thoughts, as well as homicidal ideation, multiple times on multiple days while under Sinai‘s care. In addition, per the Janofsky Attachment, Caples had to be medicated due to episodes of aggression. Viewing the allegations in the complaint and its attachments, “as well as all inferences that may reasonably be drawn from them” in the light most favorable to Decedent‘s Survivors, we conclude that a jury could reasonably find that Caples’ conduct demonstrated a “propensity for violence.” See
