I. Factual Background
On 29 April 2011, Gregory Scadden (“plaintiff’) filed a complaint against Robert Holt, both individually and in his official capacity as an emergency medical service provider working for the Town of
On May 2, 2008, plaintiff was a deputy sheriff employed with the Carteret County Sheriffs Department and was on duty and on patrol in his sheriffs vehicle when he received a dispatch call to assist EMS [Emergency Medical Services] at the home of an individual].] . . . Dispatch had advised plaintiff when making the call that the patient was combative and uncooperative. When plaintiff arrived on the scene [defendant] Holt and two EMS attendants, along with another deputy sheriff, had loaded the patient and stretcher into the Town of Newport EMS vehicle. Plaintiff walked up to the ambulance and stepped up into the back of the vehicle at the foot of the stretcher. The patient was agitated and unruly, so plaintiff advised the other deputy to handcuff the patient’s arms to allow EMS to start an IV on the patient. When plaintiff ordered the deputy to handcuff the patient, the patient attempted to kick plaintiff from the patient’s prone position on the stretcher. Plaintiff, to protect himself from the kick, extended his arms and bent over quickly to block the kick and pin patient’s legs to the stretcher. While restraining the patient’s legs, plaintiff noticed that the patient’s legs had not been strapped or restrained in any way prior to this event. After securing the patient’s legs and as plaintiff straightened up, he felt a sharp, pinching pain in his lower back. From this event plaintiff suffered a severe and permanent low back injury.
Plaintiff claims that the above facts show that defendant Holt was negligent in failing to properly restrain the patient. Plaintiff’s only claims against the Town of Newport arise through respondeat superior from the alleged negligence of defendant Holt. Plaintiff also raised an uninsured motorist claim in his complaint.
On 27 June 2011, defendants filed a motion to dismiss in their answer on the basis of the complaint’s alleged violation of Rule 9(j) of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1 and under Rule 12(b)(6) for failing to state a claim. The trial court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss by a written order entered 2 November 2011. Plaintiff timely filed written notice of appeal from the trial court’s order on 28 November 2011.
II. Standard of Review
Plaintiff’s only argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. See N.C. Gen. Stat.
On a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, the standard of review is whether, as a matter of law, the allegations of the complaint, treated as true, are sufficient to state a claim upon which relief may be granted under some legal theory. The complaint must be liberally construed, and the court should not dismiss the complaint unless it appears beyond a doubt that the plaintiff could not prove any set of facts to support his claim which would entitle him to relief.
Block v. County of Person,
III. 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss
Plaintiff appeals from the trial court’s order entered 2 November 2011 granting defendants’ motion to dismiss. Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by dismissing his complaint because defendant Holt owed plaintiff a legal duty to control his patient and prevent him from kicking plaintiff.
A. Third-Party Tortfeasor Standard
For a common law negligence complaint “[t]o withstand a motion to dismiss ... [it] must allege the existence of a legal duty or standard of care owed to the plaintiff by the defendant, breach of that duty, and a causal relationship between the breach of duty and certain actual injury or loss sustained by the plaintiff.” Lambeth,
[a]n exception to the general rule exists where there is a special relationship between the defendant and the third person which imposes a duty upon the defendant to control the third person’s conduct; or a special relationship between the defendant and the injured party which gives the injured party a right to protection.
Hedrick v. Rains,
Some examples of such recognized special relationships include: (1) parent-child, (2) master-servant, (3) landowner-licensee, (4) custodian-prisoner, and (5) institution-involuntarily committed mental patient.
King,
A finding that a special relationship exists and imposes a duty to control is justified where “(1) the defendant knows or should know of the third person’s violent propensities and (2) the defendant has the ability and opportunity to control the third person at the time of the third person’s criminal acts.” Stein v. Asheville City Bd. Of Educ.,
Plaintiff, citing Stein v. Asheville City Bd. Of Educ.,
In Stein, the plaintiffs were injured when two students at a school for “behaviorally and emotionally handicapped children” who were known to have violent tendencies opened fire at vehicles passing by an intersection in Asheville.
The Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals, holding that because the school employees could exercise no control over the students after they exited the bus, the school board could not be held liable for their actions. Id. at 332,
The portion of the Court’s opinion that plaintiff cites in his brief is inapposite to this case. Plaintiff quotes Stein for the proposition that “[n]o legal duty exists unless the injury to the plaintiff was foreseeable and avoidable through due care.” Id. at 328,
As explained in Stein, the proper standard for whether the defendant owes a duty to control the actions of a third party is whether the relationship between the defendant and the third party is such that “(1) the defendant knows or should know of the third person’s violent propensities and (2) the defendant has the ability and opportunity to control the third person at the time of the third person’s criminal acts.”
B. Analysis
Applying the above standard to the case sub judice, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting defendant’s 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. The question is whether, interpreted liberally, plaintiff alleged sufficient facts in his complaint, which if taken as true could establish a prima facie negligence case, including a “legal duty . . . owed to the plaintiff.” Lambeth,
Here, plaintiff failed to allege sufficient facts to establish that defendants had a legal duty to plaintiff. We find that the facts alleged in the complaint are inadequate to impose a legal duty on defendant Holt because they fail to establish both that defendant had a right to control the patient and that he had the requisite knowledge of the patient’s dangerousness. See Stein,
First, the facts as alleged do not show that defendant had the sort of legal right to control his patient that is required for a special relationship. See King,
Further, the facts as alleged in plaintiff’s complaint do not show that defendant knew or should have known of the patient’s violent disposition. The complaint alleges that the police dispatcher warned plaintiff that the patient was being “combative and uncooperative”, but never alleges that defendant had any foreknowledge of the patient’s disposition to violence.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Plaintiff does not raise the issue of his uninsured motorist claim on appeal. That issue is therefore abandoned. N.C.R. App. P. 26 (b)(6). Plaintiff’s claims against defendant Holt, in his individual capacity and in his official capacity, and against the Town of Newport all arise from the same alleged duty that defendant Holt owed plaintiff. Plaintiff’s argument that the trial court erred in determining defendant owed no duty to plaintiff therefore preserves all three remaining claims.
. There must be some relationship between either defendant and plaintiff, or defendant and the tortfeasor to justify imposition of a duty as to third parties. The same relationship can be found in some circumstances to impose a duty to control a third party, and in others it can be found to impose a duty to protect the injured party from third parties. Compare Pangburn,
. In the case sub judice the issue of a special relationship between plaintiff and defendant was never raised at the hearing on defendant’s motion or on appeal, therefore we will only discuss the duty to control a third party. See Hedrick,
. Although Stein refers to “criminal acts”, this test applies equally to third-party non-criminal torts. See, e.g., Harris v. Daimler Chrysler Corp.,
. Plaintiff does claim that this Court has held that “an EMT may be held personally liable for any harm caused by his negligence,” citing Fraley v. Griffin,_ N.C. App.__,
. In fact, the allegations of plaintiff’s complaint have more of a tendency to show plaintiff’s contributory negligence than the defendant’s knowledge. Plaintiff, a law enforcement officer, had been forewarned that the patient was “combative and uncooperative” but he still stood within close proximity to the patient’s feet without checking to see if they were restrained, even after he had directed another officer to restrain the patient’s arms with handcuffs.
