In this case, appellant, John Falk, acting as personal representative of the estate of his mother, Elene Seibert, filed a medical malpractice suit in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County against Dr. Martin Giller, Dr. Manouchehr Sadri, and Southern Maryland Hospital Center, Inc. The complaint alleged that on April 11, 1991, Daniel Ferguson, a twenty-one-year-old psychiatric patient who had been admitted
Falk’s suit alleged that it was Dr. Giller, Dr. Sadri, and Southern Maryland Hospital’s responsibility to supervise Ferguson and protect Seibert from Ferguson, and that Seibert’s death was a direct result of their failure to do so. 2 The defendants moved to dismiss, or in the alternative, for sum mary judgment based on § 5-609 3 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings article of the Maryland Code, which governs the liability of mental health care providers for the behavior of their patients.
On September 27, 1996, the court granted Dr. Giller’s motion to dismiss, ruling that the plaintiff failed to show how Dr. Giller, as Seibert’s treating psychiatrist, could be responsible for Ferguson’s attack. The court ordered the suit to proceed against Dr. Sadri, who was Ferguson’s treating psychiatrist, and Southern Maryland Hospital to permit the parties to develop additional facts during discovery. On December 3, 1997, however, the court granted Dr. Sadri’s motion for summary judgment, finding that the plaintiff failed to make out a viable claim under § 5-609. And on October 1,1998, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Southern Maryland Hospital, based on the same statute. The sole issue now on appeal is whether the court properly applied this statute in granting summary judgment in favor of appellees, Dr. Sadri and Southern Maryland Hospital. 4
In reviewing the granting of summary judgment, we determine whether the trial court was legally correct.
Imperial v. Drapeau,
Section 5-609 in pertinent part provides:
(b) In general. — 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.
(Emphasis added.)
When the language of a statute is clear, our role “is simply to construe the provision in accordance with the plain meaning of the text.”
Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Gussin,
Although there is no case law interpreting this fairly new statute, the wording of the statute is entirely consistent with the reasoning in three Maryland cases that have discussed this subject in depth. In
Furr v. Spring Grove State Hosp.,
Second, in the case of
Shaw v. Glickman,
Likewise, in
Hartford Ins. Co. v. Manor Inn of Bethesda, Inc.,
The record is unclear as to the nature or cause of [the patient’s] dangerousness. That is an important ingredient in determining whether, and, if so, the extent to which, the State owed a duty to [the victim]. It does not appear, however, that [the patient’s] dangerousness involved eloping from State mental institutions and stealing automobiles, which he then crashed into other automobiles. Moreover, it could not be foreseen that Griffin, having eloped, would go to Bethesda, steal a van, and drive it negligently, thus causing an accident.
Manor Inn,
The present case is similar to
Palsgraf v. Long Island R.R. Co.,
Appellant contends that he has produced enough evidence to make out a claim under the statute. He argues that the notes in Ferguson’s medical chart indicated to appellees that Ferguson needed to be placed in isolation in order to protect the other patients and employees on the same floor. According to appellant, the record reveals that throughout Ferguson’s stay at Southern Maryland Hospital, he was hostile, combative, delusional, and paranoid. Ferguson demonstrated anger toward the nurses and staff, assaulted female patients by grabbing and touching them, and repeatedly requested medication in order “to control” his behavior. Appellant emphasizes that Ferguson was held in four-point restraints 5 for approximately four hours on the day after his admission, and one week later, he picked up a large nail that the staff had to take away from him. Appellant also describes an incident that occurred when he was visiting Seibert’s room on April 10th. Seibert had slid onto the floor while trying to get out of bed. A nurse then asked Ferguson to exchange beds with Seibert so that Seibert could have a bed lower to the ground, and appellant noticed that Ferguson, who was upset that he had given up his bed, looked at Seibert “in a hateful way.”
Appellant also relies on the opinion of his psychiatric expert, Dr. Robert Toborowski, who testified at his deposition that he did not approve of Dr. Sadri’s treatment of Ferguson. Dr. Toborowski also testified that factors indicating Ferguson’s violent propensities include being a young, unemployed, adult male diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia with a history of drug abuse. Yet, Dr. Toborowski admitted that Ferguson was described as “violent” only one night during his twelve-day stay prior to the incident involving Seibert, and that the hospital records did not indicate that Ferguson intended to harm Seibert.
Even weighing the evidence in the light most favorable to appellant, as we are required to do when reviewing a summary judgment decision,
Dobbins v. Washington Suburban Sanitary Comm’n,
JUDGMENTS AFFIRMED.
APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
Notes
. Ferguson was admitted pursuant to Md.Code (1994, 1998 Supp.), Health-Gen. I, §§ 10-613 through 10-619, which constitutes the statutory scheme covering involuntary admissions to public health facilities.
. Counts I — III of the complaint were wrongful death claims against each defendant. Counts IV-VI of the complaint were survival claims against each defendant. Count VII was a separate fraud claim against Southern Maryland Hospital. Plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed Counts I-III at the first summary judgment hearing.
. This provision was transferred to § 5-316, effective Apr. 8, 1997, without change.
. Appellant does not appeal the judgment in favor of Dr. Giller.
. Ferguson had physical restraints attaching each of his wrists and ankles to a bed to prevent him from harming himself or others.
