Lead Opinion
Shands Teaching Hospital and Clinics, Inc., d/b/a Shands Vista, an adult psychiatric hospital, seeks a writ of certiorari to quash an order denying .its motion to dismiss a negligence action. Shands asserts that the Estate of Ashley Lawson failed to comply with mandatory presuit requirements under chapter 766, Florida Statutes (2014), before bringing a medical negligence claim cloaked in allegations of ordinary negligence. We have certiorari jurisdiction and conclude that because the claim arises from the services and care Shands was giving to a patient in a locked psychiatric unit, the complaint alleges medical negligence under section 766.106(l)(a), Florida Statutes. We thus grant the petition and quash the order.
I.
The Estate filed a complaint against Shands on the heels of a tragic accident. In January 2013, more than two months
II.
A.
Certiorari review of the denial of a motion to dismiss is ordinarily unavailable. Baptist Med. Ctr. of Beaches, Inc. v. Rhodin,
For a court to grant certiorari relief from the denial of a motion to dismiss, a petitioner must establish three elements: (1) a departure from the essential requirements of the law, (2) resulting in material injury for the remainder of the case (3)' that cannot be corrected on post-judgment appeal. Williams v. Oken,
The specific presuit issue here— whether the claim sounds in medical negligence (requiring presuit compliance), or ordinary negligence (no presuit requirements) — is, a familiar one which, courts have analyzed in familiar ways under the applicable statute. See, e.g., Rhodin,
B.
1.
The key allegations in the Estate’s complaint state:
1. This is an ordinary negligence action for which damages exceed $15,000, inclusive of interest, costs and attorneys’ fees.
2. This is not an action for medical malpractice. This is not an action for negligent psychiatric treatment, negligent psychiatric diagnosis, or negligent psychiatric care.
* * *
5. On November 1, 2012, Ashley Lawson was admitted to Shands Vista ... and primarily resided in the Florida Recovery Center facility. She remained a resident until her death on January 23, 2013.
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8. Ashley Lawson (DOB 6/17/84) was admitted to [the Hospital] on November 1, 2012[,] as a psychiatric patient with a history of psychiatric illness, drug abuse, impulsive behavior, and multiple suicide attempts.
9. For her own safety, [she] was transferred to [the Hospital’s] inpatient locked unit.
10. The [Hospital] owed a legal duty to provide adequate security for [her] and other psychiatric patients who resided in the locked unit.
11. Notwithstanding the legal duty owed to Ashley Lawson, the Defendant breached its duty when its employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended and kept them unattended for an unreasonable period of time which allowed Ashley Lawson to exit the locked unit with said keys and badge.
12. At the time the employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended, the employee was not rendering medical or psychiatric care to Ashley Lawson.
13. At the- time the employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended, she was acting in the scope of her employment. *
14. As a direct and proximate result of the Defendant’s breach of its duty, Ashley Lawson impulsively eloped and made her way to the interstate in a confused condition and without any money, cell phone, or warm clothing. She was, then, struck by a tractor trailer, resulting in her death on January 23, 2012.
Shands argues that the trial court’s order departed from the essential -requirements of law by elevating conclusory “ordinary negligence” labels alleged in the complaint over patently conflicting fact allegations that amount to a medical negligence claim. The complaint alleges that Shands had a legal duty to confíne Ms. Lawson within the locked unit, where she had been admitted because her psychiatric condition demanded the safety and security of a “locked unit.” Shands apparently provided this 24-7 confinement service to Ms. Lawson for some two and a half months before she, “[a]s a direct and proximate cause of [Shands’] breach of its duty, ... impulsively eloped.” Despite the Estate’s disavowals of medical negligence, we agree with Shands because under § 766.106(l)(a), the harm alleged in the Complaint arose from Shands’ duty (and failure) to confine Ms. Lawson inside the hospital, which was the very service that the locked unit existed to provide. Because the breach arose from Shands’ provision, and ultimate failure, to keep Ms. Lawson confined within its locked unit, and was the service that Ms. Lawson’s condition allegedly required, we conclude that the Estate’s claim arises out of the medical care, treatment, and services provided to her for purposes of § 766.106(l)(a).
We recognize that the Estate alleged “[t]his is not an action for medical malpractice. This is not an action for negligent pisychiatric treatment, negligent psychiatric diagnosis, or negligent psychiatric care ... [and that Shands’ employee] was not rendering medical or psychiatric care to Ashley Lawson” when the breach occurred. But simply labeling allegations as “ordinary negligence” is not dispositive. Omni Healthcare, Inc. v. Moser,
The trial court credited the complaint’s conclusory and internally inconsistent allegations that Ms. Lawson wasn’t receiving care at the time of the breach, but overlooked those allegations defining the breach in terms of the unit’s failure to keep her confined. Notably, the complaint set Shands’ breach in the context of allegations of (1) Ms. Lawson’s psychiatric condition, as “a psychiatric patient with a history of psychiatric illness, ... impulsive behavior, and' multiple suicide attempts,” and (2) Shands’ psychiatric care and services, stating: “For her own safety, [she] was transferred to Shands Vista’s inpatient locked unit ... [where Shands] owed a legal duty to provide adequate security for [her] and other psychiatric patients who resided in the locked unit.” The complaint then defined the harm in terms of Ms. Lawson’s poor psychiatric condition— impulsivity, mental infirmity, and suicidal tendencies — which Shands failed to keep in check: “[she] impulsively eloped and made her way to the interstate in a confused condition ... resulting in her death.”
Although courts must liberally construe, and accept as true, factual allegations in a complaint, as well as reasonable inferences therefrom, there is no obligation to accept internally inconsistent factual claims, conclusory allegations, unwarranted deductions, or mere legal conclusions made by a party. W.R. Townsend Contracting, Inc. v. Jensen Civil Const. Inc.,
Furthering our view that the Estate’s claim sounds-in medical negligence is that the proof required in this case will inevitably involve the medical negligence standard of care, or “that level of care, skill, and treatment which, in light of all relevant surrounding circumstances, is recognized as acceptable and appropriate by reasonably prudent similar health care providers.” § 766.102(1), Fla. Stat. Our court said in Broadway v. Bay Hospital, Inc.,
Conversely, the claim alleged here was grounded in Shands’ duty to confine Ms. Lawson in its locked unit against her will. The Estate’s claim is not that there is a duty to constantly guard one’s keys and badge in the workplace. Rather, the complaint repeatedly highlighted the unique setting giving rise to the harm — in a “locked unit” of psychiatric patients — because it was critical to the allegations. In this special context, expert testimony is necessary to evaluate the “unattended” keys allegation' and whether Shands appropriately handled Ms. Lawson’s security. Qf., Sierra v. Associated Marine Insts., Inc.,
• In a locked hospital unit confining psychiatric patients against their will, must employees’ keys and badges be kept “attended” on their person — perhaps pinned to a shirt or hanging around a neck — while caring for patients?
*333 • If acceptable security policies allow for (or' require) keys and badges to be stored away from patients and employees in a locked psychiatric unit, how are they to be stored given the wishes of some patients to escape?
• The complaint alleges that the.keys and badge were left unattended for “an unreasonable” period of time; what is a reasonable period of tim'e for an employee to leave keys and a badge unattended?
• Given Ms. Lawson’s suicidal and impulsive condition and need for locked unit, psychiatric services, did Shands act acceptably in allowing her to move about the unit, where she could obtain keys, badges, and access to exits, or was confinement to her room or bed required?
Without the help of experts to establish what is acceptable, appropriate, and prudent in this psychiatric context, jurors cannot be expected to determine through common experience whether Shands or its employee breached relevant standards. See, e.g., Robison v. Faine,
The Estate’s argument relies mostly on Robinson and Joseph v. University Behavioral LLC,
Joseph is similar. A patient with a violent background attacked Mr. Joseph — for the second time — after Mr. Joseph had warned the residential facility about that patient’s violent tendencies and sought to be removed from his ambit. Joseph,
The Estate also points to our decision in Ashe, which found ordinary negligence where a psychiatric patient was released without documented approval of a psychiatrist or other approved physician, violating both “mandatory and non-discretionary requirements of Florida’s Baker Act.”
This case more closely resembles two patient confinement cases decided by other district courts in 2010. In Perez, the Third District Court of Appeal quashed an order denying a motion to dismiss where a patient fell from a hospital bed in the critical care unit and died.
The Fourth District found a similar complaint to allege medical malpractice where a 76-year-old, disoriented, and confused man fell from a stretcher after being admitted to a hospital and suffered fatal head injuries. Indian River Mem’l Hosp., Inc. v. Browne,
The claims in both Perez and Browne dealt with inadequately confined patients, just like the Estate’s claim here that Shands failed to keep Ms. Lawson adequately confined within the locked unit as her condition required. And the same result is called for ‘ here. We agree with these two courts that “[tjhese types of issues arise out of the rendering of, or the failure to render, medical care or services,” Browne,
3.
Finally, this matter has been determined en banc in order to maintain uniformity in the court’s decisions. The three-judge panel could not reach a definitive result, with one judge favoring a return of the issue to the trial court for a motion-to-dismiss-stage evidentiary process. Shands did not request an evidentiary proceeding below and our cases have not required one, even when chapter 766 presuit-involved claims have been difficult to interpret, vague, or raised unanswered questions about whether a claim sounds in ordinary versus medical negligence. Requiring a novel evidentiary process would be a time- and resource-intensive departure both from traditional pleading standards and from the manner that trial courts have always handled these cases. Even in .Lakeland Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Pilgrim,
III.
Because the Estate’s complaint alleges medical negligence, the trial court should have granted Shands’ motion to dismiss without prejudice for the Estate- either to allege presuit compliance under chapter 766, see Hosp. Corp. of Am. v. Lindberg,
The Petition is GRANTED and the order denying Shands’ motion to dismiss is QUASHED.
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part, dissenting in part.
Shands Teaching Hospital and Clinics, Inc., seeks review of the trial court’s order denying its motion to dismiss the complaint of the Estate of Ashley Lawson, which seeks to proceed against the Hospital with a negligence claim without resorting to the medical malpractice presuit screening requirements of chapter 766, Florida Statutes (2013). Our three judge panel divided evenly, one member voting to deny the petition, one to grant the petition, leaving the opinion that follows (modified a- bit) as a middle ground, one that would adopt the Second District’s opinion in Lakeland Regional Medical Center v. Pilgrim,
I.
The Estate’s complaint arises from the death of Ashley Lawson, a psychiatric patient who received medical services in the secured psychiatric care facility at the Hospital. According to the complaint, Ms. Lawson “was admitted to [the Hospital] on November 1, 2012, as a psychiatric patient with a history of psychiatric illness, drug abuse, impulsive behavior, and multiple suicide attempts.” It further stated that “[f]or her own safety, [she] was transferred to [the Hospital’s] inpatient locked unit” and that the Hospital “owed a legal duty to provide, adequate security for [her] and other psychiatric patients who resided in the locked unit.”
As the basis for liability, the complaint alleged that the Hospital “breached its [legal] duty when its employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended and kept them unattended for an unreasonable period of time which allowed [Ms. Lawson] to exit the locked unit with said keys and badge.” As a result, she “impulsively eloped and made her way to the interstate in a confused condition and without any money, cell phone, or warm clothing. She was, then, struck by a tractor trailer, resulting in her death on January 23, 2012.”
The Estate’s complaint expressly disavowed that the action was based on medical negligence. The complaint specified that it was “an ordinary negligence action” and “not an action for medical malpractice.” Further, it stated it was “not an action for negligent psychiatric treatment, negligent psychiatric diagnosis, or negligent psychiatric care.” Paragraph twelve of the complaint specifically alleged that “[a]t the time the employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended, the employee was not rendering medical or psychiatric care” to Ms. Lawson.
Notwithstanding these disavowals, the Hospital moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to satisfy presuit requirements, arguing that the allegations sounded in medical negligence. The Hospital pointed out that the complaint alleged a duty was owed to psychiatric patients in the “locked unit” of the psychiatric facility to be kept safe while being treated for psychiatric illnesses, including — in Ms. Lawson’s
The Estate responded that its complaint, on its face, alleged only ordinary, not medical, negligence that happened'to occur in a medical facility. Specifically, the breach occurred when the Hospital’s “employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended and kept them unattended for an unreasonable amount of time, which allowed Ashley .Lawson to exit a locked unit with said keys and badge.”. This negligent act, though occurring in the psychiatric care unit, “involved no medical skill or knowledge ... misdiagnosis on admission or afterwards or any improper treatment.”
At the hearing on its motion, the Hospital urged that the complaint’s allegations of inadequate security had to be judged by the standard for security of a psychiatric hospital overseeing psychiatric patients in a locked unit; the provision of security in this environment must be viewed “in light of the particular type of patient and the psychiatric illness and the threat that that patient represents, all of which entails a medical judgment, a psychiatric analysis of that patient, as well as that facility.” The Estate again countered that its complaint did not allege medical negligence, and no medical treatment or evaluation was alleged. It analogized the alleged security breach as akin to the decision of whether to leave a gurney rail up or down, which lacks a medical basis.
After argument, the trial court denied the Hospital’s motion, saying “I don’t know what the facts are going to show one way or the other, but I háve to take that allegation particularly in Paragraph 12 on its face value and say this particular employee was not rendering medical or psychiatric care at the time.” In denying the motion, the trial court made “perfectly clear to everyone [that] I’m not resolving this issue overall. I’m saying that at this stage, having to give deference to the allegations and the complaint, I don’t think I could grant a motion to dismiss.” An unelabo-rated written order followed.
II.
As a preliminary matter, certiorari jurisdiction exists to review the denial of the Hospital’s motion, the potential effect of which would be to subject the Hospital to defending a claim in contravention of Florida’s Medical Malpractice Reform Act. See Sova Drugs, Inc. v. Barnes,
Turning to the merits, whether a suit raises an issue of medical negligence for purposes of statutory - presuit notice requirements involves' a case-by-case approach, one that is guided by the statutory definition of “medical negligence” and the panoply of cases attempting to articulate a dividing line between situations subject to the presuit process and those that are not.
As we said in Broadway v. Bay Hospital, Inc.,
Given this statutory guidepost, the starting point in determining whether medical negligence is at issue is what is alleged in a complaint. Broadway,
While the starting point is what a complaint says, and plaintiffs have the right to assert what they believe is the true nature of the negligence alleged, simply labeling a claim as one not involving medical negligence is not dispositive of the judicial inquiry. See Omni Healthcare, Inc. v. Moser,
Let’s turn now to the Estate’s complaint. To support its position that a medical negligence claim underlies the complaint’s allegations, the Hospital contends the Estate’s negligence claim implies, if not states directly, that decisions about psychiatric patient security, involve some degree of medical judgment; after all, not all psychiatric patients have the same degree of risk of flight or risk of harm to self or others. Unlike other hospital patients who are free to leave if physically able to do so, psychiatric patients like Ms. Lawson may be subject to confinement as part of their treatment plans. And at least inferentially, a standard of medical care exists regarding how those overseeing a psychiatric facility are to ensure patients at risk for flight, suicide, and other such risks are appropriately restricted. See Young v. Bd. of Hosp. Dirs. of Lee Cnty.,
A review of the caselaw finds none directly on point. The Hospital’s view is supported by Indian River Memorial Hospital v. Browne,
The parallel in this case to Indian River is that the face of the Estate’s claim contains two key allegations that indicate that the negligence alleged may be based, at least in part, on the breach of a professional medical standard of cars. The first is that Ms. Lawson “was admitted to [the Hospital] ... as a psychiatric patient with a history of psychiatric illness, drug abuse,
Much like Indian River, the standard of care for the Hospital’s treatment of psychiatric patients may be “based in part on the hospital’s evaluation of his medical condition when he was admitted” to the psychiatric inpatient locked facility. Id. at 238-39. By interlineation with the words of the Indian River court, the failure to “implement adequate procedures to protect [psychiatric] room patients from” escaping a locked psychiatric unit includes a medical component. Id. at 239. Because the “adequacy of the hospital’s procedures depends on the prevailing professional standard for managing and supervising those admitted to [psychiatric facilities that include an inpatient locked unit], these types of issues arise out of the rendering of, or the failure to render, medical care or services.” Id. A difference between Indian River and this case is that the former involved admission to an emergency room while the latter involves admission to a psychiatric facility, but Indian River is persuasive in favor of the Hospital’s position.
The Estate counters that Indian‘River can be distinguished because it asserts no claim that the Hospital was negligent in assessing Ms. Lawson’s psychiatric condition; instead, the Hospital adequately diagnosed that condition, but failed to implement its generic security plan when an employee negligently left keys and a badge where Ms. Lawson could access them. Of course, the failure to keep a psychiatric patient safe from her own actions is not unlike failing to give medicines, or leaving them unattended for the patient to take indiscriminately. Leaving a scalpel in a surgical patient could be considered an act of ordinary negligence if viewed in isolation from its médical context; similarly, leaving keys unattended in a medical facility could be considered an act of ordinary negligence if viewed in isolation from its psychiatric context. Even if Ms. Lawson’s condition was assessed correctly, the- Hospital’s duty to patients in a locked unit is to prevent harm that could result from their acting upon them impulses or idea-tions. Like Indian River, the failure here appears to be based, in part, on implementation of protocols related to a patient’s specific medical condition. The Estate says its claim is like the situation in Lake Shore Hospital, Inc. v. Clarke,
The Estate further relies on Joseph v. University Behavioral LLC, 71 So.3d‘ 913, 919 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011) and Robinson v. West Florida Regional Medical Center,
What is to be done in light of the presence of a- possible medical negligence claim, in this case? The trial judge felt hampered, making it “perfectly clear” to the parties that he was “not resolving this issue overall,” needing more information to make a reasoned judgment. And the Estate leaves open, if not encourages, the possibility that the Hospital can reassert its position at later stages of the proceeding via a summary judgment if it believes that pre-suit requirements have been met. See id. (leaving open possibility for defendant “to show, with further development of the record, by way of proof of its affirmative defense, that any wrongful conduct on its part did arise from medical diagnosis, treatment or care .... ”); ■ see also Cin-tron,
A pivotal point is that no substantiation yet exists in this case that a medical standard of care 'actually exists in the real world for securing individual psychiatric patients in a psychiatric ward; perhaps affidavits or testimony of medical' experts will say it exists, perhaps not. To con-
Viewed in this light, the most reasonable approach in this type of situation is described by Judge Altenbernd in Pilgrim, which provides for the filing of affidavits and a possible “limited evidentiary hearing,” the overall purpose of which is to determine expeditiously at the outset of litigation whether a claim is based on medical negligence and subject to pre-suit. Id. at 509 (“If the factual basis for the claim remains disputed, it may be necessary for the trial" court to conduct a limited eviden-tiary hearing, comparable to the hearing used to resolve a Venetian Salami jurisdictional dispute, to determine whether this case falls within the ambit of chapter 766.”). When a complaint is vague or raises an unanswered , question of whether medical negligence is involved, the “parties are entitled to a process that presents evidence by affidavit or evidentiary hearing.” Id. This approach best achieves the intended legislative goal of the pre-suit process, which is similar to jurisdictional and standing disputes, see Chuck v. City of Homestead Police Department,
Notes
. The Estate also points to Southern Baptist Hospital of Florida, Inc. v. Ashe,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Shands Hospital files a petition for writ of certiorari asserting that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss because the plaintiffs failed to allege that they followed the presuit notice requirements contained in chapter 766, Florida Statutes (Medical Malpractice Act). The trial court correctly determined, in ruling" on the motion to dismiss, it was required to take the allegations of the complaint as true and that the allegations' therein, leaving a pass and key unattended, established simple carelessness unrelated to diagnosis and treatment. Therefore, as alleged in the complaint, the case did not constitute one for medical negligence. See St. ■ Jo
Standard of Revieiv
The appropriate certiorari review of the trial court’s decision to deny the motion to dismiss is to review the four corners of the complaint to determine whether the trial court departed from the essential requirements of law. St. Joseph’s Hosp.,
Complaint
The complaint in this case states in pertinent part:
8. Ashley Lawson (DOB 6/17/84) was admitted to [the Hospital] on November 1, 2012 as a psychiatric patient with a history of psychiatric illness, drug abuse, impulsive behavior, and multiple suicide attempts.
9. For her own safety, [she] was transferred to [the Hospital’s] inpatient locked unit.
10. The [Hospital] owed a legal duty to provide adequate security for [her] and other psychiatric patients who resided in the locked unit.
11. Notwithstanding the legal duty owed to Ashley Lawson, the Defendant breached its duty when its employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended and kept them unattended for an unreasonable period of time which allowed Ashley Lawson to exit the locked unit with said keys and badge.
12. At the time the employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended, the employee was not rendering medical or psychiatric care to Ashley Lawson.
13. At the time the employee negligently left her keys and badge unattended, she was acting in the scope of her employment.
14. As a direct and proximate result of the Defendant’s breach of its duty, Ashley Lawson impulsively eloped and made her way to the interstate in a confused condition and without any money, cell phone, or warm clothing. She was, then, struck by a tractor trailer, resulting in her death on January 23, 2012.
(Emphasis added).
The key assertions are:
1. The nature of the negligent act. The keys and badge were left unattended, an act not involving medical judgement.
2. The background circumstances at the time of the incident. Diagnosis or treatment was not taking place.
3. The employee’s role or job duties are not identified in the complaint. In fact, based on what is alleged in the complaint, it could have involved staff with no relationship to medical diagnosis or treatment.
4. The standard of care. The failure to provide adequate security in a lock down facility. A standard that this court has stated does not necessarily involve medical negligence. See Robinson v. West Florida Regional Medical Center,675 So.2d 226 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996).
Trial Court’s Ruling
At the hearing on the motion to dismiss, the trial-court ruled as follows:
Okay. Well, I’m here at the complaint stage and a motion addressed to the*343 complaint and I have to take the allegations of the complaint as true for the purposes of this motion anyway, and ask myself basically, under these circumstances, whether the Plaintiff has pled themselves out of court, basically by establishes that this is no way could have been connected or established that it was within the scope of rendering medical or psychiatric care. The complaint alleged quite the opposite in terminology. I don’t know what the facts are going to show one way or the other, but I have to take that allegation particularly in Paragraph 12 on its face value and say this particular employee was not rendering medical or psychiatric are at the time. I don’t know what the facts are going to reveal, but at this stage, I don’t think I can grant a motion to dismiss. But in denying the motion to dismiss, I want to make it perfectly clear to everyone that I’m not resolving this issue overall. I’m saying that at this stage, having to give deference to the allegations and the complaint, I don’t think I could grant a motion to dismiss.
The trial court’s ruling may be summarized as follows:
1. In ruling on the motion to dismiss, the court was limited to review of the four corners of the complaint.
2. Based on the allegations in the complaint, the court could not say this case is based on medical negligence.
3. The court would revisit the issue if, as the facts develop, it becomes apparent the case is based on medical negligence.
The trial court’s ruling was entirely correct and did not constitute a departure from the essential requirements of law.
Pertinent Statutory Sections
Chapter 766, Florida Statutes, contains a complex process which must be followed in medical negligence cases. The chapter defines a claim for medical negligence as “arising out of the rendering of, or the failure to render, medical care or services.” § 776.106(l)(a), Fla. Stat.
The complex procedures contain strict presuit notice and investigation requirements. See, e.g., § 766.203, Fla. Stat. There are also extensive statutory requirements concerning breaches of standards of care and methods of proving these breaches in medical negligence actions. See, e.g., § 766.202, Fla. Stat. One specific example of a provision which would make no sense outside the context of medical judgment is section 766.203(2)(b), which requires corroboration of reasonable grounds to institute medical negligence litigation by providing “submission of a verified written medical expert opinion from a medical expert as defined” in the statute.
The clear import of these extensive procedures is to prevent ■ frivolous second guessing of health care providers in their diagnosis of patients and their method of treatment of patients. The onerous procedures were not intended to provide unnecessary obstacles to injured parties attempting to institute claims against health care providers for simple carelessness. Indeed, requirements of extensive investigation and written medical expert opinions would make no sense in the context of simple careless acts, such as carelessly leaving one’s keys where a patient can get them.
This court, in fact, has held on numerous occasions that where the challenged action does not involve a medical diagnosis or a decision that required professional skill or judgment, the presuit requirements need not be met. S. Baptist Hosp. of Fla., Inc. v. Ashe,
Several other courts have reached similar conclusions concerning the appropriate way of analyzing the statute’s applicability. “[Bjecause the presuit requirements of [Florida’s Medical Malpractice Act] limit the constitutional right of access to courts, they must be narrowly construed.” Holmes,
In analyzing whether an act constitutes medical or simple negligence we cannot forget what the clear language of the statute indicates is intended to be covered and not covered.
Case Law Analysis
There are many cases dealing with the distinction between medical negligence and simple negligence. On one end of the spectrum are cases involving alleged misdiagnosis or harm caused during the treatment of a patient, and on the other end are cases not involving professional judgment or skill, such as simple premises liability. Compare Broadway v. Bay Hosp., Inc.,
In Holmes,
It is axiomatic that the mere fact that a wrongful act occurs in a medical setting does not automatically transform the contested action into one that sounds in medical malpractice; the wrongful act must be “directly related to the improper application of medical services and the use 'of professional judgment or skill.” Corbo [v. Garcia], 949 So.2d [366] at 368 [ (Fla. 2d DCA 200.7) ] (quoting Lynn v. Mount Sinai Med. Ctr., Inc.,692 So.2d 1002 , 1003 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997)). This Court has previously held that “[t]he primary test for whether a claim is one for rhedical malpractice is whether the claim relies on the application of the medical malpractice standard of care.” Pierrot [v. Osceola Mental Health, Inc.], 106 So.3d [491] at 493 [ (Fla. 5th DCA 2013) ] (citing Weinstock v. Groth,629 So.2d 835 , 838 (Fla.1993); Joseph v. Univ. Behavioral LLC.,71 So.3d 913 , 917 (Fla. 5th DCA 2011); GalenCare, Inc. v. Mosley,59 So.3d 138 , 141-43 (Fla. 2d DCA 2011)).
Id. Cases not involving medical skill or judgment, however, are simple negligence actions not subject to the presuit requirements of chapter 776. Id. at 1287. This analysis is consistent with the purpose of the presuit requirements in chapter 766.
Here, the hospital relies heavily on the case of Indian River Memorial Hospital, Inc. v. Browne,
The hospital also relies on Young v. Board of Hospital Directors of Lee County,
Because the actions alleged in the complaint are unrelated to diagnosis and treatment, the trial court was correct in denying the motion to dismiss. ' ‘'
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
The trial court’s duty in determining whether to grant or deny a motion to dismiss simply is to review the four corners of the complaint. St. Joseph’s Hosp., Inc. v. Cintron,
A writ of certiorari must be limited in its use to maintain its effectiveness as a remedy in preventing frivolous and “piecemeal review of pretrial' orders.” Abbey v. Patrick,
