This interesting summary judgment case explores a health care provider’s duty to warn a possible victim of a mentally ill patient. These cases, of which there were four in Texas before the present case, all explore the Tarasoff/Thompson doctrine, which originated in California. This doctrine stands for the proposition that a health care provider may have a duty not only to his ill patient, but to the patient’s intended victim if it is foreseeable that the patient will do injury to an identifiable person. The Texas Supreme Court has not spoken on the Tara-soff/Thompson duty, but the four prior appellate opinions all seem to indicate that such a duty exists under the proper fact situation. This court also agrees the duty exists, as did the trial court.
These cases are not medical malpractice actions under article 4590i of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated. The heritage is much older. Such cases are common-law negligence actions involving duty and foreseeability of injury. Facts can raise such a duty if the facts are sufficient to do so. It was the trial court’s job to determine at the summary judgment hearing if there was enough proper summary judgment evidence to raise a fact issue, taking the nonmovant’s version of any contested facts as true. This is also the appellate court’s job in reviewing the trial court’s action. We do so.
FACTS
Lorenzo Limón was a man with problems on February 4, 1992. He was a substance abuser, divorced, depressed, and had attempted suicide in the past. His daughter took him to the Gonzaba Clinic. He was seen by Will Munoz, an alcohol and drug abuse counselor, for twenty to twenty-five minutes at the clime. Limón and Munoz had never met before. Munoz is not a physician. He cannot prescribe medication or admit anyone into the hospital. Limon’s daughter described to Munoz her father’s depression history and expressed her opinion that her father was “a danger to himself and others, and needed to be in a hospital.” When questioned by Munoz, Limón said he had been depressed. He mentioned that he was facing an employer-ordered urinalysis test and that he might have a problem because he had smoked “half a joint” recently. He also indicated that his former wife’s calls “bothered him” and he was in the process of changing his phone number. Munoz asked Limón if he felt suicidal or homicidal. He said he did not. He also explained he had not made any threats and, in fact, did not even own a gun. Munoz noted Limón had “mild to moderate depression.” He referred Limón to the Alamo Mental Health Group for further testing and evaluation. If Limon’s daughter harbored any thoughts that her dad might hurt her mother, she kept them to herself. Two days later, February 6, 1992, Limón went to his former wife’s home and shot her. She is now a paraplegic.
There are agency questions in this appeal revolving around the relationships between Munoz and the other defendants. The other *238 defendants are Dr. William Gonzaba, the principal physician at the office where Munoz saw Limón; the Gonzaba Medical Group, a professional association; and Treatment Associates, Inc., a corporate mental health/chemical dependency provider with whom Munoz was affiliated. The liability of these other persons and entities are derivative of the liability of Munoz. We deal with Munoz first.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review orders granting summary judgment under the following standards. To prevail on summary judgment, the movant is required to disprove at least one of the essential elements of each of the plaintiffs causes of action.
Lear Siegler, Inc. v. Perez,
THE CALIFORNIA CASES
The original case, which gave a name to the whole doctrine, is
Tarasoff v. Regents of University of California,
[Ojnee a therapist does in fact determine, or under applicable professional standards reasonably should have determined, that a patient poses a serious danger of violence to others, he bears a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect the foreseeable victim of that danger.... In sum, the therapist owes a legal duty not only to his patient, but also to his patient’s would-be victim and is subject in both respects to scrutiny by judge and jury.
Id.
at 25-26,
Four years later, the California court limited the
Tarasoff
doctrine in the case of
Thompson v. County of Alameda,
The
Thompson
court found that imposing a duty on the therapist to warn all parents
of
small children in the neighborhood would be unreasonably onerous and of questionable value.
Id.
at 79-80,
In those instances in which the released offender poses a predictable threat of harm to a named or readily identifiable victim or group of victims who can be effectively warned of the danger, a releas *239 ing agent may well be liable for failure to warn such persons. Despite the tragic events underlying the present complaint, plaintiffs’ decedent was not a known, identifiable victim, but rather a member of large amorphous public group of potential targets. Under these circumstances we hold that County had no affirmative duty to warn plaintiffs, the police, the mother of the juvenile offender, or other local parents.
Id.
THE TEXAS CASES
Texas entered into the
Tarasoff
arena in 1987 in the case of
Williams v. Sun Valley Hospital,
Where there is no allegation of a threat or danger to a readily identifiable person, we, like those courts whose logic we follow, are unwilling to impose a blanket liability upon all hospitals and therapists for the unpredictable conduct of their patients with a mental disorder. In this case, there was no duty to warn Pamela Williams as she drove on a public street more than a mile from the hospital that a patient had escaped from a mental ward.
Id. at 787.
A
Tarasoff-type
case was won by the victim’s family, and upheld by the Austin court of appeals in
Kerrville State Hospital v. Clark,
Although we do not decide the issue of duty based on a failure to warn Rebecca of Gary’s imminent release and his deteriorating mental condition, we note that a threat need not be made against a specific victim in order for the duty to warn to be imposed.
Id. at 436 n. 13. The Austin court quoted language from an Arizona case with approval:
“[W]e agree with those eases interpreting Tarasoff which state that a psychiatrist should not be relieved of this duty merely because his patient never verbalized any specific threat... .When a psychiatrist determines, or under applicable professional standards reasonably should have determined, that a patient poses a serious danger of violence to others, the psychiatrist has a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect the foreseeable victim of that danger. The foreseeable victim is one who is said to be within the zone of danger, that is, subject to probable risk of the patient’s violent conduct.”
Id.
(quoting
Hamman v. County of Maricopa,
Two other Texas courts considered cases with
Tarasoff
facts in 1996 prior to the case that is before this court in this opinion. These cases are
Zezulka v. Thapar,
No. 01-94-01195-CV, — S.W.2d -,
We are not asked in this case to hold a doctor responsible to the general public at large. Because Thapar allegedly knew of a specific threat to a specific person, we hold that she had a duty to warn that person.
Id., — S.W.2d at -, at *6.
The last of the Texas
Tarasojf-type
cases,
Kehler,
was only decided approximately two months before the present ease. This ease involved a double murder by a man named Bilby.
Kehler,
While it is likely a foreseeable duty would be recognized in Texas under a Tara-soff/Tkompson fact situation with an identifiable victim, this ease would nevertheless fail to fall within its parameters. Thus, each of the appellees’ motion for summary judgment properly responded to the appellants’ only viable claim, a claim arising under Tarasojf/Thompson that has not yet been affirmatively adopted by our Texas Supreme Court and, in any event, is not applicable here.
Id. at 332.
ANALYSIS AND CONCLUSION
The above quote from Kehler fits the instant case. This court has no trouble following the philosophical underpinnings of Tarasojf and Thompson. These cases are based on familiar grounds of common-law duty and its basic building block of foreseeability of harm. A foreseeable duty does not arise until there is an identifiable victim. If the victim is not identifiable, then who is the physician to warn? We agree with appellants that the victim does not have to be named. It is enough if a reasonable health provider could figure it out. This discussion, though, puts the cart before the horse. There are two elements in Tarasojf and Thompson. Both involve basic foreseeability questions. The first question is whether a reasonable health provider could have foreseen that the patient would injure or kill someone. If a reasonable health care provider could have foreseen that harm would come to someone, then the second question arises — who is the intended victim? If the victim is identifiable, by name or otherwise, the duty to warn the intended victim arises. This may be a factual determination that needs to be decided by a jury. We do not think it is in this case, though, and the trial court was correct in granting the summary judgments based on the evidence before it.
*241 Munoz was interviewing a patient, Limón, that had no history of violence. He was not saying, or even hinting, that he wanted to hurt someone. In fact, he denied it, saying he was neither suicidal nor homicidal. He said his former wife’s calls depressed him, along with other things that depressed him. His stated way of dealing with the calls, however, was not confrontational. He simply chose to avoid the problem by changing his telephone number. A husband being upset by his former wife’s calls, or vice-versa, is hardly diagnostic of a serious mental illness. It is the usual state of affairs, and probably the reason many of these calls get made. Limon’s proposed solution to change his number so his former wife could not reach him was also a well-trod trail, and not a response to alarm anyone. Limon’s daughter, Casanova, felt all these conversations were benign. She did not warn her mother, or feel any reason that she should do so. Her father never indicated to her any intentions of harming her mother. She was “totally surprised” when she learned of what had happened. No doubt, so was Munoz.
When all is said and done in life, some things are simply not foreseeable. Foreseeability involves logic, a predictable response to a situation. Mentally ill people, by virtue of their condition, may not be logical, and the actions of a tortured brain may not be foreseeable. On the other hand, they may be. When the patient told the doctor in
Tarasoff
that he was going to kill this readily identifiable girl as soon as she returned home from Brazil, the killing was foreseeable. No doubt there are less foreseeable cases where reasonable minds could differ on foreseeability of the action to come. A specific threat will not always be present, as was recognized in the
Clark
case.
Clark,
Having found no foreseeability that would raise a duty on the part of Munoz, it is not necessary to address the agency, and other, legal relationships between the other defendants and Munoz. Their liability, if any, would be derivative of that of Munoz, and if Munoz has not breached a duty, then neither have they.
We affirm the summary judgment as to all defendants.
