This is an appeal from an order of summary judgment dismissing appellant’s complaint in negligence based on a finding that appellees owed no duty to protect her from an attack perpetrated by a third person. Because we are unable to address appellant’s argument for reversal, we affirm.
On May 4, 1993, the appellant, Jacqueline Holloway, went to the emergency room at appellee Stuttgart Memorial Hospital for treatment of minor injuries she had sustained in an altercation with Barbara Peters, who was also a patient at the emergency room. Appellant was accompanied by her daughter and her niece, who twice sought but were denied permission to enter the treatment room occupied by appellant. Stationed in the emergency waiting room was a security guard, who was armed and in uniform, and who was an employee of appellee Burns International Security Services that was under contract to provide security at the hospital. A woman identifying herself as appellant’s mother approached the security guard and asked for permission to see appellant. The guard referred the woman to appellee Debbie
Appellant brought this lawsuit contending that appellees were liable for the injuries she sustained as a result of their failure to use reasonable care to ensure her safety. Appellees filed motions for summary judgment premised on the general rule, taken from Restatement (Second) of Torts § 315 (1965), that one is not ordinarily liable for the criminal acts of third persons absent a duty of care arising from a special relationship. Aside from this rule, appellees also relied on the decision in Boren v. Worthen Nat’l Bank,
The law of negligence requires as an essential element that the plaintiff show that a duty of care was owed. Young v. Paxton,
As her sole point on appeal, appellant contends that she was owed a duty of care by virtue of the special relationship existing between a hospital and its patient. Appellees respond to that argument by contending, as a threshold matter, that this issue is being raised for the first time on appeal. From our review of the record, we must agree that appellees’ point is well-taken. Below, appellant argued exclusively that, by their actions, appellees had voluntarily assumed a duty to protect her from the acts of third persons. She did not argue, as she does here, that appellees owed a duty based on the existence of a special relationship. In fact, appellant responded to the motions for summary judgment by stating that when she “walked into the emergency room . . . none of the defendants had any special responsibilities to provide for the security of the plaintiff.” In her argument before the court, she further maintained that a duty of care did not rest on the existence of a special relationship. It is a basic rule of appellate procedure that a party cannot change arguments on appeal, Ball v. Foehner,
Affirmed.
