Lorraine HORTON, Appellant,
v.
Louis FREEMAN and Jeanne Freeman, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Steven M. Goldsmith of Steven M. Goldsmith, P.A., Boca Raton and William R. Ponsoldt, Jr., of Wright, Ponsoldt & Lozeau, Stuart, for appellant.
Louis Schulman and Cynthia M. Dennen of Casagrande & Associates, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellees.
*1065 MAY, J.
The plaintiff appeals an order dismissing her amended complaint with prejudice. She argues the complaint sufficiently stated a cause of action for negligence. We agree and reverse.
The plaintiff filed a wrongful death action for the death of her son. In her fourth amended complaint, the plaintiff alleged three counts: negligent care, negligent supervision, and negligence per se for violation of section 827.04, Florida Statutes (2004), contributing to the delinquency of a child. The plaintiff alleged the defendants voluntarily assumed the care and custody of her minor son while she tended to a personal family emergency.
Specifically, the fourth amended complaint alleged the defendants created an environment for the use of drugs in their home, negligently allowed the use of illegal drugs by their son and the decedent, failed to call an ambulance, and failed to provide appropriate care when they knew or should have known the decedent had overdosed. The complaint further alleged the defendants found the decedent lying unconscious on the floor of their residence with "froth and spittle" oozing from his mouth. And, instead of attempting to revive the child or call for emergency assistance, the defendants took photographs of the plaintiff's son, and "left the comatose [child] to die" from an apparent drug overdose.
*1066 The defendants filed a motion to dismiss and/or strike. The trial court dismissed the fourth amended complaint with prejudice and struck the negligence per se claim as untimely.
We review orders of dismissal de novo. See K.W. Brown & Co. v. McCutchen,
To state a claim for negligence, the plaintiff must allege the existence of a duty, breach of that duty, causation, and damages. See, e.g., Clay Elec. Coop., Inc. v. Johnson,
"It is axiomatic that an action undertaken for the benefit of another, even gratuitously, must be performed in accordance with an obligation to exercise reasonable care." Barfield ex rel. Barfield v. Langley,
The plaintiffs in Barfield alleged the defendants had agreed to take care of the plaintiffs' two children, one of whom was a nine-year old boy. The defendants' nine-year old son owned a BB gun. He invited a friend to bring his BB gun over to the house. The three boys then went to a nearby field. When the friend shot at a foxhole, the bullet ricocheted off of a board and struck the plaintiffs' nine-year old son near the right eye, causing permanent injury.
The trial court entered a final summary judgment against the plaintiffs, specifically finding no genuine issue of material fact existed. The Second District Court of Appeal disagreed and reversed the summary judgment finding a "genuine issue of material fact exist[ed] ... in regards to whether [the defendants] breached [their] duty" to use reasonable care in protecting the plaintiffs' son from reasonably foreseeable harm. Id. at 749.
Here, the fourth amended complaint alleged the defendants undertook the duty to care for and supervise the plaintiff's decedent. Reduced to its simplest form, the fourth amended complaint alleged the defendants openly displayed drug paraphernalia, permitted the use of drugs within their home, and failed to take appropriate action when they found the decedent in a comatose condition. It alleged *1067 the defendants breached their duty to use reasonable care when they allowed the children to use drugs and failed to take appropriate action when they knew or should have known the decedent had overdosed on drugs. While the facts may ultimately belie the allegations, taking the well-pled allegations as true, we hold the fourth amended complaint states a viable cause of action.
We find the facts of Preferred National Insurance v. Fat Investors, Inc.,
We emphasize that our holding in this case does not expand premises liability to impose a duty on a social host to seek medical attention for a guest unless that host has voluntarily undertaken that duty. See, e.g., Estate of Massad v. Granzow,
For this reason, the order of dismissal is reversed and the case remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
STONE and SHAHOOD, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] We affirm the trial court's striking of the negligence per se claim as barred by the two year statute of limitations for a wrongful death claim. See § 768.28, Fla. Stat. (2004).
