Sunday, August 21, 2011

Older friend did not have duty to prevent / did not cause 15-year-old’s suicide.

Lenoci v. Leonard, 2011 VT 47 (mem.)

This case asks the Court to decide if an eighteen-year-old has a duty to control the behavior of a fifteen-year-old friend and, if the fifteen-year-old later commits suicide, whether the eighteen-year-old is at fault.  Plaintiff contends the trial court erred in finding Kayla did not owe Alex a duty. She suggests such a duty arose when Kayla, an eighteen year old, brought Alex, a minor, to a party with alcohol and adults present and recognized, or should have recognized, the "unreasonable risk of sexual assault" Alex faced. Plaintiff further argues that there was ample evidence supporting her theory that Kayla's negligence caused Alex's death and emotional distress and summary judgment was therefore premature. We affirm the trial court's grant of summary judgment to defendant and conclude she had no duty to intervene to prevent the tragedy that occurred. We additionally address the trial court's holding that Alex's suicide broke any causal connection to Kayla's actions.

Foreseeability of the risk is often a primary consideration on the issue of duty. We have recognized that "[a]ctionable negligence is made out only when it appears that a prudent person, in like circumstances, would have thought that injury would be likely to result" from the acts or omissions in question.To argue that Kayla could or should have anticipated Alex would suffer emotional distress as a result of the intercourse requires too much speculation and does not satisfy the need that the claimed injury be reasonably foreseeable.


Plaintiff essentially advocates that we find a duty simply because one girl was eighteen and the other was fifteen. The law does not impose such a duty in this situation—a duty for an eighteen-year-old to protect a high school friend who has not reached the age of majority from the consequences of the younger person's independent behavior.  There is no evidence that Kayla ever agreed to supervise and care for Alex or that the parents of Alex ever relinquished or sought to relinquish supervision of Alex to Kayla. As the trial court noted, "This was a case of two high school friends sneaking out together, unbeknown to either of their parents; not a situation where an adult agrees to care for another's child. Kayla did not become Alex's keeper simply because Kayla was 18 years old and Alex was not." We affirm the trial court's decision on this issue.

The trial court, however, noted that the wrongful death claim required further analysis because "a separate duty exists as to suicide." We address this issue to provide guidance to the trial bench in the future and to affirm the trial court's reasoning in this case.   

Generally speaking, voluntary suicide is viewed as an independent intervening act that breaks the causal chain and severs potential liability. However, the causal chain is not broken when an injured person becomes insane, even temporarily, and that insanity prevents one from realizing the nature of one's act or controlling one's conduct. Here, there was no evidence of an uncontrollable impulse on Alex's part to commit suicide.

A number of jurisdictions have recognized an additional exception to the general rule limiting liability in the event of a suicide, holding that liability exists because the defendant had a duty to prevent the suicide arising from the defendant's special relationship with the suicidal individual. This exception does not apply here. As we have found, the relationship between Alex and Kayla did not give rise to any "special relationship" that would impose a duty of care on Kayla.
There was substantial evidence that Alex had been expressing suicidal ideation for some time, long before she had sex at the apartment, and there was no evidence Kayla knew Alex was suicidal. Alex, for her own reasons, chose to end her life. Nothing Kayla did or did not do played a part in that decision.
Affirmed.

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