DocketNumber: C.A. No. PC-92-7046
Judges: <bold><underline>ISRAEL, J.</underline></bold>
Filed Date: 12/12/1996
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Although some argument is made that the motion is akin to a motion for partial summary judgment under Rule 56, actually it is more like a motion for judgment as a matter of law under Rule 50 (a). The decision of the Court on a motion like this becomes the "law of the case," since it is based on an evidentiary showing by both parties and a determination by this Court as a matter of lawand fact. The parties have some concern that evidentiary rulings also become part of ``the law of the case,' or that they may be estopped from objecting at trial to evidence if they waived objection at the hearing. During colloquy in the course of hearing this Court ruled that any waiver of objection to the admissibility of evidence at hearing would not bind that party at trial. That ruling is also now part of "the law of the case."
1. In 1987 the plaintiff consulted the defendant Richard Millman, M.D., for diagnosis and treatment of a sleep disorder known as sleep apnea. Doctor Millman performed a sleep study of the plaintiff at the defendant Rhode Island Hospital. The study consisted of attaching electrodes to the plaintiff's head to monitor brain wave activity. A videotape record was made of the plaintiff sleeping in a room in the defendant Rhode Island Hospital's sleep clinic.
2. The videotape recorded the plaintiff's movements and sounds while sleeping. The plaintiff was shown to roll fitfully in bed, to grunt, snort, and wave his hands and arms. His thrashing about sometimes deranged the electrodes.
3. In January 1990 the defendant Rhode Island Hospital issued a press release to the media, including Channel 12, a television broadcast station owned and operated by defendants Narragansett Television. L.P. and its general partner Narragansett Television, Inc., and which employed defendants Deborah Ferraro, John Woodin and Walter Cryan. In that release the defendant Rhode Island Hospital suggested as a topic of newsworthy interest that media representatives might, "Visit the all-night sleep lab at Rhode Island Hospital (one of a very few in New England) to observe a sleep study."
4. On February 5, 1990, the defendant Deborah Ferraro, a reporter employed by Channel 12, visited the sleep clinic where she interviewed the defendant Richard Millman, M.D. She asked Dr. Millman if he had a videotape of sleeping patients who suffered from sleep apnea. He selected a videotape which contained a number of sleep events, including the plaintiff's, at the clinic and handed it over to Ms. Ferraro.
5. Doctor Millman told Ms. Ferraro that, if she used any portion of the tape, she must either blot out the patient's face electronically or show only any patient who would not be identifiable. Doctor Millman had no idea at the time whose medical information he was releasing to Ms. Ferraro.
6. Ms. Ferraro agreed that either the patient's face would be electronically blotted out or that she would use only that portion of the tape on which the patient was not identifiable. Relying entirely on Ms. Ferraro's promise, the defendant physician and hospital transferred confidential medical information to Ms. Ferraro for broadcast.
7. Ms. Ferraro was unable to apply technology to blot out the patient's face. She then decided to use a portion of the tape which showed the plaintiff, but which she believed showed an unidentifiable patient.
8. The portions of the tape broadcast as "teasers," or "teases," at around 10:00 p.m. on the evening of February 6, 1990, were selected by some employee of the station other than Ms. Ferraro.
9. The "teasers," of which there were at least two, showed the plaintiff suffering from sleep apnea. He was seen to be gesticulating, snorting and choking.
10. The plaintiff called Channel 12 and spoke to defendant Walter Cryan, the anchor for the eleven o'clock news telecast, which the "teasers" were promoting. He told Mr. Cryan that he had not given the station permission to use the tape. After communicating with defendant John Woodin, the station's news director, Mr. Cryan viewed the tape and determined that in his opinion the plaintiff was not identifiable and would not be recognized. In spite of the plaintiff's persistent requests otherwise, the videotape was nonetheless broadcast.
11. The videotape as broadcast both as a "teaser" and as part of the eleven o'clock news telecast shows the plaintiff, who is clearly identifiable to people who know him and recognizable generally, in the throes of sleep apnea.
The problem is that, except in the case of an extremely deranged person, all behavior results from some mental direction. As a consequence, courts must deal with degrees of mental control and direction. Some purposes are punishable. Some are not. In a decent society, members have a right to know which is which.
And so, we are mired in mixed signals. At least with reference to what we call common law intentional torts. Since not every person liable for an intentional tort is liable for punitive damages, the state of mind called "intentional" standing alone will not suffice to support such an award.
It is not enough that an actor engaged in intentional conduct which resulted in liability for the tort. In order for a plaintiff to recover punitive damages it would appear that the actor must have engaged in the conduct for the purpose of inflicting actual harm to the victim. At least that is so at common law. As a result courts can speak of "wickedness," or "malice," plainly importing moral values into the tort damage process. We can also speak of "the good of society," when justifying an award of "exemplary" damages.
The notion of "recklessness" adds an even murkier concept to the kinds of state of mind of an actor which permit the assessment of punitive damages. The boundary between negligence and recklessness is perceptible only to a fact-finder on a case-by-case basis, and close calls are settled by the fact-finder. Once again the focus is not on the blameworthiness of the conduct, itself, but on the mental attitude of the actor with respect to the consequences of the wrongful conduct. Mere indifference to foreseeable harmful consequences to a plaintiff will not support an award of punitive damages. A knowing and deliberate disregard of the objectively substantial certainty of those consequences will suffice. At least at common law.
Furthermore, as health care providers, the defendant physician and the hospital were each the direct subjects of the Confidentiality of Health Care Information Act ("CHIA"), G.L.1956 (1995 Reenactment) §§
"Anyone who violates the provisions of this chapter may be held liable for actual and exemplary damages."
Exemplary damages is simply another way of saying punitive damages. Read literally the health care defendants, who have violated §
The subsection has no culpability standard. The General Assembly, the ultimate arbiter of who should be punished "for the good of society" in this State, has spoken clearly with respect, at least, to health care providers. These defendants argue, nonetheless, that in the absence of any statutory standard of culpability this Court ought to construe the statute to require the same degree of culpability as is required in the case of common law torts. See BMW of North America. Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. ___, 116 S.Ct. 1589, 134 L.Ed.2d 809 (1996). They point out that G.L. 1956 (1994 Reenactment) §
They are clearly mistaken. The Supreme Court in Soares v. Ann Hope, supra, held that the statute, alone, was sufficient grounds to submit the issue of punitive damages to the jury in a false imprisonment case. As to the malicious prosecution claim, however, the Supreme Court was not so categorical, even though that tort, too, requires common law "malice," or lack of legal justification, usually good faith reasonable belief, as one of its elements. As to that tort the Supreme Court found that the requisite degree of culpability was shown by the evidence to entitle the plaintiff to have the issue of punitive damages submitted to the jury.
Section
The health care defendants had more than adequate notice of the standard they were expected to meet. Even if their conduct had been inadvertent or unintentional, if it had been their conscious and knowing conduct, they are liable under the statute without fault. The statute creates a form of strict liability for punitive damages. The amount of such damages must, nevertheless, respond to the degree of blameworthiness attached to the particular defendant's conduct.
It can be argued with considerable merit that the civil sanctions in §
In this case with respect to the health care defendants no problem of statutory construction arises. Their conduct satisfies the common law standard of criminal recklessness. It obviously would satisfy the "knowing-and-intentional" standard of §
Accordingly, the motions of the defendants Richard Millman, M.D., and Rhode Island Hospital to strike the plaintiff's claim in Counts V and VI of the complaint for punitive damages for violations of the CHIA are denied. The ruling is based on this Court's finding after evidentiary hearing that a prima facie case for punitive damages exists, which, if presented at trial, will entitle the plaintiff to have the question of an award of punitive damages against these defendants submitted to and considered by the ultimate fact-finder.
It is clear that the plaintiff cannot be entitled to punitive damages for mere negligence as alleged in Counts XIX and XX as a claim for damages against these defendants.
First, with respect to the breach of privacy claims against the health care providers under various subsections of §
The omission is particularly pertinent because no standard of culpability is attached to liability. A party is liable if that party subjects any person or causes any person to be subjected to a violation of a right to privacy as defined by the statutes. That liability is strict. Reasonableness standards pertain to the violations, themselves, not to the conduct of the defendant charged with the violation. If the General Assembly wanted to impose punitive damages for culpable violations of the act, it would have done so and provided the courts with a standard.
In the second place, there was no evidence presented that the health care defendant violated any provision of §
The claims of punitive damages implicit in Counts XI and XII, if any, will be stricken.
So far as the counts alleging intentional infliction of emotional distress by the health care defendants are concerned, this Court is doubtful, on the basis of the evidence presented at this hearing, whether these counts will survive a Rule 50 motion.See, Champlin v. Washington Trust Co. of Westerly,
Under these circumstances, the Court must grant the defendants' motions to strike any implicit claim for punitive damages in Counts XVII and XVIII.
Each media defendant is alleged to have violated G.L. §
This Court does not need to consider whether the "newsworthiness" of this videotaped event is so far protected by the defendants' First Amendment rights that the plaintiff's "right to privacy" must yield. Neither §
Accordingly, the motions to strike any implicit claims of punitive damages in Counts VII, VIII, IX and X of the complaint are granted.
The question remains whether the tort can be committed with such enhanced culpability as to entitle a plaintiff to punitive as well as compensatory damages. Also to be considered is whether or not the media defendants, or any of them, can be exposed to liability for publishing truthful information, albeit embarrassing, about the plaintiff, without any personal ill will or animus toward the plaintiff.
If the basis for recovery is the extreme and outrageous nature of the defendant's conduct, should not every defendant, who is at all liable, be liable for punitive damages? Is not "extreme," after all, an absolute? Can any tortious conduct be worse than "extreme"? All this Court can discern that could heighten liability, so that punitive damages can be assessed, would be if the extreme and outrageous conduct is motivated by malice in sense of personal animus directed particularly at the plaintiff. In this kind of case, the defendant must be specially motivated to hurt the plaintiff, or the defendant must know that his or her otherwise outrageous conduct will hurt the particular plaintiff.
This Court is encouraged to the view that personal animosity or ill will, including spiteful indifference, is required for the imposition of punitive damages against media defendants by the unanimous opinion of the United States Supreme Court in HustlerMagazine v. Falwell,
"Respondent contends, however, that the caricature in question here was so ``outrageous' as to distinguish it from more traditional political cartoons. There is no doubt that the caricature of respondent and his mother published in Hustler is at best a distant cousin of the political cartoons described above, and a rather poor relation at that. If it were possible by laying down a principled standard to separate the one from the other, public discourse would probably suffer little or no harm. But we doubt that there is any such standard, and we are quite sure that the pejorative description ``outrageous' does not supply one. ``Outrageousness' in the area of political and social discourse has an inherent subjectiveness about it which would allow a jury to impose liability on the basis of the jurors' tastes or views, or perhaps on the basis of their dislike of a particular expression. An ``outrageousness' standard thus runs afoul of our long-standing refusal to allow damages to be awarded because the speech in question may have an adverse emotional impact on the audience." Id., 485 U.S., at 55, 108 S.Ct., at 881-82, 99 L.Ed.2d, at 51-52.
It is true that the plaintiff in Hustler was and is a public figure. The plaintiff here is clearly not, nor did he inject himself into a public issue. It is true that the publication inHustler was obviously not intended to be literally believed. In our case the publication is conceded to be true. Nevertheless, the offensiveness of the two publications differ in severity by several orders of magnitude. Display of the plaintiff's tormented sleep in our case is far less objectively offensive than the parodic assertion that an otherwise reputable clergyman "did it" for the first time with his mother. Yet, the injured plaintiff inHustler was turned away without even compensatory, let alone punitive, balm for his injured sensibilities. "Outrageousness", alone, is not enough to overcome First Amendment protection in the arena of "political" discourse. It may well not be enough to avoid its shield in that of private exposure.
With those considerations in mind, the Court is satisfied that, although Deborah Ferraro's conduct in failing to assure that the plaintiff's identity would be concealed, notwithstanding her solemn professional journalistic commitment, is a reckless disregard of the plaintiff's privacy interests, her conduct does not display any personal spite or ill will to the plaintiff. The same is true of Walter Cryan, who was specifically requested by the plaintiff, not to repeat the display of the plaintiff's grossly disturbed slumber in a regular news broadcast, after the plaintiff had viewed it during an earlier "teaser" promotion for the later news show. His conduct is not only recklessness, but blatant indifference to the invasion of plaintiff's privacy. He makes no claim that he did not or could not control the contents of the night's newscast. He does not assert that he is merely a performer who has no control over the script he reads. Nonetheless, the Court is satisfied that his conduct falls short of that degree of desire to inflict harm on the plaintiff which will subject him to punitive damages.
So far as John Woodin, the producer of the broadcast, is concerned, while he did have control over the content of the broadcast, there is no showing that he had any intent to harm the plaintiff personally. Under the circumstances it is difficult to make out how he will be liable at all for any damages, let alone for punitive damages, for his conduct in producing the teasers or the eventual news broadcast.
The claims against Narragansett Television, L.P., and Narragansett Television, Inc., are based on the doctrine ofrespondeat superior. These defendants are liable, if at all, as the employers of Ferraro, Cryan, Woodin, or of any other employee of the station, who controlled the broadcasts which are alleged to have violated the plaintiff's privacy. Under those circumstances punitive damages may be awarded only if the employer participated in, authorized or ratified the tortious conduct of its employees. AAA Pool Service Supply, Inc. v.Aetna Casualty and Surety Company,
Accordingly, the claims for punitive damages against the media defendants in Counts XIII, XIV, XV and XVI will be stricken, and the motions granted.
Read literally §
One of the specific exceptions to the prohibition in subsection (a) is contained in current subsection (b)(22) (in 1990 part of subsection (b)(19)): "A hospital may release the fact of a patient's admission and a general description of a patient's condition to persons representing themselves as relatives or friends of the patient or as a representative of the news media." This exception is the sole recognition of the news media's interest in confidential health care information.
It is also noteworthy that §
As the Court has pointed out with respect to the health care provider defendants, the problem of due process prior notice requirements for the imposition of penalties under Gore can be satisfied by importing into the provision for punitive damages either a common law standard of personal malice or the criminal liability standard of knowing and intentional conduct. It is all the more important that with respect to the media defendants there must be a reasonably well-defined standard for the imposition of any damages, let alone punitive damages, because of First Amendment constraints. The Florida Star v. B.J.F.,
This Court is satisfied that the "knowing-and-intentional" standard of culpability in §
The evidence is sufficient to support the conclusion that the defendant Ms. Ferraro knew that the videotape was somehow protected confidentiality with respect to the identity of the subjects portrayed. There is no evidence that she was aware of the Act, but she was conscious of an obligation to protect the identity of the persons portrayed. The evidence supports the conclusion that she "knowingly" violated the Act when she turned the videotape over to a producer at the station for broadcast on the late evening newscast. But, was her conduct "intentional"? Did she "intend" for the plaintiff's identity to be disclosed? The evidence is equally clear that she did not. The evidence is that she did everything she reasonably could to avoid publicizing the plaintiff's identity. The fact that her efforts were unavailing may support a claim in negligence for compensatory damages, but, standing alone, that fact is not evidence that she intended to violate the Act.
The fact that she may have violated some kind of journalistic ethical constraint by not preserving confidentiality in accordance with some kind of "deep throat" promise is not the equivalent of an intentional disclosure of protected information. Her failure to keep her commitment may have some relation to a claim by the health care defendants for contribution, but that cannot be the basis for an assessment of punitive damages by the plaintiff against the media defendants. Her motion to strike will be granted.
The defendant Walter Cryan is in a different position from that of Ms. Ferraro. It is clear that he was called by the plaintiff after the "teasers" were aired and was advised that the plaintiff, who was the subject of the videotape, was identifiable and identified. Mr. Cryan called the news director, the defendant Mr. John Woodin, who advised Mr. Cryan to check to make sure the plaintiff's concerns were unfounded because the subject of the tape was not identifiable. The evidence is clear that he "knew" that the station was about to broadcast confidential information. There is no evidence that he knew about the Act, but it is clear that the station was about to broadcast matter for which it should have had consent. There is no evidence in this record that he gave heed to Mr. Woodin's admonition to review the videotape himself.
But knowledge of the protected status of the plaintiff's identity by Mr. Cryan alone will not suffice to expose him to punitive damages under the Act. His conduct must have been both knowing and intentional. His exposure of the plaintiff's sleep apnea to the viewers of Channel 12 was plainly intentional. He did nothing to prevent the exposure. He cannot escape liability for his knowing and intentional conduct. His motion to strike the claim for punitive damages must be denied.
Although Mr. John Woodin had the power to decide not to publicize the plaintiff's confidential health care information, he relied entirely and justifiably on defendant Walter Cryan's assessment. Based on the communication from Mr. Cryan, he is chargeable with knowledge that protected information was about to be broadcast. His knowledge, however, does not rise to the level of that of Ms. Ferraro. He responded reasonably, if ineffectively, to the problem communicated to him by Mr. Cryan. He did not intend to violate the Act. His motion to strike will be granted.
The claims against Narragansett Television, L.P., and Narragansett Television, Inc., are based entirely on the doctrine of respondeat superior. A principal is liable for punitive damages only where it ratifies, authorizes or participates in the wrongful conduct of its agent. Reccko v. Criss Cadillac Co.,Inc.,
To recapitulate: The motion to strike the claim for punitive damages will be granted as to Counts I, II, III, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII, XVIII, XIX and XX of the plaintiff's amended complaint. The motion to strike will be denied as to Counts IV, V and VI of the plaintiff's amended complaint.
AAA Pool Service & Supply, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety ... ( 1984 )
Sorenson v. Colibri Corp. ( 1994 )
Soares v. Ann & Hope of Rhode Island, Inc. ( 1994 )
Kalian v. People Acting Through Community Effort, Inc. ( 1979 )
BMW of North America, Inc. v. Gore ( 1996 )
Reccko v. Criss Cadillac Co., Inc. ( 1992 )
Champlin v. Washington Trust Co., of Westerly ( 1984 )