Case Title: Chirillo v. Granicz

Citation: 

Docket Number: SC14-898

State: florida

Court: Florida Supreme Court

Date: 2016-08-25T00:00:00Z

Document:
Supreme Court of Florida 
 
 
____________ 
 
No. SC14-898 
____________ 
 
JOSEPH S. CHIRILLO, JR., M.D., et al., 
Petitioners, 
 
vs. 
 
ROBERT GRANICZ, etc., 
Respondent. 
 
[August 25, 2016] 
 
QUINCE, J. 
 
This case is before the Court for review of the decision of the Second 
District Court of Appeal in Granicz v. Chirillo, 147 So. 3d 544 (Fla. 2d DCA 
2014).  The district court certified that its decision is in direct conflict with the 
decision of the First District Court of Appeal in Lawlor v. Orlando, 795 So. 2d 147 
(Fla. 1st DCA 2001), on the issue of the duty owed to a patient by a physician or 
psychotherapist.  Granicz, 147 So. 3d at 549.  We have jurisdiction.  See art. V, § 
3(b)(4), Fla. Const.  For the reasons that follow, we approve the Second District’s 
decision and disapprove that of the First District. 
 
 
 
 
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FACTS 
This case involves a medical malpractice action filed by Robert Granicz 
(“Granicz”) as personal representative of his wife’s estate, asserting that her 
primary care physician, Dr. Joseph S. Chirillo, Jr., breached his duty of care in 
treating her, which resulted in her suicide.  Granicz, 147 So. 3d at 546.  Granicz’s 
wife, Jacqueline Granicz (“the decedent”), had a history of depression.  Id.  She 
began seeing Dr. Chirillo in 2005, and in September of that year, Dr. Chirillo 
switched her medication from Prozac to another antidepressant known as Effexor.  
Id. 
On October 8, 2008, the decedent called Dr. Chirillo’s office and told his 
medical assistant that she had stopped taking the Effexor because she thought it 
was causing her to experience some side effects, such as not sleeping well and 
having to take more sleeping pills, being under mental strain and crying easily, and 
having gastrointestinal problems.  Id.  The decedent also explained that she had not 
“felt right” since late June or July.  Id.  “The [medical] assistant wrote this 
information in a note for Dr. Chirillo.”  Id.  Upon reading the note shortly 
thereafter, Dr. Chirillo changed the decedent’s antidepressant to Lexapro and 
referred her to a gastroenterologist.  Id.  Dr. Chirillo’s office called the decedent 
and told her that she could pick up samples and a prescription for Lexapro, but the 
 
 
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office did not request that she schedule an appointment with Dr. Chirillo.  Id.  The 
decedent picked up the items later that day.  Id. 
The next day, Granicz found the decedent’s body hanging in their garage.  
Id.  The decedent did not leave a note.  Id.  Granicz and one of the couple’s adult 
daughters, Renee Granicz (“Renee”), were both shocked because the decedent had 
not given them any indication that she might be suicidal.  Id.  Renee had spoken to 
the decedent two days before the suicide.  Id.  The decedent had mentioned not 
feeling well, crying easily, and her stomach hurting, and when Renee told her to 
call her doctor, the decedent agreed that she would call.  Granicz had seen the 
decedent just hours before her suicide, as he was leaving home and she was 
returning home.  She mentioned not feeling well, but to Granicz, it appeared that 
her distress was mostly physical rather than emotional. 
Granicz filed this medical malpractice action, naming Dr. Chirillo; Joseph S. 
Chirillo, M.D., P.A.; and Millennium Physician Group, LLC, as defendants 
(collectively, “Petitioners”).  Id.  Granicz asserted that Dr. Chirillo had breached 
his duty of care in treating the decedent and that her suicide had resulted from that 
breach.  Id.  Prior to trial, Petitioners filed a motion for summary judgment against 
Granicz, arguing in relevant part that Dr. Chirillo owed no duty to prevent the 
decedent from committing an unforeseeable suicide while she was not in his 
control.  Id. at 547.  The trial court granted the motion, finding that Dr. Chirillo did 
 
 
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not have a legal duty to prevent Jacqueline’s suicide.  Id. at 546.  Granicz appealed, 
arguing “that the court improperly characterized Dr. Chirillo’s duty as a duty to 
prevent Jacqueline’s suicide.”  Id.  Granicz asserted that Dr. Chirillo’s duty instead 
was to exercise reasonable care in his treatment of the decedent and summary 
judgment was improper because Granicz had provided expert testimony setting 
forth the applicable standard of care, how it was breached, and how the breach was 
the proximate cause of the decedent’s suicide.  Id.  The Second District agreed 
with Granicz and reversed, certifying conflict with Lawlor.  Id. at 546, 549.  
Petitioners now appeal, arguing that Dr. Chirillo had no duty to prevent the 
decedent’s suicide. 
ANALYSIS 
Petitioners first argue that the Second District erred in rejecting Florida case 
law that refuses to extend a physician’s duty to prevent a mentally ill patient’s 
suicide to a non-custodial relationship.  The determination of duty, as an element 
of negligence, is a question of law, McCain v. Florida Power Corp., 593 So. 2d 
500, 502 (Fla. 1992), and is therefore subject to de novo review, Estate of Rotell ex 
rel. Rotell v. Kuehnle, 38 So. 3d 783, 785 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010).  We also review de 
novo a trial court’s granting of summary judgment.  Volusia Cty. v. Aberdeen at 
Ormond Beach, L.P., 760 So. 2d 126, 130 (Fla. 2000). 
 
 
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Our opinion in McCain is “the starting point for any duty analysis under 
Florida’s negligence law.”  United States v. Stevens, 994 So. 2d 1062, 1066 n.2 
(Fla. 2008).  In McCain, we recognized that foreseeability is relevant to the 
elements of both duty and proximate cause.  593 So. 2d at 502.  Under duty, the 
question is “whether the defendant’s conduct foreseeably created a broader ‘zone 
of risk’ that poses a general threat of harm to others.”  Id.  On the other hand, 
proximate cause asks “whether and to what extent the defendant’s conduct 
foreseeably and substantially caused the specific injury that actually occurred.”  Id.  
Duty is determined as a matter of law and is the tool used by the jury to assess the 
defendant’s behavior, whereas proximate cause is a fact-specific assessment by the 
jury to determine whether the exact injury is likely to recur if the defendant’s same 
conduct is repeated in a similar context.  Id. at 503.  Although a duty analysis 
considers some general facts of the case, it does so only to determine whether a 
general, foreseeable zone of risk was created, without delving into the specific 
injury that occurred or whether such injury was foreseeable.  Id. at 502 n.1, 504. 
In this case, the trial court granted summary judgment because it found that 
Dr. Chirillo did not have a duty to prevent the unforeseeable suicide of the 
outpatient decedent.  Granicz, 147 So. 3d at 546.  Relying on Florida case law and 
section 766.102(1), Florida Statutes (2008), the Second District reversed, agreeing 
with Granicz that the trial court improperly characterized the duty Dr. Chirillo 
 
 
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owed to the decedent.  Id. at 546, 548.  The district court instead framed Dr. 
Chirillo’s duty as “a duty to ‘use the ordinary skills, means and methods that are 
recognized as necessary and which are customarily followed in the particular type 
of case according to the standard of those who are qualified by training and 
experience to perform similar services.’ ”  Id. at 548 (quoting Sweet v. Sheehan, 
932 So. 2d 365, 368 (Fla. 2d DCA 2006)).  The court then defined the applicable 
“standard” for the medical profession as “ ‘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.’ ”  
Id. (quoting Sweet, 932 So. 2d at 368); see also § 766.102(1), Fla. Stat. (2008).  
After detailing what it determined was the proper method for assessing duty, the 
Second District found that Granicz had provided sufficient expert testimony 
regarding the standard of care to establish that Dr. Chirillo owed the decedent a 
general, legal duty—not a duty to prevent her suicide—thereby precluding 
summary judgment.  Id.  The court also found that based on the evidence, a jury 
question still remained as to proximate cause.  Id. 
In Lawlor, the conflict case, the trial court granted summary judgment 
because the suicide of a former patient was not sufficiently foreseeable to impose a 
duty on the defendant psychotherapist.  795 So. 2d at 147.  The First District 
affirmed, finding no legal duty for two reasons: the unforeseeability of the suicide 
 
 
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and the decedent’s status as an outpatient.  Id. at 148.  First, the district court 
framed the issue as “whether a psychotherapist owes a legal duty to an outpatient 
client who commits suicide.”  Id. at 147.  The court noted that Florida law already 
imposes a duty in a custodial setting to protect a patient from harming himself but 
found that no Florida cases had extended that duty to outpatients.  Id. at 148.  The 
court then outlined the McCain standard for determining duty as follows:   
[T]he issue of duty is a question of law to be determined by the trial 
court as a “minimum threshold legal requirement for opening the 
courthouse doors” before the “more specific factual requirement” to 
prove causation can go to the trier of fact.  In determining the 
threshold issue of legal duty, a trial court is required to examine the 
factual allegations which go to the question of whether a duty was 
foreseeable.  Facts to support foreseeability can be relevant to both the 
element of duty and the element of proximate causation.  The 
necessary examination of facts, which the supreme court recognizes 
may be essential in determining whether or not a legal duty exists, 
does not make any part of the duty analysis a jury question. 
. . . While there is a foreseeability analysis that would be 
performed by the trier of fact in regard to proximate causation, the 
duty analysis of the trial court must result in a finding of duty as a 
matter of law before the issue of proximate causation becomes 
relevant. 
 
Id. (internal citations omitted).  Having cited the standard, the First District found 
that the trial court “correctly considered all the factual allegations in performing 
the foreseeability analysis as to the duty element.”  Id.  The district court reviewed 
the record and highlighted the lack of evidence of a risk of suicide, concluding that 
evidence of the decedent’s depression and “other risk factors” does not necessarily 
 
 
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create a “foreseeable zone of risk for imposing a legal duty on [the decedent’s] 
psychotherapist.”  Id. 
The conflict issue here concerns the proper determination of a physician’s 
duty to a patient who commits suicide.  The Second District used the statutorily 
delineated duty—and standard of care—to identify the physician’s duty as a 
general duty to treat the patient in accordance with the prevailing standard of care 
in the medical field.  Granicz, 147 So. 3d at 548.  Whereas, the First District 
described the duty as a duty to protect a patient from harming himself or as a duty 
of custodial supervision and care.  Lawlor, 795 So. 2d at 147-48.  While both 
district courts cited the same controlling law from McCain, they applied it in 
different ways, creating apparent conflict.1  Importantly, the characterization of the 
duty determines the outcome of each case, as both were decided on a motion for 
summary judgment.  The reason for this apparent conflict is that a duty can arise 
from a variety of sources.  McCain, 593 So. 2d at 503 n.2.     
In McCain, we described four sources of duty: statutes, judicial 
interpretations of statutes, other judicial precedent, and the general facts of the 
case.  Id.  We clarified that the requirement of determining a foreseeable zone of 
                                          
 
 
1.  Harry Lee Anstead et al., The Operation and Jurisdiction of the Supreme 
Court of Florida, 29 Nova L. Rev. 431, 520 (2005) (describing apparent conflict as 
“when a district court opinion only seems to be in conflict, even though there 
actually may be some reasonable way to reconcile it with the case law”). 
 
 
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risk related to the last category—cases in which a duty arises from the general facts 
of the case.  Id.  Therefore, where a duty is derived from statutes, the determination 
of duty under McCain would appear to be inapplicable.  Because the Second 
District in the instant case delineated a statutory duty, and the First District in 
Lawlor looked for the creation of a foreseeable zone of risk under McCain, the 
conflict cases are, in fact, distinguishable on that basis.  However, the cases are 
still in conflict as to another issue: the proper analysis of foreseeability under 
McCain. 
In Granicz, the Second District stated that by focusing on whether the 
decedent’s suicide was foreseeable, the trial court erroneously analyzed Dr. 
Chirillo’s duty under the element of proximate cause.  147 So. 3d at 548.  The 
district court quoted McCain to clarify that the proper inquiry for determining duty 
“ ‘is whether the defendant’s conduct created a foreseeable zone of risk, not 
whether the defendant could foresee the specific injury that actually occurred.’ ”  
Id. at 548 (quoting McCain, 593 So. 2d at 504).  Although the trial court in Lawlor 
also focused on whether the suicide was foreseeable, the First District in that case 
found such focus to be a proper determination of duty under McCain and affirmed 
the denial of summary judgment on that and one other basis.  Lawlor, 795 So. 2d at 
148. 
 
 
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Petitioners argue that the trial court’s and Lawlor’s focus on the 
foreseeability of the suicide was properly conducted under the duty element 
because in both cases, the courts were determining whether the psychotherapist 
owed a duty to prevent suicide.  Therefore, suicide was the risk, the foreseeability 
of which the district court had to determine under McCain’s “foreseeable zone of 
risk” formulation.  Petitioners assert that the Second District’s application of 
section 766.102(1)’s standard of care was incorrect because there is a difference 
between an action in general medical malpractice (to which section 766.102 would 
apply) and one for a duty to prevent suicide (for which foreseeability of the suicide 
is the relevant consideration).  See Winger v. Franciscan Med. Ctr., 701 N.E.2d 
813, 818 (Ill. App. Ct. 1998) (recognizing that action for failure to properly 
supervise a suicidal patient or protect such patient from inflicting self-harm is 
different from an action for general medical malpractice in diagnosis or treatment).  
In the alternative, Petitioners argue that because there is no duty to prevent suicide 
in an outpatient situation, the trial court’s (and Lawlor’s) finding of no legal duty is 
still correct.  Both of these arguments, however, are misguided, and we reject them 
in favor of the Second District’s analysis in Granicz. 
Petitioners are correct that Florida law has not extended the duty to prevent 
suicide to an outpatient scenario, but such fact only highlights why Petitioners’ 
attempt to classify the duty in the instant case as a duty to prevent suicide is 
 
 
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incorrect and inappropriate.  The decedent in this case was an outpatient of Dr. 
Chirillo’s.  Therefore, under Florida law, there was no duty to prevent her suicide.  
Paddock v. Chacko, 522 So. 2d 410, 415-17 (Fla. 5th DCA 1988).  However, the 
nonexistence of one specific type of duty does not mean that Dr. Chirillo owed the 
decedent no duty at all.2  As we plainly stated in McCain, there are several sources 
of duty.  Although the inpatient duty to prevent suicide does not apply here, there 
still existed a statutory duty under section 766.102 to treat the decedent in 
accordance with the standard of care.  We find that the Second District properly 
evaluated the instant case based on the statutory duty owed to the decedent and 
also properly classified the foreseeability of the decedent’s suicide as a matter of 
fact for the jury to decide in determining proximate cause.  As such, we approve 
the Second District’s decision in this case. 
We disapprove Lawlor on two grounds: (1) the First District evaluated that 
case under a duty it had already determined did not apply to outpatient scenarios—
the duty to prevent suicide—and (2) the First District should have assessed the 
                                          
 
 
2.  Perez v. United States, 883 F. Supp. 2d 1257, 1286 & n.90 (S.D. Fla. 
2012) (finding that it would be peculiar and contrary to the intent of Florida law 
“to absolve a treating psychiatrist of liability for all negligent acts simply because 
the patient is being seen on an outpatient basis” and citing Sweet, 932 So. 2d at 
365, for the proposition that “[t]he outpatient status of a person being treated for 
severe mental illness clearly does not, as a matter of law, completely absolve a 
psychiatrist or mental health provider from the duty to render an appropriate 
diagnosis, treatment, and care”). 
 
 
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foreseeability of the decedent’s specific injury (suicide) as part of a proximate 
cause analysis, granting summary judgment on that ground only if the evidence 
was undisputed that the suicide was not foreseeable.  See McCain, 593 So. 2d at 
504 (“The judge is free to take this matter [(the determination of proximate cause)] 
from the fact-finder only where the facts are unequivocal, such as where the 
evidence supports no more than a single reasonable inference.”). 
Petitioners also argue that the Second District erred in deferring to the 
opinions of Granicz’s experts regarding the standard of care without conducting its 
own independent analysis of the foreseeability of the decedent’s suicide.  However, 
this statement is erroneous in two ways, both of which stem from Petitioners’ error 
as to the first claim, the error of classifying the duty in this case as a duty to 
prevent suicide.  As discussed above, the foreseeability of the decedent’s suicide is 
relevant to the proximate cause analysis, not the determination of duty.  Further, as 
to the Second District’s reliance on expert testimony, this Court has found such 
reliance to be proper in medical malpractice cases.  Pate v. Threlkel, 661 So. 2d 
278, 281 (Fla. 1995) (“In medical malpractice cases, the standard of care is 
determined by a consideration of expert testimony.”); see also Perez, 883 F. Supp. 
2d at 1286 & n.90 (“Courts rely primarily on expert testimony when determining 
the applicable standard of care.”); Brooks v. Serrano, 209 So. 2d 279, 280 (Fla. 4th 
DCA 1968) (“To determine what skills, means and methods are recognized as 
 
 
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necessary and customarily followed in the community with respect to any given 
case normally requires expert testimony, except where the duty and its breach are 
so obvious as to be apparent to persons of common experience.”).  Therefore, we 
find that the Second District was correct to look to the depositions of the experts—
filed with the motion for summary judgment—to determine the applicable standard 
of care.  Because Petitioners’ argument regarding suicidal ideations is related to the 
foreseeability of the decedent’s suicide, those arguments are more cognizable as 
reasons for granting summary judgment on grounds of an undisputed lack of 
proximate cause. 
Although erroneously considered by the trial court as part of the duty 
determination, the issue of the foreseeability of the suicide was presented by 
Petitioners to both the trial and appellate courts.  The trial court found the 
decedent’s suicide unforeseeable, while the Second District determined that a jury 
question remained as to the issue, thus precluding summary judgment.  Granicz, 
147 So. 3d at 547, 549.  Because a motion for summary judgment requires a court 
to determine whether the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, this 
Court reviews the granting of such a motion de novo.  Aberdeen at Ormond Beach, 
L.P., 760 So. 2d at 130. 
It is possible for a defendant to owe a legal duty of care to a specific plaintiff 
yet not be liable to that plaintiff because proximate causation cannot be proven.  
 
 
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McCain, 593 So. 2d at 502-03.  In that context, summary judgment is proper where 
“the evidence supports no more than a single reasonable inference” as to proximate 
cause, id. at 504, or where there are no genuine issues of material fact as to 
proximate cause, Brooks, 209 So. 2d at 280.  If reasonable persons can disagree as 
to whether the facts establish proximate cause, summary judgment is not proper 
and the issue is for the jury to decide.  McCain, 593 So. 2d at 504. 
Here, the trial court in its order and Petitioners in their initial brief outlined 
testimony from the hearing on the motion for summary judgment which tended to 
show that the decedent’s suicide was not foreseeable.  However, Granicz pointed 
out that Dr. Chirillo (1) knew that patients who stopped taking Effexor abruptly 
had an increased risk of suicide and (2) ultimately opined that stopping Effexor 
was “a contributing factor” in the decedent’s suicide.  On this evidence, we 
approve the Second District’s finding that there is a genuine issue of material fact 
remaining as to proximate cause and therefore, summary judgment should not have 
been granted.   
CONCLUSION 
For the reasons herein expressed, we approve the Second District’s decision, 
reversing and remanding the case to the trial court with instructions to proceed to 
trial.  We disapprove the decision of the First District in Lawlor as an improper 
determination of duty. 
 
 
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It is so ordered. 
LABARGA, C.J., and PARIENTE, LEWIS, and PERRY, JJ., concur. 
CANADY and POLSTON, JJ., concur in result. 
  
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND 
IF FILED, DETERMINED. 
 
Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal - Certified 
Direct Conflict of Decisions 
 
 
Second District - Case No. 2D12-5244 
 
 
(Sarasota County) 
 
Daniel Marc Schwarz and Scott Allan Cole of Cole Scott & Kissane, P.A., Miami, 
Florida, 
 
 
for Petitioners 
 
James B. Tilghman, Jr. and Gary Devenow Fox of Stewart Tilghman Fox Bianchi 
& Cain, P.A., Miami, Florida, 
 
 
for Respondent