MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT PROVIDERS, WHO WERE TREATING MOTHER, DID NOT OWE A DUTY OF CARE TO HER SON, WHO WAS STABBED AND KILLED BY MOTHER (FOURTH DEPT).
The Fourth Department, reversing Supreme Court, determined defendant medical/mental health facilities and psychiatrist, who were treating plaintiff’s wife, did not owe a duty to plaintiff’s son, who was killed by plaintiff’s wife. Plaintiff had called defendant Unity Mental Health (UMH) several times seeking additional care because his wife’s condition was worsening. Plaintiff was told his wife should keep her psychiatric appointment which was two weeks away. Two days later plaintiff’s wife stabbed their son (decedent):
Generally, medical providers owe a duty of care only to their patients, and courts have been reluctant to expand that duty to encompass nonpatients because doing so would render such providers liable “to a prohibitive number of possible plaintiffs” … .The scope of that duty of care has, on occasion, been expanded to include nonpatients where the defendants’ relationship to the tortfeasor ” ‘place[d] [them] in the best position to protect against the risk of harm,’ ” and “the balancing of factors such as the expectations of the parties and society in general, the proliferation of claims, and public policies affecting the duty proposed herein . . . tilt[ed] in favor of establishing a duty running from defendants to plaintiffs under the facts alleged” … . Under the circumstances of this case, however, we conclude that those factors do not favor establishing a duty running from defendants to decedent. The complaint herein does not allege that plaintiff’s wife sought treatment specifically in order to prevent physical injury to decedent or her family, that defendants were aware whether she had threatened or displayed violence towards her family in the past, or that defendants directly put in motion the danger posed by the patient … . Cardenas v Rochester Regional Health, 2021 NY Slip Op 01641, Fourth Dept 3-19-21