OPINION
We allowed appeal in this matter to determine whether a hospital, which collects samples for drug testing under a contract with an employer, owes a duty of care to the employee undergoing that testing.
Appellant Renee Sharpe (“Sharpe”), a courier for Federal Express, was directed to report to St. Luke’s Hospital (the “Hospital”) to undergo routine, random drug screening. Pursuant to a contract with Federal Express, the Hospital collected urine samples and then forwarded those samples to an outside laboratory for testing. On the day in question, Sharpe maintains, numerous events transpired at the Hospital that affected the chain of custody associated with her urine sample, as a result of which it was misidentiffed and/or mishandled. Consequently, Sharpe alleges, the urine sample falsely tested positive for cocaine. When she disputed that outcome, the Hospital conducted an internal investigation at the request of *93 Federal Express. Following the investigation, through which the Hospital verified the chain of custody, Sharpe’s employment with Federal Express was terminated.
Sharpe thereafter instituted an action against the Hospital in the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County, alleging that the Hospital “had a duty of care to perform specimen collection in accordance with the Code of Federal Regulations governing specimen collection and in accordance [with] the requirements placed upon a medical facility performing to the appropriate and generally accepted standards [for] urine specimen collection.” Citing to numerous instances in which the Hospital’s actions allegedly did not conform to these standards of care, and contending that such failures resulted in a false positive drug test, Sharpe averred direct and immediate harm to both her reputation and economic status resulting from the termination of her employment. Sharpe proceeded to assert claims of, inter alia, negligence and deliberate and reckless misconduct against the Hospital. 1 Sharpe did not assert any claim against the entities that had performed the testing and reported the results to Federal Express; the Hospital, however, joined those entities as additional defendants.
The Hospital ultimately filed a motion for summary judgment, maintaining, inter alia, that Sharpe could not establish that it owed her a duty that is recognized by law, a prerequisite to her negligence claim. Specifically, the Hospital asserted that, because it collected Sharpe’s specimen pursuant to its contract with Federal Express, no professional or contractual relationship had been created between it and Sharpe, thus obviating the existence of a duty on its part.
Following argument, the trial court agreed with the Hospital’s position, explaining in its order granting summary judgment that, where a third party has engaged an entity to perform employment drug testing, the employee may not
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thereafter maintain a negligence claim against that entity.
See Ney v. Axelrod,
President Judge McEwen authored a dissenting statement, expressing his view that the doctrine of privity should not be so rigidly applied as to preclude the imposition of a duty upon entities that present themselves as engaging in a specialty or' as possessing a degree of expertise for which licensure by a government authority is required. Moreover, President Judge McEwen noted that, while Sharpe did not assert a claim against the laboratory and the individuals that actually performed the test, she nonetheless alleged a plethora of failures on the part of the Hospital concerning its collection and handling of the urine specimen. President Judge McEwen also found it critical that Sharpe had already attained employment with Federal Express for purposes of imposing a duty of reasonable care, given the resultant loss of employment and the stigma inevitably attaching to her subsequent attempts to obtain employment. He would have imposed a duty upon any *95 hospital or laboratory involved in any stage of drug testing to adhere to a standard of reasonable and prudent conduct to prevent an undue risk of harm from false positive test results. Judge Olszewski issued a concurring memorandum, acknowledging that the court was bound by Ney and Tomko, but indicating that he would have reached a different result in those cases. Unlike President Judge McEwen, however, Judge Olszewski would not have distinguished this matter on the basis of Sharpe’s existing employment relationship with Federal Express; instead, finding the Superior Court cases to “unnecessarily perpetuate the outdated requirement of privity,” he invited either the en banc Superior Court or this Court to overrule the relevant line of decisions.
A cause of action in negligence requires allegations that establish the breach of a legally recognized duty or obligation that is causally connected to damages suffered by the complainant.
See Martin v. Evans,
The concept of duty is rooted in public policy, and the determination of whether a duty should be imposed upon an alleged tortfeasor involves a balancing of the following factors:
(1) the relationship between the parties; (2) the social utility of the actor’s conduct; (3) the nature of the risk imposed and foreseeability of the harm incurred; (4) the consequences of imposing a duty upon the actor; and (5) the overall public interest in the proposed solution.
Althaus v. Cohen,
As to the first of the
Althaus
factors, a sufficient relationship exists between the Hospital and Sharpe to justify the imposition of a duty upon the Hospital to exercise reasonable care in the collection and handling of the urine specimen, despite the absence of a contract between the two parties. Specifically, Sharpe personally presented herself to the Hospital, which was aware of the purpose of the urine screening; the Hospital, in turn, should have realized that any negligence with respect to the handling of the specimen could harm Sharpe’s employment.
Accord Stinson,
The characteristics of the relationship between Sharpe and the Hospital that justify the imposition of a duty also render
Tomko
distinguishable. The employee in that case was seeking to assert a claim in negligence for a failure to diagnose cancer, conduct that was not directly subsumed within the physician’s obligations under his contract with the employer for a pre-employment physical examination.
See Tomko,
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Examining the remaining factors, while the Hospital’s participation in the drag testing process certainly has social utility, the substantial harm deriving from inaccurate test results, which, in the context of Sharpe’s employment-related screening, allegedly took the form of a termination of gainful employment, would be a foreseeable consequence of a breach of the duty of reasonable care.
Accord Stinson,
Accordingly, we hold that the Hospital owed Sharpe a duty of reasonable care with regard to collection and handling of her urine specimen for the employment-related drug testing; it is, of course, for the jury to determine whether the Hospital breached such duty.
The order of the Superior Court is reversed, and the matter is remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. Although Sharpe also asserted claims of defamation, fraudulent misrepresentation and breach of contract, she voluntarily withdrew those claims before the trial court. Moreover, while Sharpe did not withdraw her claim for deliberate and reckless misconduct, the trial court and the Superior Court engaged in no discussion of that count. Nor do the parties advance any argumentation along these lines.
. The scope of the obligations assumed by a physician under a contract with an insurance company, and the absence of affirmative conduct on the part of the physician that would itself result in direct harm to the examinee, also provide a basis for distinguishing those Superior Court cases that have found the lack of a duty between the physician and the examinee.
See, e.g., Promubol v. Hackett,
. The dissenting and concurring memoranda from the Superior Court frame the inquiry in terms of privity, which, along with the plaintiff's status as a third-party beneficiary of a contract, may have a bearing
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upon the viability of a claim based upon an alleged violation of a contractual term.
See, e.g., Scarpitti v. Weborg,
. As President Judge McEwen suggested in his dissent,
Hey
may be distinguished on the basis that the employee there was seeking damages for the loss of potential employment arising from pre-employment drug screening. While the Superior Court classified such a claim for damages as speculative and insufficiently substantial to support imposition of the advocated duty,
see Ney,
