Joseph Stracke, et al. v. Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., et al., No. 64, September Term 2018.
Opinion by Hotten, J.
SURVIVAL AND WRONGFUL DEATH ACTION – GROSS NEGLIGENCE –
SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE – The Court of Appeals held that Respondents failed to
present sufficient evidence at trial that Petitioners’ conduct amounted to gross negligence,
and that the trial judge did not err in granting Petitioners’ motion for Judgment
Notwithstanding the Verdict. “[G]ross negligence is an intentional failure to perform a
manifest duty in reckless disregard of the consequences[,]” and represents an utter
indifference to the life and property of another. Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 187, 935
A.2d 699, 717 (2007). Viewing the evidence in light most favorable to Respondents,
Petitioners assessed the patient, took his vitals, and promptly transported him to the nearest
hospital within seven minutes of first arriving on the scene. “[A] well-intended error in
medical judgment – even if it costs the patient’s life – [does not equate to a] wanton and
reckless disregard for the life of that patient.” McCoy v. Hatmaker, 135 Md. App. 693,
713, 763 A.2d 1233, 1244 (2000). There was not legally sufficient evidence that
Petitioners made a deliberate choice not to give their patient a chance to survive.
Accordingly, the evidence at trial was insufficient to elevate Petitioners’ conduct to gross
negligence.
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – THE FIRE AND RESCUE COMPANY ACT
– IMMUNITY FOR MUNICIPAL DEPARTMENTS – The Court of Appeals held that
the Fire and Rescue Company Act, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a) unambiguously confers
immunity upon municipal fire departments and its employees. The Court declined to
revisit and overturn its prior decision in Mayor and City of Baltimore v. Chase, 360 Md.
121, 756 A.2d 987 (2000), which held that § 5-604(a) immunity applies to municipal fire
and rescue companies and their employees, as well as to volunteer and private rescue
companies.
Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Case No. 24-C-14-001249
Argued: June 7, 2019 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
OF MARYLAND
No. 64
September Term, 2018
__________________________________
JOSEPH STRACKE, et al.
v.
ESTATE OF KERRY BUTLER, JR., et al.
__________________________________
Barbera, C.J.,
*Greene,
McDonald,
Hotten,
Getty,
Booth,
Wilner, Alan M.
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned)
JJ.
__________________________________
Opinion by Hotten, J.
Barbera, C.J., McDonald, and Wilner, JJ.,
dissent.
_______________________________
Filed: August 16, 2019
*Greene, J., now retired, participated in the
hearing and conference of this case while an
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
Materials Act
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
active member of the Court; after being recalled
2019-08-16 pursuant to Maryland Constitution, Article IV,
10:50-04:00
Section 3A, he also participated in the decision
and adoption of this Opinion.
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
The Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., Ms. Crystal Butler, the widow of Kerry Butler, Jr.,
Vera Ganey, parent and guardian of Kerry Butler, Jr.’s sole minor child, and Mr. Kerry
Butler, Sr., the father of Kerry Butler, Jr. (collectively referred to as “Respondents”),1 filed
a wrongful death and survival action in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City. 2 Respondents
alleged that Baltimore City Fire Department medics, Joseph Stracke and Stephanie
Cisneros (collectively referred to as “Petitioners”),3 were grossly negligent in their
treatment of Mr. Butler, and that their gross negligence caused his ultimate demise.
After a jury found that Petitioners were grossly negligent, the trial judge granted
Petitioners’ Motion for Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (“JNOV”). Respondents
appealed to the Court of Special Appeals, which reversed the trial court’s grant of JNOV
on the basis that Petitioners were grossly negligent and not entitled to immunity under the
1
For purposes of this opinion, Kerry Butler, Jr. will be referred to as “Mr. Butler,”
and his wife, Crystal Butler, will be referred to as “Ms. Butler.”
2
At the time of filing, the plaintiffs included: 1) the Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., by
his wife Crystal Butler; 2) Crystal Butler, individually; 3) Kerry Butler, Sr., individually
as father to Kerry Butler, Jr.; and 4) Vera Ganey, as parent and guardian to Kerry Butler,
Jr.’s sole surviving minor child. On May 9, 2019, an On Omnibus Motion to Substitute
and Join Parties was filed, requesting that: 1) Cynthia Jones, personal representative of the
Estate of Crystal Butler, who had since passed away, be substituted for and instead of
Crystal Butler in her individual capacity; 2) Malcolm Butler, substitute personal
representative of the Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., be substituted for and instead of Crystal
Butler as the personal representative of the Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr.; and 3) the Estate of
Kerry Butler, Sr., by and through its personal representative, Jeanette Corbett-Butler, be
joined or otherwise made a party to this appeal in accordance with Md. Rule 1-203(d). We
granted this Motion.
3
The Mayor and City Council of Baltimore was initially named as a defendant in
the action. However, the circuit court dismissed them as a party pursuant to the doctrine
of governmental immunity.
Fire and Rescue Company Act, Maryland Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings (“Cts. &
Jud. Proc.”) § 5-604(a). On appeal and cross-appeal, we are asked to consider the following
issues:
1. Does willful or gross negligence by an omission defeat the immunity
from liability granted to fire and rescue personnel by the Maryland Fire
and Rescue Company Act, Md. Code, Courts & Judicial Proceedings § 5-
604, or is the immunity lost only by a willful or grossly negligent
affirmative act?
2. Did CSA err in finding sufficient evidence that Petitioners committed
gross negligence that caused the death of a patient, when undisputed
evidence established that Petitioners assessed the patient, including
taking vital signs, and within seven minutes transported the patient to the
hospital, where his condition suddenly worsened?
3. Does § 5-604 afford Petitioners, as employees of a fire department,
limited immunity against claims for simple negligence?
For the reasons outlined below, we conclude that Petitioners were not grossly negligent in
their treatment of Mr. Butler, and were therefore afforded immunity under the Fire and
Rescue Company Act, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a).4 Because we hold that Petitioners
were not grossly negligent, we decline to address the first issue presented. We further hold
that Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a) does, and continues to, grant immunity against simple
negligence claims to employees of a fire department. Accordingly, we reverse the
judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
4
Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a) provides:
[n]otwithstanding any other provision of law, except for any willful or
grossly negligent act, a fire company or rescue company, and the personnel
of a fire company or rescue company, are immune from civil liability for any
act or omission in the course of performing their duties.
-2-
Factual Background
Just after 1:00 a.m. on March 2, 2011, Mr. Butler woke his wife allegedly
complaining of chest pains. Earlier that evening, Mr. Butler had eaten a spicy chicken
sandwich and Oreo cookies, and drank a Hawaiian punch beverage prior to going to bed.
Ms. Butler called 9-1-1 and reported that her husband was experiencing chest pain and
having difficulty breathing and speaking. Ms. Butler helped dress Mr. Butler and assisted
him down the steps to the first floor of their home to wait for the emergency medics.
Stracke and Cisneros were dispatched to the Butlers’ home in response to the 9-1-1
call for a reported chest pain emergency. Stracke and Cisneros are both first responders,
whose primary responsibilities involve the assessment and transportation of patients.
Neither Stracke nor Cisneros are responsible for diagnosing medical conditions.
Petitioners arrived on the Butlers’ street at approximately 1:18 a.m. Petitioners
experienced some difficulty locating the residence because the relatively unlit street made
it difficult to identify the house numbers, and there had been inconsistencies between the
reported address and the actual location of the Butlers’ house.5 Due to the lack of lighting,
Stracke promptly exited the ambulance and walked along the street in order to locate the
correct house while Cisneros remained in the ambulance. When Stracke reached Ms.
Butler at the correct address, around 1:20 a.m., he relayed his location to Cisneros, who
remained in the ambulance.
5
Dispatch reported the address to Petitioners as 850 Bethune Road, however, the
Butlers’ correct address was 860 Bethune Road.
-3-
By the time Stracke reached the Butlers’ residence, Ms. Butler was standing just
outside the front door and Mr. Butler was sitting in a chair just inside the house. At the
time, Mr. Butler was 28 years old, five feet and seven inches tall, and approximately 245
pounds. Without entering the house, Stracke asked in a loud voice “what seems to be the
problem.” Ms. Butler responded that Mr. Butler had told her that he thought he was having
a heart attack. According to Ms. Butler, Mr. Butler had his hand on his chest. Stracke
asked Mr. Butler “what’s going on my main man[]” and Mr. Butler responded that “[his]
right side hurt.” While standing in front of the Butlers’ residence, Stracke visually assessed
Mr. Butler, in accordance with relevant medical protocols, observing that he was “a good
shape gentleman[.]” Stracke expressed the desire and need to bring Mr. Butler to the
ambulance for further evaluation and possible treatment.
Ms. Butler then claimed that Mr. Butler stood up and staggered the short distance
to the ambulance, approximately 30-40 feet, without the aid of Stracke or a stretcher.
Stracke, however, claimed that he instructed Mr. Butler to wait while he retrieved a
stretcher, but Mr. Butler declined, stating that he was “ready to go” and began walking to
the ambulance on his own accord. Stracke quickly signaled to Cisneros prior to escorting
Mr. Butler from his residence to the ambulance, and Cisneros promptly exited the
ambulance with a medical bag and oxygen bottle in order to fully and properly assess Mr.
Butler’s condition.
Cisneros performed a visual assessment of Mr. Butler as he approached the
ambulance. Ms. Butler stated that Mr. Butler was staggering as he walked to the
ambulance, while Cisneros observed that Mr. Butler was taking “perfectly normal” steps
-4-
and did not appear to be in need of any assistance. According to Petitioners, Mr. Butler
entered the ambulance unassisted and without difficulty. When Cisneros asked Mr. Butler
what was going on, Mr. Butler responded that his throat was burning (he was holding his
hand to his throat) and that he had “[c]hest heartburn.” Although Cisneros recorded this
symptom as “chest hurt” in Mr. Butler’s chart, she explained that this was primarily due to
a lack of accurate options that were provided from a drop-down menu on the form.
Inside the ambulance, Stracke took Mr. Butler’s blood pressure, heart rate, and
blood oxygen level, while Cisneros recorded these measurements in Mr. Butler’s chart.
Cisneros also checked Mr. Butler for reproducible pain under his right arm (there was
none), felt his pulse, checked his pupils, looked at his skin, and listened to his lungs, which
were “perfectly clear.” All of Mr. Butler’s vitals appeared to be baseline, indicating that
he was in stable condition.
Petitioners determined that Mr. Butler should be transported to the nearest hospital,
Harbor Hospital, which was less than a mile away. Around 1:24 a.m., approximately seven
minutes after first arriving on the Butlers’ street, Petitioners and Mr. Butler departed for
the hospital, with Stracke driving the ambulance and Cisneros remaining with Mr. Butler
in the rear of the ambulance. Stracke explained that at this time, it was Petitioners’ priority
“to deliver a viable patient to appropriate definitive care, here Harbor Hospital, as soon as
possible[.]” According to Cisneros, Mr. Butler was seated in a “position of comfort” and
“very pleasant” and “very chatty” during the drive to the hospital. The ambulance arrived
at Harbor Hospital approximately three minutes later, around 1:27 a.m. Stracke
immediately retrieved a wheelchair for Mr. Butler, who exited the ambulance unassisted
-5-
but without difficulty, and sat in the wheelchair. Stracke pushed Mr. Butler directly into
the emergency room while Cisneros alerted hospital staff that Mr. Butler “had a burning in
his throat.”
Stracke waited with Mr. Butler in the emergency room for hospital staff to triage
Mr. Butler. While waiting in the emergency room, a hospital technician observed Mr.
Butler holding his chest and complaining that his chest hurt. The hospital technician
observed this happening for another five to ten minutes, with Mr. Butler’s voice growing
louder as the time passed. After waiting in the emergency room for approximately ten
minutes, Mr. Butler became unconscious and began to slide out of his wheelchair. Stracke
prevented Mr. Butler’s head from striking the floor as he slid out of the wheelchair.
Cisneros observed Mr. Butler’s condition and called for a nurse and doctor, who took Mr.
Butler to a code room with the assistance of Stracke. After Mr. Butler was taken to the
code room, and while he was receiving treatment from hospital staff, Petitioners left the
hospital and went back on service to prepare for the next potential dispatch call.
Despite the hospital staff’s efforts, Mr. Butler could not be resuscitated and
ultimately died. At the time of his death, doctors were unable to identify Mr. Butler’s cause
of death. Following an autopsy, the medical examiner concluded that Mr. Butler died of a
myocardial infarction, more commonly known as a heart attack.
-6-
Procedural Background
Trial in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City
Respondents filed a wrongful death and survival action against Petitioners, and the
Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (“the City”) in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City.6
Before commencement of trial, the City moved that the circuit court determine whether it
was immune from suit under the doctrine of governmental immunity, and Petitioners
moved that the circuit court determine whether the Fire and Rescue Company Act, Md.
Code, Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a) granted them civil immunity in the absence of any
willful or grossly negligent act. The circuit court answered both questions in the
affirmative, entering judgment in favor of the City due to its governmental immunity. 7 The
suit against Petitioners proceeded to trial to determine whether Petitioners acted in a willful
or grossly negligent manner.
At the close of Respondents’ case, Petitioners moved for judgment on the ground
that Respondents “ha[d] not proved that either [Petitioner], Stracke or Cisneros, was
grossly negligent by a preponderance of the evidence[.]” The circuit court denied
Petitioners’ motion. Petitioners renewed their motion, on the same ground, at the close of
all of the evidence, which the circuit court reserved ruling on until after the jury returned
its verdict. Following deliberations, the jury found Petitioners were grossly negligent in
6
Respondents filed a separate action against Harbor Hospital.
The City’s favorable judgment by the circuit court was not appealed by
7
Respondents and is not an issue before this Court.
-7-
the treatment of Mr. Butler, that this gross negligence caused Mr. Butler’s death, and
accordingly, awarded Respondents $3,707,000. Following the announcement of the jury’s
verdict, Petitioners moved for a JNOV on the same grounds advanced in their earlier
motions for judgment. The circuit court granted Petitioners’ motion, concluding that
Respondents’ evidence of gross negligence was insufficient. Judgment in favor of
Petitioners was entered by the circuit court on March 21, 2016.
Appeal to the Court of Special Appeals
Respondents filed a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals, and Petitioners
filed a timely cross-appeal.8 Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., et al. v. Joseph Stracke, et al., No.
238, 2018 WL 4761044 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Oct. 1, 2018). The Court first determined that
the circuit court erred in granting Petitioners’ JNOV because “significant evidence existed
to show that [Petitioners] acted grossly negligent.” Id. at *4. Because there was sufficient
evidence of gross negligence, the Court reversed the circuit court’s grant of Petitioners’
JNOV, and ordered the circuit court to reinstate the jury’s verdict in favor of Respondents.
8
Respondents presented two questions for review, which the Court of Special
Appeals rephrased as:
1. Did the trial court err in entering a judgment notwithstanding the verdict
on the grounds of insufficient evidence?
2. Did the trial court err in ruling that [Petitioners] were entitled to limited
immunity afforded by the Maryland Fire and Rescue Company Act?[]
Petitioners presented the single following question for review, which the Court also
rephrased as:
3. Did the trial court err in denying [Petitioners’] motions for mistrial?[]
Although the Court of Special Appeals did consider this third issue, it was not appealed to
the Court of Appeals and is therefore not before us for consideration.
-8-
Next the Court explained that, because it was bound by Court of Appeals’ precedent in
Mayor & City of Baltimore v. Chase, 360 Md. 121, 756 A.2d 987 (2000), the Fire and
Rescue Company Act affords immunity in simple negligence cases to municipalities and
their employees, not just volunteers. Id. at *6-7.
Senior Judge Lawrence F. Rodowsky, sitting specially assigned, dissented from the
panel’s majority opinion, citing “the breadth of the grant of immunity to members of the
fire and rescue companies as recognized by [the Courts’] cases and, ultimately, as conferred
by [the Fire and Rescue Company Act].” Id. at *10 (Rodowsky, J., dissenting). After
assessing the evidence that was submitted at trial, Judge Rodowsky determined that the
“evidence may or may not be sufficient to support a finding of negligence, but it is not
evidence of gross negligence.” Id. at *11. Judge Rodowsky also observed that even “if
there is willful or gross negligence by an omission, the immunity [provided by Md. Code,
Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a)] is not lost.” Id. at *13. Section 5-604(a) of Cts. & Jud. Proc.,
first introduced as Senate Bill 731 in the 1983 General Assembly session, originally read:
“A volunteer fire company is immune from liability in the same manner as a local
government agency for any act or omission in the course of performing its duties if . . .
[t]he act or omission is not one of gross negligence.” However, according to Judge
Rodowsky, the General Assembly’s removal of “omission” evidenced its intent to only
withhold immunity for grossly negligent acts, not grossly negligent omissions. Id. at *13
(citing Chapter 546 of the Acts of 1983). Because Petitioners’ gross negligence was based
on their failure to properly question and examine Mr. Butler – i.e., a failure to act – Judge
-9-
Rodwosky concluded that Petitioners’ immunity under the Act was not defeated by their
alleged grossly negligent omissions from action. Id.
Petitioners filed a timely petition for certiorari before this Court, and Respondents’
filed a timely cross-petition. We granted certiorari on both Petitioners’ petition and
Respondents’ cross-petition. Stracke, et al. v. Estate of Butler, Jr., et al., 462 Md. 556, 201
A.3d 1228 (2019).
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant or denial of a motion for JNOV for legal correctness, by “viewing
the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it in the light most favorable
to the non-moving party, and determining whether the facts and circumstances only permit
one inference with regard to the issue presented.” Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md. 680, 706,
118 A.3d 829, 844 (2015) (quoting Scapa Dryer Fabrics, Inc. v. Saville, 418 Md. 496, 503,
16 A.3d 159, 163 (2011)). Gross negligence is a question of law “when reasonable [people]
could not differ as to the rational conclusion to be reached.” Romanesk v. Rose, 248 Md.
420, 423, 237 A.2d 12, 14 (1968). “[I]f there is no rational ground under the law governing
the case for upholding the jury’s verdict, [JNOV] must be granted.” Bell v. Chance, 460
Md. 28, 52, 188 A.3d 930, 944 (2018). In this context, if the non-moving party has offered
sufficient evidence, so as reasonable minds might differ, that the moving party engaged in
a grossly negligent manner, the motion for JNOV should be denied. See Barnes v. Greater
Balt. Med. Ctr., Inc., 210 Md. App. 457, 480, 63 A.3d 620, 634 (2013).
- 10 -
DISCUSSION
Petitioners were not grossly negligent in their treatment of Mr. Butler.
“Issues involving gross negligence are often more troublesome than those involving
malice because a fine line exists between allegations of negligence and gross negligence.”
Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 187, 935 A.2d 699, 717 (2007). Ordinary, simple negligence
is “any conduct, except conduct recklessly disregardful of an interest of others, which falls
below the standard established by law for protection of others against unreasonable risk of
harm.” Id. On the other hand, this Court has explained that “gross negligence is an
intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless disregard of the consequences as
affecting the life or property of another, and also implies a thoughtless disregard of the
consequences without the exertion of any effort to avoid them.” Id. We have made clear
that a claim for gross negligence “sets the evidentiary hurdle at a higher elevation[.]” Beall
v. Holloway-Johnson, 446 Md. 48, 64, 130 A.3d 406, 415 (2016).
“[A] wrongdoer is guilty of gross negligence or acts wantonly and willfully only
when he inflicts injury intentionally or is so utterly indifferent to the rights of others that
he acts as if such rights did not exist.” Barbre, 402 Md. at 187, 935 A.2d at 717.
Gross negligence is not just big negligence. For these purposes, gross
negligence “must be sufficient . . . to establish that the defendant . . . had a
wanton or reckless disregard for human life . . . . Only conduct that is of
extraordinary or outrageous character will be sufficient to imply this state of
mind.”
Thomas v. State, 237 Md. App. 527, 537, 186 A.3d 857, 863 (2018), rev’d, State v. Thomas,
No. 33, 2019 WL 2574642 (Md. June 24, 2019) (quoting State v. Kramer, 318 Md. 576,
590, 569 A.2d 674, 681 (1990)) (emphasis added).
- 11 -
In Beall, we considered, inter alia, whether there was sufficient evidence to support
a finding of gross negligence against a police officer whose cruiser collided with a fleeing
motorcyclist during a high-speed chase, and which resulted in the death of the motorist.
446 Md. at 57-62, 130 A.3d at 411-14. We reiterated that a claim of gross negligence must
be supported by sufficient evidence that the defendant “acted with ‘wanton or reckless
disregard for the safety of others[.]’” Id. at 64-65, 130 A.3d at 415 (quoting Boyer v. State,
323 Md. 558, 580-81, 594 A.2d 121, 132 (1991)). Even given this objectively higher
threshold assigned to proving gross negligence, our opinion in Beall morphed the
distinctions between simple and gross negligence by holding that “a legally sufficient case
of ordinary negligence will frequently be enough to create a jury question of whether such
negligence was or was not gross.” Id. at 64, 130 A.3d at 415.
We decline to further muddy this already unclear area of law. If in almost all
instances where a plaintiff can prove negligence, and the case is submitted to the jury to
consider gross negligence, then many first responders will be stripped of the protective
shield that the immunity was intended to provide, forcing them to go through the entire
litigation process when there is only evidence of simple negligence. This result runs
contrary to the heightened threshold of gross negligence we have articulated, and in many
cases, gross negligence will be treated as “just big negligence.” See Thomas, 237 Md. App.
at 537, 186 A.3d at 863.
The evidence submitted at trial of Petitioners’ actions, or failures to act, while
potentially sufficient to establish simple negligence, was not sufficient to establish gross
negligence, even when taken in the light most favorable to Respondents as the non-moving
- 12 -
party. See Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md. 680, 706, 118 A.3d 829, 844 (2015).
Respondents point out that “if a trier of fact disbelieves part or all of a witness’ testimony,
that discredited testimony is assigned no weight and plays no role in the consideration of
the ultimate issue.” Grimm v. State, 447 Md. 482, 506, 135 A.3d 844, 858 (2016).
However, “disbelief is not evidence in and of itself.” Id. Even given this principle, there
is not sufficient evidence to conclude that Petitioners made a deliberate and conscious
choice to not help Mr. Butler survive. Assuming the facts as they were presented by
Respondents, as the non-moving party, Petitioners still responded to Mr. Butler’s 9-1-1
call, provided him with immediate attention and treatment, and transported him to the
nearest hospital in under ten minutes.
In Tatum v. Gigliotti, the Court of Special Appeals concluded that a paramedic who
failed to properly diagnose a medical condition and administer proper treatment, eventually
leading to the patient’s death, did not perform his duties in a grossly negligent manner. 80
Md. App. 559, 569, 565 A.2d 354, 358-59 (1989). There, the medic attempted to put a
paper bag over the patient’s face, believing that he was suffering from hyperventilation.
Id. at 562, 565 A.2d at 355. However, the patient was actually suffering from a severe
asthma attack. Id. The medics escorted the patient to the ambulance, but did not transport
him on a stretcher. Id. While in the ambulance and en route to the hospital, the patient slid
from his seat and fell onto the floor of the vehicle. Id. An emergency room nurse testified
that when the patient arrived at the hospital, he was in cardiac arrest. Id. at 563, 565 A.2d
at 355. The patient ultimately died from a lack of oxygen. Id. The Court of Special
Appeals reasoned that, even considering these facts in the light most favorable to the
- 13 -
plaintiff, “[t]he evidence in [the] case indicated that although the actions of [the medic]
may have amounted to negligence, they [did] not satisfy the threshold of gross negligence.”
Id. at 569, 565 A.2d at 358.
Similarly, in McCoy v. Hatmaker, the Court of Special Appeals concluded that a
paramedic’s failure to follow medical protocol and subsequent erroneous medical
judgment was not sufficient to establish gross negligence. 135 Md. App. 693, 707-08, 763
A.2d 1233, 1241 (2000). There, paramedic Billie Hatmaker diagnosed the patient, William
McCoy, as dead after observing him unconscious, having unresponsive eyes, a
significantly lowered body temperature, and having already released bodily fluids. Id. at
699-702, 763 A.3d at 1236-38. Instead of performing advanced life support procedures,
Hatmaker proceeded to fill out a Maryland Ambulance Information Sheet and called the
police and medical examiner. Id. at 702, 763 A.3d at 1237-38. McCoy alleged that
Hatmaker breached his duty of care to McCoy by failing to provide appropriate
resuscitative medical treatment and by violating relevant Maryland State Protocol and
Emergency Medical Technician/Paramedic Guidelines. Id. at 701-02, 763 A.3d at 1238.
The Court of Special Appeals disagreed, reasoning,
we cannot equate a well-intended error in medical judgment – even if it costs
the patient’s life – with wanton and reckless disregard for the life of that
patient. Medical protocols seek to establish best practices for successfully
treating certain conditions. Failure to follow such protocols might sometimes
be deliberate, but more often than not, we believe, such failure to heed them
during an emergency would be purely accidental and, therefore, at most
simple negligence. Even resolving all inferences in [McCoy’s] favor, the
undisputed facts here simply do not show that Hatmaker’s failure falls into
the former category. [McCoy] cannot point to any facts that show he made
a deliberate choice not to give McCoy a chance to survive, and, at the end of
- 14 -
the day, it is deliberateness that lies at the core of the Tatum standard of
willfulness and wantonness.
Id. at 713-14, 763 A.2d at 1244 (footnote omitted) (emphasis in original).
Respondents and the Dissent point to Petitioners’ failure to adhere to the Maryland
Medical Protocols for Emergency Medical Services Providers (“the Protocols”) and the
Emergency Medical Services procedures set forth in the Baltimore City Manual of
Procedures (“MOP”) as evidence of Petitioners’ gross negligence. The Protocols were
developed to “help [Emergency Medical Service] providers anticipate and be better
prepared to give the emergency patient care ordered during the medical consultation.” The
Protocols outline various procedures in which applicability and strict compliance varies
based on the circumstances of the emergency response. For example, the Protocols
mandate that algorithms for general patient care must be followed according to the specific
sequence, but all other treatment protocols do not require a strict or mandatory sequence.
There are also varying categories that certain procedures and instructions may fall under.
Some sections of the Protocols merely describe and define illnesses or emergencies, and
what symptoms those diagnoses may exhibit. If a paramedic determines that a patient is
suffering from certain conditions, such as cardiac arrest or acute coronary syndrome
(“ACS”), then the Protocols require specific procedures to be taken to ensure the safety of
the patient. However, if a paramedic determines that a patient is not in fact suffering from
a described condition, then the specific procedures do not necessarily have to be strictly
followed. Additionally, other protocols in the Baltimore City MOP are explicitly situation
dependent, including whether there are non-emergency passengers, the weight of the
- 15 -
patient, and the location or type of building the patient may be located in. Finally, some
procedures are administrative, and do not primarily serve to support the health and safety
of the patient. For example, if a patient refuses to be transported via stretcher, paramedics
are instructed to obtain a signed and witnessed “release from responsibility” form.
The Protocols describe a patient who is experiencing ACS as someone with chest,
epigastric (the area of the upper abdomen, just below the ribs), arm, or jaw pain or
discomfort, and possible diaphoresis (sweating), nausea, shortness of breath, or difficulty
breathing.9 The Protocols explain that a patient with such symptoms should be placed into
a position of comfort and transported to the nearest hospital cardiac catheterization center.
In assessing the patient, the medics should first perform a visual assessment of the patient
regarding their symptoms, then transport the patient to the ambulance via a stretcher.
Respondents assert that “Petitioners violated virtually every [Protocol] and MOP policy
governing their encounter with [Mr.] Butler.” However, Petitioners did not “knowing[ly],
conscious[ly], deliberate[ly]” fail to adhere to “virtually every protocol adopted both by
the State agency authorized by law to promulgate such protocols and their own municipal
employer[.]” Dissent at 1. Stracke visually assessed Mr. Butler while Mr. Butler was
seated in his residence, and Cisneros conducted a visual assessment as Mr. Butler was
escorted towards the ambulance. Additionally, Cisneros testified that Mr. Butler was in
9
There is conflicting evidence and testimony regarding whether Mr. Butler was
experiencing these symptoms and whether they were fully and properly assessed by
Petitioners. However, because the standard of review for a JNOV considers the evidence
in a light most favorable to the non-moving party, see Cooper, 443 Md. at 706, 118 A.3d
at 844, we assume that Mr. Butler was displaying these symptoms, and that they were
readily observable by Petitioners.
- 16 -
fact in a position of comfort while being transported to the hospital in the ambulance.
Furthermore, the failure to adhere to protocols and policies does not itself establish a
reckless disregard for human life or amount to gross negligence. See Tatum, 80 Md. App
at 571, 565 A.2d at 359-60; see also McCoy, 135 Md. App. at 707-08, 763 A.2d at 1241.
Similar to Tatum and McCoy, here, Petitioners responded to a 9-1-1 call to give
assistance to Mr. Butler. At the time of his death, Mr. Butler was 28 years old, five feet
and seven inches tall, and weighed approximately 245 pounds. He had no history of heart
problems and was apparently in relatively good health. Petitioners escorted Mr. Butler to
the ambulance and conducted a number of assessments while there, including taking his
blood pressure, heart rate, and blood oxygen levels. Believing Mr. Butler needed further
care, Petitioners transported him to the closest hospital. Mr. Butler was brought into the
emergency room less than ten minutes after making first contact with Petitioners. It was
not until Mr. Butler had been waiting in the hospital for an additional ten minutes did his
symptoms begin to worsen and he eventually went into cardiac arrest, at which point he
was taken into the care of the hospital staff. There was no evidence submitted at trial or
reflected in the record that contradicts these facts.
Hindsight is 20/20, and it is clear from the medical examiner’s autopsy that
Petitioners’ assessment did not conform to Mr. Butler’s actual medical condition and
needs. It is true that Petitioners did not follow protocol by failing to transport Mr. Butler
via stretcher from his home to the ambulance, and by transporting him to the nearest
hospital rather than a cardiac catheterization center. While this may – or may not – be
sufficient to establish negligent conduct, the evidence presented by Respondents is not
- 17 -
sufficient to establish gross negligence. “Gross negligence is not just big negligence.”
Thomas, 237 Md. App. at 537, 186 A.3d at 863, rev’d, State v. Thomas, No. 33, 2019 WL
2574642 (Md. June 24, 2019). The mere fact that Petitioners inaccurately diagnosed and
treated their patient does not elevate their conduct to gross negligence. “[W]e cannot
equate a well-intended error in medical judgment – even if it costs the patient’s life – with
wanton and reckless disregard for the life of that patient.” McCoy, 135 Md. App. at 713,
763 A.2d at 1244.
Even if the jury disbelieved all of the evidence submitted by Petitioners, and all
contradicted evidence was settled in favor of Respondents, it is undisputed that Petitioners
made a concerted effort to locate Mr. Butler, assess him, take his vitals, and transport him
to the nearest hospital for further review and treatment in less than ten minutes. Under
these conditions, Petitioners did not possess a wanton and reckless disregard for Mr.
Butler’s life, nor did they present an utter indifference to his rights and well-being. On the
contrary, Petitioners arrived at Mr. Butler’s home, despite initially receiving an incorrect
address, and provided the care they assessed as necessary for the situation before them.
“There is no legally sufficient evidence that [Petitioners] made a deliberate choice not to
give Mr. Butler a chance to survive.” Estate of Kerry Butler, Jr., et al. v. Joseph Stracke,
et al., No. 238, 2018 WL 4761044, at *13 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. Oct. 1, 2018) (Rodowsky,
J., dissenting). This does not represent “an intentional failure to perform a manifest duty
in reckless disregard of the consequences[,]” or an utter indifference to the rights of others.
Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 187, 935 A.2d 699, 717 (2007).
- 18 -
Finally, the practical implications of holding otherwise cannot be overstated.
Concluding that Petitioners were grossly negligent would have a negative impact on not
only the number of individuals who seek employment as first responders in the future, but
would create a chilling effect on their conduct. First responders must have broad discretion
to proceed in their assessment and treatment of patients without the fear of liability. Judges
or juries would be permitted to engage in a post hoc, hindsight assessment of the first
responders’ conduct. In reality, the trier of fact cannot be expected to review the conduct
as if they stood in the shoes of the first responders and made split-second decisions that
could impact the health and life of those they are treating. First responders fulfill a vital
role throughout our State, and we must not minimize their service by second-guessing their
actions through a 20/20 lens.
Section 5-604(a) provides immunity against simple negligence claims to employees of
municipal fire departments.
Assuming, arguendo, that Petitioners were merely negligent in their actions with
respect to Mr. Butler, Respondents alternatively assert that Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a)
only confers immunity from simple negligence claims upon private and volunteer fire and
rescue companies, not municipalities or their employees. Matters of statutory
interpretation are questions of law that are reviewed de novo. Schisler v. State, 394 Md.
519, 535, 907 A.2d 175, 184 (2006). We must interpret a statute as “to give every word
effect, avoiding constructions that render any portion of the language superfluous or
redundant.” Blondell v. Balt. City Police Dep’t, 341 Md. 680, 691, 672 A.2d 639, 644
(1996). To that end, we will first look to the plain meaning of the statutory language, and
- 19 -
give effect to the clear and unambiguous language. Jones v. State, 336 Md. 255, 261, 647
A.2d 1204, 1206-07 (1994). If the language is unclear or ambiguous, we will then look to
the legislative objectives and goals in order to discern the proper interpretation and
construction. Whack v. State, 338 Md. 665, 672, 659 A.2d 1347, 1350 (1995). A review
of the statute and our prior case law make clear that Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a)
unambiguously confers immunity from simple negligence claims upon municipal fire
departments and their employees, as Petitioners indisputably are.
Our analysis begins and ends with our previous decision in Mayor & City of
Baltimore v. Chase, 360 Md. 121, 756 A.2d 987 (2000), in which we concluded that the
General Assembly intended the Fire and Rescue Company Act to immunize municipal and
private fire departments, as well as their employees, from simple negligence claims. In
Chase, a Baltimore City Fire Department paramedic was sued for alleged negligent and
grossly negligent treatment of a patient. Id. at 124, 756 A.2d at 989. The Court of Special
Appeals held that § 5-604(a) applied only to volunteer and private fire and rescue
companies, and therefore did not bestow immunity upon municipal fire departments and
their employees. Id. We reversed, determining that “fire company” and “rescue company”
unambiguously included municipal fire departments and their personnel, and therefore the
plain language of the statute controlled. Id. at 130-32, 756 A.2d at 992-94. We further
explained that the General Assembly’s exclusion of the word “volunteer” from the title of
the original bill indicated their intent to afford immunity to all fire and rescue personnel,
including municipalities and their employees, not just private and volunteer entities. Id. at
126, 756 A.2d at 990.
- 20 -
Despite this clear precedent in Chase that applies § 5-604(a) immunity to municipal
fire departments, Respondents assert that our more recent opinion in TransCare Maryland
v. Murray, 431 Md. 225, 64 A.3d 887 (2013), concluded that the terms “fire company” and
“rescue company” were ambiguous, thus requiring this Court to revisit the interpretation
of the statute and its legislative history. Respondents’ position fails in two regards. First,
we did not hold in TransCare that the phrases “fire company” and “rescue company” were,
standing alone, ambiguous. We explained,
[a]s TransCare is a commercial ambulance company, the application of [Cts.
& Jud. Proc.] § 5-603(b)(3) to it depends, in part, on whether the adjective
“volunteer” modifies only “fire department” or also modifies “ambulance
and rescue squad.” If “volunteer” modifies only “fire department,”
TransCare potentially has immunity as an “ambulance squad” (if its
“members” have immunity). If “volunteer” also modifies “ambulance and
rescue squad,” TransCare does not have immunity under this provision
(regardless of whether its “members” or employees have immunity). Either
construction of the phrase is grammatically correct; in light of this ambiguity
in meaning, we resort to the statute’s legislative history to discern its purpose.
Id. at 235-36, 64 A.3d at 893 (emphasis added). The two phrases of “fire company” and
“rescue company” only become ambiguous when modified by the adjective “volunteer.”
This is particularly significant because of the second reason Respondents’ position
fails. TransCare addresses the interpretation of Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-603(b)(3), which
states that “[a] volunteer fire department or ambulance and rescue squad whose
members have immunity . . .” are “not civilly liable for any act or omission in giving any
assistance or medical care[.]” (Emphasis added); see also Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-603(a).
Conversely, Petitioners in the present case are claiming immunity from suit under § 5-
604(a), which states that “except for any willful or grossly negligent act, a fire company
- 21 -
or rescue company, and the personnel of a fire company or rescue company, are immune
from civil liability for any act or omission in the course of performing their duties.”
(Emphasis added). The language in § 5-604(a) clearly differs from the language in § 5-
603(b)(3) because the former section omits the word “volunteer” from its language of
which entities are afforded immunity. Section 5-603(b)(3) is only ambiguous because of
its use of “volunteer” as a modifier, and because that language does not appear in § 5-
604(a), TransCare does not render § 5-604(a) ambiguous and is not binding on the present
case.
We decline to revisit our opinion in Chase to conclude that § 5-604(a) is ambiguous
and intended to only confer immunity upon private and volunteer fire and rescue
companies, as Respondents request. TransCare does not alter our interpretation of § 5-
604(a) in Chase, and Respondents offer no compelling reason for us to revisit our Chase
opinion. Accordingly, we conclude that § 5-604(a) unambiguously applies to municipal
fire departments, and immunizes them and their employees from simple negligence claims.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that there was not sufficient evidence to establish that Petitioners
committed gross negligence. The mere fact that Petitioners inaccurately diagnosed and
treated their patient does not elevate their conduct to gross negligence. “[W]e cannot
equate a well-intended error in medical judgment – even if it costs the patient’s life – with
wanton and reckless disregard for the life of that patient.” McCoy v. Hatmaker, 135 Md.
App. 693, 713, 763 A.2d 1233, 1244 (2000). Petitioners assessed the patient, took his
vitals, and promptly transported him to the nearest hospital within approximately seven
- 22 -
minutes of first arriving on the scene. Based on the evidence presented at trial, the jury
could not have found that Petitioners were grossly negligent by a preponderance of the
evidence. We further conclude that Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 5-604(a) unambiguously confers
immunity upon municipal fire departments in simple negligence claims. See Mayor & City
of Baltimore v. Chase, 360 Md. 121, 756 A.2d 987 (2000). Accordingly, we reverse the
judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF
SPECIAL APPEALS IS REVERSED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY
RESPONDENTS.
- 23 -
Circuit Court for Baltimore City IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
Case No. 24-C-14-001249
Argued: June 7, 2019 OF MARYLAND
No. 64
September Term, 2018
JOSEPH STRACKE, et al.
Case No. 419686V vs.
Argued 1/7/19
ESTATE OF KERRY BUTLER, JR., et al.
Barbera, C.J.
*Greene
McDonald
Hotten
Getty
Booth
Wilner, Alan M. (Retired, Specially
Assigned)
Dissenting Opinion by Wilner, J., which Barbera,
C.J., and McDonald, J., join
Filed: August 16, 2019
*Greene, J., now retired, participated in the
hearing and conference of this case while an
active member of the Court; after being recalled
pursuant to Maryland Constitution, Article IV,
Section 3A, he also participated in the decision
and adoption of this Opinion.
The Court today holds, as a matter of law, that what a jury necessarily found was a
knowing, conscious, deliberate violation by two paramedics, responding to a Priority 1
emergency 911 call, of what was reported to be and actually was, a heart attack, of virtually
every protocol adopted both by the State agency authorized by law to promulgate such
protocols and their own municipal employer, and which led directly to the death of the
patient does not constitute gross negligence. With respect, I dissent. In my view, the Court
has given lip service to, but has effectively departed from, this Court’s jurisprudence in
several important respects. Although it denies doing so, it treats as facts assertions that
the jury obviously did not accept, which is inappropriate when reviewing a judgment
N.O.V., and it does not give full credence to recent pronouncements of this Court regarding
the nature of gross negligence.
The procedural history of this case is set forth in the Majority Opinion and need not
be repeated. What is not so clear from the Majority Opinion is the critical fact that two
diametrically contradictory versions of what actually occurred were presented to the jury.
The conflict was so dramatic and pervasive that the jury could not rationally conflate the
two versions. It had to believe one or the other, and, on proper instructions from the court,
it obviously chose to believe the version presented by the plaintiffs. Had it chosen to accept
the version presented by the defendants, it would have had no choice but to find no
negligence at all on their part – they would have done nothing wrong. To illustrate that
point, the reader needs to understand in greater detail what the jury had before it.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
1
Mr. Butler’s wife Crystal described her husband, who was 28 years old, as “stocky”
but healthy, able to engage in normal physical activities, with no history of heart problems.
In fact, Mr. Butler was not in good health. The autopsy report showed that he was obese
(five foot-seven inches tall weighing 244 pounds) and had a “50% stenosis of the left
anterior descending coronary artery with near complete occlusion by superimposed
thrombus [and] 70% stenosis of the right coronary artery with near complete occlusion by
superimposed thrombus.” He died of “coronary artery thrombosis due to atherosclerotic
cardiovascular disease.” His illness was apparently asymptomatic until March 1, 2011, but
he clearly had a significant heart problem.
Petitioners Stracke and Cisneros were employed by the Baltimore City Fire
Department. Mr. Stracke was certified as an “emergency medical technician basic
(EMTB); Ms. Cisneros was a trained and nationally certified paramedic and an advanced
life support medic. Both acknowledged that they had been trained in and were familiar
with the Maryland Medical Protocols for Emergency Medical Services Providers adopted
by the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Services Systems (MIEMSS) and
comparable EMS procedures adopted by the Baltimore City Fire Department that governed
their responsibilities when responding to medical emergencies.1
1
MIEMSS is an independent State agency created by Md. Code, § 13-503 of the
Education Article. Among its duties is the adoption of an Emergency Medical System
Plan that would include “criteria and guidelines for the delivery of emergency medical
services including provisions to assure proper medical direction of emergency medical
services.” § 13-509.
2
The Call
Mr. and Ms. Butler were both out on the evening of March 1, 2011. Mr. Butler was
visiting his brother; Ms. Butler was visiting her mother. When she returned around 10:00,
Mr. Butler already was home and said he was hungry, so she gave him a “spicy chicken
sandwich meal” she had gotten from Wendy’s, a fast-food restaurant. She then went to
bed. Her husband watched television for a while and ate the sandwich, along with some
cookies. Some four hours later, just before 1:00 a.m., Mr. Butler woke her, told her he was
having a heart attack, and asked her to call 911. He was lying on the bed with his legs
“balled up.” His teeth were clenched, he was mumbling, and he had his hands on his chest.
Ms. Butler immediately called 911. The call came in at 1:02 a.m. Ms. Butler
reported that her husband said he was having chest pains, was breathing “kinda fast,” and
was having difficulty speaking. She reported that he had not taken any drugs or
medications and had not previously had a heart attack or angina. She made no mention of
Mr. Butler complaining of indigestion or heartburn. In light of that information, the Fire
Department regarded this as a Priority 1 chest pain case.
Within two minutes, Medic 5 unit, consisting of Mr. Stracke and Ms. Cisneros, was
dispatched. They were informed that the problem was “chest pains 28 year old male.”
Under the Baltimore City Fire Department procedures, all 911 calls requiring emergency
medical service are categorized initially as Priority 1 calls. Quite apart from that, an
assessment indicative of a heart attack or congestive heart failure of itself would be a
Priority 1.
3
Unfortunately, the dispatcher gave the unit an incorrect address – 850 Bethune Court
instead of 860. That caused only a relatively short delay, however; photographs placed in
evidence show that the buildings were townhomes located adjacent to one another. The
unit arrived on scene at the Butler home at 1:19 a.m.
In the meanwhile, because Mr. Butler was unable to dress himself, his wife assisted
him, and because he was unable to walk by himself, she also helped him move from the
upstairs bedroom to the front door. She was standing at the front door when the ambulance
arrived. Mr. Butler remained seated inside near the door.
The Immediate Response
Ms. Butler saw the driver – Mr. Stracke – exit the ambulance several houses away
and called to him. His response, according to her, was “[v]ery loudly he said what seems
to be the problem.” The tone of his voice was “Very angry. Very loud.” She replied “he
say [sic] he’s having a heart attack.” Mr. Stracke did not enter the house and, because it
was dark, could see only that Mr. Butler was seated. From the outside, he loudly asked
Mr. Butler what the problem was. His exact words, according to him, were “what’s going
on my main man?” Mr. Butler was unable to respond. According to Ms. Butler, he was
mumbling, which he did not ordinarily do, and so she spoke for him. She told Mr. Stracke
that her husband “could barely walk and he could barely talk.” Mr. Butler was still holding
his chest and was bent forward.
The ambulance was parked 30 to 40 feet away from the house. Notwithstanding
Ms. Butler’s statement that her husband could barely walk, Mr. Stracke responded that he
4
was “going to have to walk.” Ms. Butler repeated that he couldn’t walk, but Mr. Stracke
told Mr. Butler again, “you’re going to have to walk.” Although there was a stretcher in
the ambulance, Mr. Stracke refused to get it and forced Mr. Butler to walk to the ambulance
as a condition of being taken to the hospital. Ms. Butler stated explicitly that her husband
never volunteered to walk to the ambulance. At no time prior to forcing Mr. Butler to walk
to the ambulance did Mr. Stracke conduct any kind of physical examination of Mr. Butler,
take his blood pressure or other vital signs, administer oxygen, or offer him aspirin or any
other medication that he was authorized to offer. Nor did Ms. Cisneros, who was the more
highly trained of the two, offer any assistance at that point or intervene in any way. She
remained at the ambulance.
In light of Mr. Stracke’s insistence, Mr. Butler was forced to walk – in Ms. Butler’s
words, “stumbling” and “staggering” – the 30 to 40 feet to the ambulance, with his hands
still on his chest, without any assistance from either Mr. Stracke or Ms. Cisneros. Having
reached the ambulance, he then was forced to hoist himself or climb some steps in order to
enter the ambulance, again without any assistance from Mr. Stracke or Ms. Cisneros, who
were engaged in a conversation at the time.2
Mr. Stracke told a very different story. He acknowledged that, under the MIEMSS
protocols, a report of chest pain was Priority 1. Nonetheless, because it was late at night,
he did not activate the siren or lights on the ambulance on the trip to the scene. In contrast
2
The testimony of Mr. Stracke and Ms. Cisneros is somewhat ambiguous in how Mr.
Butler entered the ambulance. Mr. Stracke said “[h]e pulled his-self up” without
assistance. Ms. Cisneros indicated that there were steps that Mr. Butler had to climb.
5
to Ms. Butler’s testimony, Mr. Stracke said that, when he first encountered Mr. Butler, Mr.
Butler looked “normal,” he was not holding his chest, and he did not appear to be in any
pain. As noted, his greeting to Mr. Butler was “what’s going on my main man.” Mr.
Butler’s only response was that his right side hurt. He said nothing about having heartburn.
Mr. Stracke said that he told Mr. Butler to “hold tight” while he got a stretcher but that Mr.
Butler responded that he was “ready to go” and walked out of the house on his own accord.
Mr. Stracke insisted that Mr. Butler had no difficulty walking – he was “a healthy
male walking.” Mr. Stracke made no inquiry of Mr. Butler regarding the pain in his right
side or about any medicines he had taken. Mr. Stracke acknowledged that MIEMSS
protocols required that he enter the house to ascertain the nature of the problem and that he
provide a stretcher to transport the patient, and that he failed to do either. Indeed, he
testified that he offered to get a stretcher and Mr. Butler declined. The gist of his testimony
was that compliance with the protocols was somewhat discretionary. Ms. Cisneros
regarded them as “the Bible” and that compliance is required “because it’s a serious
situation. You’re taking care of people’s lives” but agreed with Mr. Stracke that a stretcher
was not required if she determined that it was not necessary.
Ms. Cisneros said that, when Mr. Stracke located the proper address, she went to
the rear of the ambulance to retrieve a stretcher and a bottle of oxygen, as the applicable
protocols required, but terminated that effort when she saw Mr. Stracke wave to her and
say that Mr. Butler would be walking. She never approached the home and first saw Mr.
6
Butler when he was midway to the ambulance.3 She confirmed Mr. Stracke’s statement
that Mr. Butler was not stumbling or leaning and that his steps were “perfectly normal.”
She said that Mr. Butler had his hand on his throat, which he said was burning and that he
denied that he was having chest pains. During the trip to the hospital, she took some of his
vital signs, which she said were normal. She said that Mr. Stracke took his blood pressure
and that she felt his pulse, checked his pupils, listened to his lungs, and looked at his skin.
She added that Mr. Butler was “very chatty.”
From all of that, having learned that Mr. Butler had consumed spicy chicken, and
being unable to reproduce any pain on his right side, Ms. Cisneros concluded that she “had
no reason to believe that the patient was in anything other than stable [ ] condition,” and,
accordingly, downgraded him from Priority 1 to Priority 3 and, in her EMS Patient Care
Report, recorded the problem as “chest heartburn,” breath “non-labored,” and “patient
condition “stable.”
Events at the Hospital
According to Ms. Cisneros’ report, she and Mr. Stracke spent only four minutes
with Mr. Butler at his home. The trip to the hospital took about four minutes. In the
ambulance, Mr. Butler was seated on a bench rather than placed on the available stretcher.
3
The Majority Opinion states that “Cisneros promptly exited the ambulance with a
medical bag and oxygen bottle in order to fully and properly assess Mr. Butler’s
condition,” but neglects to add that, when Stracke told her that Mr. Butler would be
walking, she returned the bag and apparently never opened it.
7
Upon arrival at the hospital, he was required to remove himself from the ambulance without
assistance but was taken to the emergency room in a wheelchair.
Ms. Butler followed the ambulance in a separate car and said that she arrived at the
emergency room before her husband and waited there until he arrived. She registered him.
A hospital employee who identified himself as a multi-functional technician (MFT) said
that he first noticed Mr. Butler standing outside the hospital for five to ten minutes before
he was wheeled into the emergency room. The MFT said that one of the paramedics –
either Mr. Stracke or Ms. Cisneros – was with Mr. Butler. The other appeared to be giving
the charge nurse a report.4
The MFT noticed him again about five or ten minutes later, after he had been
wheeled into the emergency room. He was sitting in a wheelchair with his hands on his
chest, complaining that his chest hurt. One of the paramedics was with him but made no
effort to assist him. Some five to ten minutes after that, the MFT saw Mr. Butler for a third
time. He was still in the wheelchair in the same spot. He was “hollering for help” and
again complaining that his chest hurt. At that point, he was alone.5
4
Here, again, the Majority ignores evidence that the jury may have found significant. The
Majority Opinion states that “Stracke immediately retrieved a wheelchair for Mr. Butler.”
(Emphasis added). The MFT testified that he saw Mr. Butler standing outside the hospital
for five to ten minutes before being wheeled into the emergency room.
5
There is some ambiguity in the MFT’s testimony regarding how many times he saw Mr.
Butler and what was happening. On direct examination, he was clear that he noticed Mr.
Butler on three occasions, once before he was wheeled into the emergency room and twice
afterward. On cross-examination, what he saw on the second and third occasions seems
to be conflated. He was clear that on the last occasion, Mr. Butler was hollering, had his
8
Mr. Stracke stated that, when they arrived at the hospital, Mr. Butler exited the
ambulance on his own without asking for any assistance, and that Stracke then got the
wheelchair and wheeled him into the hospital. We may infer (or the jury could) that the
MFT’s first observation of Mr. Butler occurred while he was waiting for Mr. Stracke to
bring the wheel chair. Neither he nor Ms. Cisneros retrieved any of the emergency medical
equipment in the ambulance. Ms. Cisneros went directly to the nurse’s station, and Mr.
Stracke remained with Mr. Butler, standing behind him.
At some point, while Mr. Stracke was standing behind Mr. Butler, Mr. Butler’s head
lurched back and hit Mr. Stracke’s stomach, which caused Mr. Stracke to inquire “What
are you sleepy, main man?” Ms. Cisneros, who had a better view, proclaimed that he was
having a seizure, as she observed him sliding out of the wheelchair. Fortuitously, a doctor
appeared on the scene, and Mr. Butler was wheeled into an adjacent Code Room and placed
on a table.
Dr. Alan Barnes, who was on duty at the time, examined Mr. Butler in the Code
Room. The chart prepared by Ms. Cisneros indicated chest or abdominal discomfort, but
Mr. Butler was unresponsive and had no pulse. Dr. Barnes, with hospital staff assistance,
commenced advanced cardiac life support measures and tried to find out what had
happened. All he could learn from Ms. Cisneros was that the patient “was complaining of
hands on his chest, and that no paramedics were with him, but it wasn’t entirely clear
whether that was the second or third occasion. It appears that any confusion in this regard
emanates from the fact that the cross-examination focused on what the MFT saw and heard
after Mr. Butler was in the emergency room.
9
some discomfort which occurred after he had eaten, like, a spicy chicken sandwich.”
Indeed, that is what Ms. Cisneros reported to the hospital staff. The Emergency Nursing
Record shows the Chief Complaint as “Pt brought in by EMS c/c ‘heartburn eating spicy
chicken.’”
Dr. Barnes noted that, although Ms. Cisneros had told him that Mr. Butler had eaten
the spicy chicken “a relatively short period of time before this incident occurred” Ms.
Butler had said that her husband had eaten the chicken “hours before” and that “there
possibly was no relation between eating of this spicy chicken with this episode that
occurred.” Ms. Butler told Dr. Barnes what she said she had told Mr. Stracke – that her
husband was having chest pains and she was concerned that “something was seriously
wrong with him.” The resuscitation efforts, which continued for about an hour, were
unsuccessful, and Mr. Butler was declared dead at 2:41 a.m. By then, both Mr. Stracke
and Ms. Cisneros had left the hospital.
Dr. Barnes believed that Ms. Cisneros had misled the hospital regarding Mr.
Butler’s condition. Based on what he saw and what Ms. Butler told him, Dr. Barnes
believed that Mr. Butler was not stable and obviously had a cardiac problem. Dr. Barnes
stated that the paramedics had a duty to inform the hospital of that while they were enroute
and to convey him to the emergency room in a gurney rather than a wheelchair. They gave
no such notice, brought him in a wheelchair, and informed the hospital staff that he did not
have a cardiac problem. That is why the hospital staff did not deal immediately with the
10
patient but allowed him to sit in the emergency room for ten minutes or more until he
collapsed and likely why no cause of death could be determined until the autopsy.
The MIEMSS and Fire Department Protocols
Respondents’ claim of gross negligence is based largely on petitioners’ alleged
violation of the Medical Protocols for Emergency Medical Service Providers adopted by
MIEMSS and comparable procedures adopted by the City Fire Department. Relevant are
the protocols in place in 2011, when the incident at issue here occurred.
The purpose of the MIEMSS protocols, as explained in the General Provisions
section was “to standardize the emergency patient care that EMS providers, through
medical consultation, delivered at the scene of illness or injury and while transporting the
patient to the closest appropriate hospital.” The protocols are declared to be “a form of
‘standing orders’ for emergency patient care intervention in a patient who has a life-
threatening illness or injury.” John Blake, the captain of EMS training for the City Fire
Department, explained that “standing order” means that the provider, depending on the
level of care, can perform those functions with or without consulting a physician.6 He
acknowledged that EMS personnel do not make medical diagnoses – only a physician may
do that – but merely make an assessment of the patient’s condition.7
6
Mr. Blake explained that certain medications may not be administered without consent by
a physician.
7
Dr. Kevin Brown, one of the plaintiffs’ medical experts, agreed that only a physician may
enter a diagnosis in a patient’s medical record but stated that assessments required to be
made by EMTs also are in the nature of a diagnosis. In stating flatly that “[n]either Stracke
11
Mr. Blake testified that there are three priority levels under the protocols. Priority
1 is the highest life threat. The patient is critically unstable, needs to get to the hospital,
and needs life-saving interventions as soon as possible.
The protocols for general patient care of a responsive patient require that the EMS
provider obtain a history of the episode, take baseline vital signs, and perform a specified
physical examination, none of which was done before requiring Mr. Butler to walk to the
ambulance. A MIEMSS protocol defines an acute coronary syndrome as patients
presenting with chest, epigastric, arm, or jaw pain or discomfort and may be associated
with diaphoresis, nauseas, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing. Mr. Blake agreed
that, in determining whether that condition exists, medics need to look for chest pain,
clenching the chest, shortness of breath, sweating, trouble speaking – all of the signs Ms.
Butler testified were present. Those symptoms, he said, should be treated as a coronary
issue until that can be ruled out with a different assessment.
In order to rule out a cardiac event, Mr. Blake said that the paramedic would hook
the patient up to a cardiac monitor (EKG), initially with four leads, and, if there’s a “chief
complaint,” the protocol is to expand that to a 12-lead EKG, the latter of which could be
nor Cisneros are responsible for diagnosing medical conditions,” the Majority ignores this
evidence. MIEMSS protocols and expert medical testimony that the Majority also ignores
make abundantly clear that, when certain symptoms are observed, EMTs must treat the
problem as though it is a heart attack until such time as that can be ruled out.
12
done in the ambulance.8 Neither the four-lead nor the 12-lead EKG was done. Dr. Kevin
Brown, a medical expert who testified for the plaintiffs, confirmed that requirement.
Mr. Blake testified that, under the MIEMSS and Fire Department protocols, it would
be inappropriate to make the patient walk to the ambulance if the patient did not wish to
walk or if the patient’s complaints were consistent with a possible heart attack. Indeed, he
said that moving the patient in a stretcher was “required” unless it was impossible to get
the stretcher to the patient. It would not be appropriate even to allow a patient with
symptoms consistent with acute coronary syndrome to walk, whether by demand or by
decision of the patient. In that situation, the patient should be ordered to stop and wait for
a stretcher. He stated that, although there was no MIEMSS protocol dealing with the
patient lifting himself into the ambulance, in the paramedic training class, medics are taught
that “any sort of strenuous activity is going to cause increased oxygen demand on the heart”
which “could cause further damage to the heart, potentially.”
MIEMSS protocols make clear that all Priority 1 patients require on-line medical
consultation. The City Fire Department protocols state, in the section dealing with hospital
consultation, that, when providing consultation, “information is needed so that the
physician may get a full picture of your patient’s status,” including “[a]ll pertinent
information, i.e. vital signs, patient history, injury/illness to patient, and treatment
rendered.” The City protocols also provide that “[p]atient care does not end when the
medic unit arrives at the hospital receiving bay. Care must be continued into the
8
The MIEMSS protocols refer to an EKG as an ECG.
13
Emergency Department and until such care has been turned over to the emergency
department staff.” The evidence showed that no care at all was given to Mr. Butler by
either Mr. Stracke or Ms. Cisneros while he languished in the emergency room in obvious
pain and eventually hollering for help until he slid out of his wheelchair.
Evaluation of the Evidence
As is evident, the jury was faced with two very different versions of what Mr.
Stracke and Ms. Cisneros were told, what they observed, and what they did with that
information. If Ms. Butler’s version is believed, they were told repeatedly and were able
to observe on their own that Mr. Butler was suffering from chest pains, not a sore throat,
that he was unable to walk or talk in a normal way, that he had trouble breathing, that he
was bent over holding his chest, and that he never volunteered to walk to the ambulance,
much less to hoist himself into it, all of which indicates that he was having a heart attack.
All of that evidence is internally consistent. None of it is mere conjecture, speculation, or
hypothesis. The only question for the jury was whether it was credible.
The evidence presented by Mr. Stracke and Ms. Cisneros is completely opposite.
They claimed that Mr. Butler was never holding his chest, that he could walk and talk
normally, that he actually denied having any chest pains, that he had no trouble breathing,
that he volunteered to walk to the ambulance, and that, until his sudden “seizure” at the
hospital, there was no basis for any concern. He was simply suffering from having eaten
spicy chicken that disagreed with him. That is what led Ms. Cisneros to downgrade the
14
situation from Priority 1 to Priority 3, for her and Mr. Stracke to conform their behavior
accordingly, and for Ms. Cisneros to report that to the hospital staff.
The last part of the relevant evidence regarding the issue of negligence came from
the plaintiffs’ medical experts, Dr. Kevin Brown and Dr. Timothy Sanborn, who based
their opinions on Ms. Butler’s version as complemented by what actually occurred.
Dr. Brown opined that Mr. Stracke and Ms. Cisneros deviated from the standards of
care, derived from the MIEMSS and Fire Department protocols, in several respects. The
first deviation was the failure to make an assessment of Mr. Butler upon their arrival at his
home. The call indicated a chest pain case, which required them to bring the EKG and
defibrillator to the residence and determine whether the EKG was abnormal, and, if it was,
to transport him in a manner that would lessen the physical demands on his heart. Dr.
Brown said that, in light of the chest pain and other symptoms, Mr. Butler likely was
experiencing an acute heart attack at that point and that, if an EKG had been taken, it would
have been abnormal. That required rolling him to the ambulance, administering appropriate
medication, and inserting a catheter into a vein, none of which was done. It is important,
he said, to apply an EKG if the patient complains of chest pain. It takes no more than two
minutes and has no downside.
The subsequent deviations followed from the first – requiring Mr. Butler to walk to
the ambulance and hoist himself or climb steps in order to get in, the failure to inform the
hospital that they had a patient with chest pains on the way, failure to put Mr. Butler on a
stretcher and monitor his heart rhythm while he was in the emergency room waiting to be
15
triaged and to falsely inform the hospital in their Report that the problem was merely throat
pain from having eaten spicy chicken a half-hour earlier.
Dr. Sanborn’s testimony was through a pretrial video-taped deposition. He iterated
the symptoms of a heart attack noted in the MIEMSS and Fire Department protocols,
including pain in the throat and right side and trouble breathing. He noted that patients
sometimes complain of heartburn, believing that the pain is coming from the stomach, but
an EKG can show that the pain is actually coming from the heart.
Dr. Sanborn confirmed that, when assessing a patient complaining of chest pain, the
first thing is to “immediately” take vital signs, including blood pressure, administer
oxygen, and provide aspirin. He confirmed as well that, given the symptoms described by
Ms. Butler, Mr. Butler should have been placed on a stretcher and not allowed to walk to
the ambulance. He added that “having them walk 40 feet and climbing into a medic unit
is “complete disregard for common treatment of heart attack patients.” That, he said, “can
cause a heart attack or a cardiac event to become worse.” In summary, he said:
“No assessment was made of the patient in the dwelling. No treatment was
given in the dwelling. No EKG was given in the dwelling. No vitals were
performed until after the patient had got into the medic unit. And the patient
was not placed on a wheeled stretcher. These are all deviations from the
published documents, protocols.”
None of that medical expert opinion is even mentioned in the Majority Opinion, but
the jury heard it and presumably gave it credit.
As I have observed, there was no way that the jury could accept both versions or
even some conflation of the two. Given the stark inconsistencies, it had to believe one or
16
the other. The Majority Opinion recognizes that, in reviewing the grant of a judgment
N.O.V., we must view the evidence and the permissible inferences from the evidence in a
light most favorable to the non-moving party – in this case the plaintiffs. “If the non-
moving party offers competent evidence that rises above speculation, hypothesis, and
conjecture, the judgment notwithstanding the verdict should be denied.” Sage Title Group,
LLC v. Roman, 455 Md. 188, 201 (2017), quoting from Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md.
680,707 (2015).
What that means, and what I perceive the Majority has missed, is that the only
evidence that we may consider in judging the validity of the judgment N.O.V. is what Ms.
Butler, the hospital MFT, Dr. Barnes, Drs. Brown and Sanborn, and Mr. Blake said and
not any contradictory evidence from petitioners. The Majority, in my view, is simply
incorrect in considering as a basis for its conclusion that “[i]t was not until Butler, Jr. had
been waiting in the hospital for an additional ten minutes did his symptoms begin to worsen
and he eventually went into cardiac arrest” and that “[t[here was no evidence submitted at
trial or reflected in the record that contradicts these facts.” There was, indeed, such
evidence – plenty of it – which the defendants ignored, the Majority has taken little or no
account of, but the jury must have believed.
DISCUSSION
We granted cross-petitions for certiorari to consider three issues:
(1) Was there sufficient evidence of gross negligence on the part of Mr.
Stracke and Ms. Cisneros;
17
(2) If so, was it the kind of gross negligence that provides immunity to them
under CJP § 5-604(a); and
(3) Whether § 5-604(a) provides limited immunity to Mr. Stracke and Ms.
Cisneros for simple negligence.
Because of its conclusion that there was insufficient evidence of gross negligence,
the Majority understandably has declined to address the second issue. It addresses the
third – whether to overrule Baltimore v. Chase, 360 Md. 121 (2000) – and correctly
declines to do so. Because I believe that there was sufficient evidence of gross negligence,
I think it appropriate to express my views on the second issue, which surely will arise again,
and add some thoughts supporting the Majority’s decision regarding Chase.
Gross Negligence
Gross negligence is a concept well-ingrained in both our statutory and common law.
The problem always has been in distinguishing it from ordinary negligence in the context
of specific circumstances. As far back as State, Use of Abell v. W. Md. R.R. Co., 63 Md.
433 (1885) (Abell), the Court recognized that “[t]here were degrees of negligence in the
sense that some acts evidence a greater degree of carelessness and recklessness than do
other acts which may still be classed as negligent [b]ut the difference between gross and
ordinary negligence is more a question of fact than of law.” Id. at 444 (emphasis added).
In Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 157, 187 (2007), citing Abell, we observed that “[i]ssues
involving gross negligence are often more troublesome than those involving malice
because a fine line exists between allegations of negligence and gross negligence.”
18
Attempts have been made to define the distinction conceptually, but, not to denigrate the
importance of that distinction, from a juror’s perspective, it seems to partake more of
Justice Potter Stewart’s observation in Jacobellis v. Ohio, 378 U.S. 184 (1964) – an
obscenity case – that you know it when you see it.
As did the trial court, the Majority relies on a definition of gross negligence stated
in Tatum v. Gigliotti, 80 Md. App. 559, 568 (1989), which was taken from Foor v. Juvenile
Services, 78 Md. App. 151, 170 (1989). It stresses “wanton or reckless disregard for human
life or for the rights of others.” This Court has restated that concept more recently but in
somewhat different language and with an added caveat based on Abell and Barbre. In Beall
v. Holloway-Johnson, 446 Md. 48. 64 (2016), quoting from Barbre, we said:
“Gross negligence is an intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in
reckless disregard of the consequences as affecting the life or property of
another, and also implies a thoughtless disregard of the consequences without
the exertion of any effort to avoid them. Stated conversely, a wrongdoer is
guilty of gross negligence or acts wantonly and willfully only when he
inflicts injury intentionally or is so utterly indifferent to the rights of others
that he acts as if such rights did not exist.”
See also Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md. 680, 708 (2015).9
We confirmed in Beall, at 64, what our predecessors noted in Abell 134 years ago,
that “[t]he distinction between negligence and gross negligence, however, can be a difficult
9
In State v. Thomas, ___ Md. ____ (2019) (No. 33, Sept. Term 2018, Opinion filed 6/24/19)
the Court defined “gross negligence” in its context as an element of voluntary
manslaughter. It is not substantively different from what we said in Barbre, Beall, and
Cooper, but our pronouncements in those cases are more apposite, as they dealt with the
meaning of the term in the context of a civil action for damages.
19
one to establish in practice” and that “[a] legally sufficient case of ordinary negligence will
frequently be enough to create a jury question of whether such negligence was or was not
gross.”
The Majority views Barbre, Cooper, and Abell, as having “morphed the distinctions
between simple and gross negligence by holding that ‘a legally sufficient case of ordinary
negligence frequently be enough to create a jury question of whether such negligence was
or was not gross.’” Those cases did not “morph” those distinctions. I note, as a matter of
passing interest, that all three were unanimous Opinions of the Court; there were no
dissents or concurring Opinions. The Court obviously meant what it said. They articulated
the theoretical difference between ordinary and gross negligence but pointed out quite
clearly that ascertaining which side of the line the facts fall on is often a factual one for the
trier of fact, with proper instructions in a jury case, to resolve. If anything, concentrating
on wantonness and inflicting injury intentionally tends to conflate gross negligence with
malice, which also contains elements of “intent to injure” and “knowing and deliberate
wrongdoing.” See Newell v. Runnels, 407 Md. 578, 636 (2009).
If any clarification of what was said in Barbre and Beall would be helpful, it ought
to be just the first part of what was said in those cases – that the test for gross negligence
is “an intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless disregard of the
consequences as affecting the life or property of another, and also implies a thoughtless
disregard of the consequences without the exertion of any effort to avoid them” – and to
20
consider wanton and deliberate wrongdoing as satisfying that test but not independent
elements of it.
What elevates this to gross negligence? What shows a reckless disregard by Stracke
and Cisneros of the consequences of their conduct or utter indifference to the rights of Mr.
Butler? As a centerpiece, the jury was entitled to consider (and the trial court, in ruling on
the motion for judgment N.O.V., was required to consider) what was at stake – the nature
of the harm that petitioners, given their training, knew may arise from a failure to perform
their duties properly, discounted or multiplied, as the case may be, by the likelihood that
such harm actually may ensue.
There was no dispute in this case that petitioners were well aware of the MIEMSS
and Fire Department protocols applicable to potential cardiac patients and they also were
well aware of the potential consequences of a failure to comply with those protocols. Those
protocols were in the nature of standing orders, not just helpful guidelines. It may be, as
the Majority states, that some of those protocols are administrative in nature or deal with
matters not relevant to this case, but the ones at issue here, dealing with what is required
when confronted by the symptoms of a heart attack, are precise and mandated, and were
confirmed by expert medical testimony that the Majority also has ignored. Ms. Cisneros
acknowledged that compliance was required “because it’s a serious situation. You’re
taking care of people’s lives.” There also was no dispute, given the facts that we must
assume when evaluating a judgment N.O.V., that petitioners failed to comply with nearly
21
every protocol applicable to potential cardiac patients – at the scene, in the ambulance, and
at the hospital.
Given those facts, it clearly was a jury issue as to whether, after being consistently
told by Ms. Butler that her husband was having a heart attack, that he was unable to walk,
talk, or breathe properly, that he was in pain and was holding his chest, and seeing for
themselves that that, indeed, was the case, (1) forcing him to walk to the ambulance and
get himself inside it without having made the required assessment, (2) downgrading his
condition to Priority 3 and acting accordingly, (3) informing the hospital that the only
problem was indigestion, and rendering no assistance to him at all while he waited in the
emergency room in pain and hollering for help constituted a reckless indifference to or
disregard for Mr. Butler’s rights. All of this is different in kind from merely making an
incorrect diagnosis or negligence in implementing a medical procedure, which is how
petitioners and the Majority view it.
Faced with information that, on its face, demonstrated the strong likelihood that
Mr. Butler was having a heart attack and the awareness by petitioners of the procedures
required by the MIEMSS and Fire Department protocols, the negligence here was not only
ignoring that information but (1) refusing to confirm or dismiss it by testing it in accordance
with required protocols, which would have informed them that their impression was
incorrect, (2) deliberate conduct that, if Mr. Butler was indeed having a heart attack, was
likely to exacerbate the problem and may kill him, and (3) affirmatively misleading the
hospital staff as to the nature of the problem, which led to his lingering in the emergency
22
room, low on the triage agenda. Harking to the point made in Beall that a legally sufficient
case of ordinary negligence will frequently be enough to create a jury question whether the
negligence was or was not gross, the jury’s finding of gross negligence in this case was
well-supported by the evidence taken in a light most favorable to the plaintiffs.10
Finally, I think it important to address the Majority’s concern about the “practical
implications” of regarding the inexcusable violations found by the jury as gross negligence
– the “negative impact” and “chilling effect” on first responders. That concern is
misplaced. For one thing, I am not aware of any other case in Maryland in which EMTs
acted with such utter disregard of a patient’s life and health as the jury found the defendants
did in this case; none have been cited by the Majority. First responders are well-protected
by CJP § 5-604(a), even if they are negligent.
To the extent that practical implications should have any bearing on how this Court
views the evidence in this case, my concern is with the practical implications to the
individuals the EMTs are duty-bound to help when responding to a 911 call for emergency
assistance if they feel secure in the knowledge that there is no consequence to them for
ignoring the whole raft of MIEMSS protocols specifically designed to assure that those in
10
If what the defendants did and failed to do does not rise to gross negligence, what would?
Would it be gross negligence if Mr. Stracke had required Mr. Butler to do 20 pushups in
order to demonstrate to Mr. Stracke’s satisfaction that he was, in fact having a heart
problem and needed a stretcher? Where to draw the line, and more important, whose
function is it to draw that line – the jury who heard and saw the witnesses and could judge
their credibility or this Court as a matter of law on a cold record?
23
need of that assistance get it. The applicable principle here is primum non nocere (a loose
translation from the Hippocratic Oath: FIRST, DO NO HARM).
IMMUNITY
As noted, two statutory construction issues regarding CJP § 5-604(a) were raised.
In light of its conclusion that there was no gross negligence, the Majority has
understandably declined to address one of them; and it has very briefly rejected the other.
I think it useful to explore those issues; one will clearly arise again, and the other deserves
a fuller explanation. A dissent, of course, is not a decision of the Court, but it may help
inform the debate if and when the issue arises again.
Section 5-604(a) provides that, notwithstanding any other provision of law, “except
for any willful or grossly negligent act, a fire company or rescue company, and the
personnel of a fire company or rescue company, are immune from civil liability for any act
or omission in the course of performing their duties” (emphasis added).11 Two questions
are raised: first, does subsection apply to employees of the City Fire Department in the
rendering of medical care; and second, if so, what kind of gross negligence is necessary to
preclude immunity?
11
Subsection (b) provides for a waiver of that immunity with respect to actions to recover
damages for the negligent operation of a motor vehicle. That subsection does not apply in
this case, as there was no allegation that petitioners were negligent in the operation of their
ambulance.
24
Application Of § 5-604(a) To Municipal Employees Who Render Medical Care
The first issue was raised by respondents in their cross-petition. They contend that
§ 5-604(a) was intended to provide immunity to municipal fire and rescue personnel for
negligence in fire suppression and rescue services, not with respect to the provision of
medical care. To hold otherwise, they claim, would create an inconsistency with the Good
Samaritan Act (CJP § 5-603). They recognize that this Court held otherwise in Baltimore
v. Chase, 360 Md. 121 (2000), but argue that Chase was wrongly decided and should be
overruled.
This Court first looked at the history and scope of § 5-604(a) in WSSC v. Riverdale
Fire Co., 308 Md. 556 (1987), an action in which WSSC (the Washington Suburban
Sanitary Commission) was sued for damages for negligence in maintaining its fire
hydrants, which caused a delay in responding to a fire. WSSC filed a third-party complaint
against Riverdale Fire Company, a volunteer fire department, for negligently connecting
its hoses to fire hydrants that it knew were inoperable, and Riverdale claimed immunity
under what is now § 5-604(a).
The fire occurred in 1980 – three years before the enactment of what is now § 5-
604(a) – and the issue was raised of whether the statute was retroactive. In considering
that issue, the Court looked at the history of the statute. It determined that the statute was
in response to a decision of the Court of Special Appeals in Utica Mut. v. Gaithers-Wash
Grove Fire, 53 Md. App. 589 (1983). That also was an action for damages against a
volunteer fire company for negligent failure to extinguish a fire. The question was whether
25
the fire company enjoyed governmental immunity, and, based on its earlier decision in
Macy v. Heverin, 44 Md. App. 358 (1979), the appellate court held that it did not because
there was insufficient evidence that the defendant was a governmental agency.
The legislative reaction to that decision was swift. The Legislature was then in
session, and a bill was introduced within days to provide immunity. The first reader bill
(SB 731) was expressly limited to volunteer fire companies. It provided that “[a] volunteer
fire company is immune from liability in the same manner as a local government agency
for any act or omission in the course of performing its duties if the act or omission is not
one of gross negligence.” 12
The bill was completely rewritten in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee to
detach the immunity from merely paralleling that then enjoyed by governmental units and
instead to provide a separately-stated immunity for fire and rescue companies generally
and their personnel (as well as to add immunity provisions dealing specifically with the
operation of motor vehicles). This is reflected not only in the text of the bill, as enacted,
but in the Judicial Proceedings Committee Hearing Summary and Committee Report and
in the initial and revised fiscal notes.
12
As initially drafted by the bill-drafting unit of the General Assembly, the bill contained
three additional conditions to immunity for volunteer fire departments – that the company
is receiving funds from a State, county, or municipal government; that one of those units
of government owns buildings used by the company; and that the company is regulated by
one of those units. Those additional provisions were not included in the bill as introduced.
26
In that Hearing Summary, the Committee described the purpose of the first reader
bill as “[a] new law which provides that a volunteer fire company is immune from liability
in the same manner as a local government for any act or omission in the course of
performing its duties if the act or omission is not one of gross negligence” but pointed out
that the Committee amendments struck those provisions and substituted immunity for a
fire or rescue company – any fire or rescue company – “for any act or omission in the
course of performing their duties except for any willful act.”
This Court considered that history in Baltimore v. Chase, supra, 360 Md. 121 and
more recently in Transcare v. Murray, 431 Md. 225 (2013), in which the Court held, among
other things, that, absent special circumstances, the immunity provided in § 5-604 did not
apply to a commercial ambulance company.
Like this case, Chase involved a medical employee of the Baltimore City Fire
Department who responded to a 911 call and was sued for negligence and gross negligence
in his treatment of the patient. The alleged negligence in Chase arose from the manner in
which the EMT intubated the patient who had gone into cardiac arrest. The negligence
was in the performance of an authorized medical procedure, not in the wholesale disregard
of clearly applicable mandated procedures. The Circuit Court granted summary judgment
to the defendants on the ground that there was no gross negligence and, as a result, the
defendants had immunity under § 5-604(a). The Court of Special Appeals reversed,
holding that § 5-604(a) applied only to volunteer and private fire and rescue companies
and therefore was inapplicable to paramedics employed by a municipal fire department.
27
A majority of this Court disagreed with the Court of Special Appeals’ conclusion
and held that a plain reading of the statutory language indicated a legislative intent to cover
municipal fire and rescue departments and their medical employees. The majority
discussed and rejected the dissent’s view that the legislative history of the statute showed
a clear intent to do no more than give volunteer companies and their employees the same,
but no greater, immunity then enjoyed by governmental agencies.
Chase was a four-to-three decision, and one can find merit in both positions. It is
decided law, however, and has been for 19 years, and, like the Majority in this case, I find
no compelling reason to revisit it. Section 5-604(a) does apply to municipal fire and rescue
departments when providing emergency medical service, notwithstanding that some of
them charge a fee for their services. If, as respondents claim, that construction creates an
anomaly when compared with the provisions of the Good Samaritan Act (CJP § 5-603),
which conditions immunity from medical mistakes, at least in part, on the service having
been provided without a fee, that may be brought to the attention of the General Assembly.
Acts and Omissions
I have emphasized the words “act” and “act or omission” because they lie at the
heart of this phase of petitioners’ statutory construction argument. They regard any gross
negligence on their part as sins of omission – the failure to make a proper assessment of
Mr. Butler at his home, the failure to transport him to the ambulance on a stretcher, the
failure to keep him on a stretcher while enroute to the hospital, the failure to inform the
hospital emergency department of the patient’s true condition, the failure to keep him on a
28
stretcher while in the emergency room at the hospital, and the failure to assist him in
entering and exiting the ambulance. The only exception to immunity, however, as they
read the statute, is a grossly negligent act. If the Legislature intended to preclude immunity
for grossly negligent omissions, they argue, it would have said so.
Section 5-604(a) is not a model of clear legislative drafting. It first provides an
exception to immunity for “any willful or grossly negligent act,” but then expresses the
immunity for “any act or omission” in the course of performing their duties.” (Emphasis
added). Did the General Assembly really intend by that to provide immunity for willful or
grossly negligent omissions but not for willful or grossly negligent acts? Other than the
textual language and its repetition in the Judicial Proceedings Committee explanation, I
can find nothing in the legislative history to explain the discrepancy.
There are many rules of statutory construction, some general, some specific. The
so-called “cardinal” rule is “to ascertain and carry out the true intention of the Legislature.”
Windesheim v. Larocca, 443 Md. 312, 341 (2015); Della Ratta v. Dyam 414 Md. 556, 566
(2010). The more specific rules are in the nature of guidelines in how to achieve that
objective. We start, and often finish, with the actual words of the statute. If there is no
ambiguity – if it is clear what the Legislature intended – we normally go no further.
Windesheim, at 341.
Occasionally, however, when we look at the overall purpose of the statute – what
the Legislature was trying to achieve – the phrasing of the statute may not be quite so clear.
Blackburn Ltd. P’ship v. Paul, 438 Md. 100, 122 (2014). We have recognized that a term
29
may be free from ambiguity in one context but ambiguous or of doubtful application in
another. Nationsbank v. Stine, 379 Md. 76, 85 (2003); Gardner v. State, 344 Md. 642, 648
(1007). “In every case,” this Court has said, “the statute must be given a reasonable
interpretation, not one that is absurd, illogical, or incompatible with common sense.”
Espina v. Jackson, 442 Md. 311, 322 (2015); Blackburn Ltd. at 122. “An examination of
interpretive consequences, either as a comparison of the results of each proffered
construction, or as a principle of avoidance of absurd or unreasonable reading, grounds the
court’s interpretation in reality.” Blue v. Prince George’s Co., 434 Md. 681, 689 (2013).
It is certainly possible to read § 5-604(a) as it is written, namely to draw a distinction
between acts of gross negligence and omissions that are grossly negligent and to provide
immunity for the latter but not the former. It is difficult for me to see any reasonable basis
for doing so, however, and the legislative history certainly does not supply one. There are
laws that provide absolute immunity to certain categories of individuals, even for grossly
negligent or malicious conduct – judges for judicial acts, legislators for legislative acts,
prosecutors for prosecutorial acts, for example – but I am unaware of any that distinguish
between grossly negligent (or malicious) acts and grossly negligent (or malicious)
omissions, because often the conduct at issue partakes of both.
That is the case here. Petitioners view their conduct as purely sins of omission –
omitting to make a required assessment of Mr. Butler at his home, omitting to use the
stretcher to transport him, omitting to assist him in entering and exiting the ambulance, and
omitting to correctly inform the hospital of his true condition, but they were more than that.
30
What may have killed him was forcing him to walk to the ambulance without conducting
the required assessment, to hoist himself or climb steps to get in and out of the ambulance,
of having to sit in the wheelchair at the hospital, of affirmatively misinforming the hospital
of the real problem. Those are acts, not omissions.
In light of the clear overall intent by the General Assembly not to immunize willful
or grossly negligent conduct, which is consistent with most immunity statutes, I would be
reluctant to construe § 5-604(a) as indicating an intent to immunize willful or grossly
negligence that embodies both acts and omissions, including when the act is associated
with, generated by, or follows from a willful or grossly negligent omission. That would,
indeed, be an absurd, illogical result that I do not believe the Legislature intended. There
may be situations in which the conduct at issue is solely in the nature of an omission of
some sort, unconnected with any affirmative act and the statute reasonably can be applied
literally, but that is not the situation in this case.
For the reasons stated, I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals.
31