Key: (1) language to be deleted (2) new language
Laws of Minnesota 1986
CHAPTER 380-S.F.No. 2135
An act relating to liability; limiting the civil
liability of practitioners for the violent acts of
patients; providing immunity from liability for
disclosure; amending Minnesota Statutes 1985
Supplement, section 626.556, subdivision 4; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 148.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA:
Section 1. [148.975] [DUTY TO WARN; LIMITATION ON
LIABILITY; VIOLENT BEHAVIOR OF PATIENT.]
Subdivision 1. [DEFINITIONS.] (a) The definitions in this
subdivision apply to sections 1 and 2.
(b) "Other person" means an immediate family member or
someone who personally knows the patient and has reason to
believe the patient is capable of and will carry out the
serious, specific threat of harm to a specific, clearly
identified victim.
(c) "Practitioner" means a psychologist, school
psychologist, nurse, chemical dependency counselor, or social
worker who is licensed by the state or who performs
psychotherapy within a program or facility licensed by the state
or established pursuant to rules adopted under section 245.69,
subdivision 2.
(d) "Psychotherapy" means the professional treatment,
assessment, or counseling of a mental or emotional illness,
symptom, or condition.
(e) "Reasonable efforts" means communicating the serious,
specific threat to the potential victim and if unable to make
contact with the potential victim, communicating the serious,
specific threat to the law enforcement agency closest to the
potential victim or the patient.
Subd. 2. [LIABILITY STANDARD.] No monetary liability and
no cause of action may arise against a practitioner for failure
to predict, warn of, or take reasonable precautions to provide
protection from, a patient's violent behavior, unless the
patient or other person has communicated to the practitioner a
specific, serious threat of physical violence against a
specific, clearly identified or identifiable potential victim.
Subd. 3. [DUTY TO WARN.] The duty to predict, warn of, or
take reasonable precautions to provide protection from, violent
behavior arises only under the limited circumstances specified
in subdivision 2. The duty is discharged by the practitioner if
reasonable efforts are made to communicate the threat to the
potential victim.
Subd. 4. [DISCLOSURE OF CONFIDENCES.] No monetary
liability and no cause of action, or disciplinary action by the
state board of psychology or board of nursing may arise against
a practitioner for disclosing confidences to third parties in a
good faith effort to discharge a duty arising under this section.
Subd. 5. [CONTINUITY OF CARE.] Nothing in subdivision 3
shall be construed to authorize a practitioner to terminate
treatment of a patient as a direct result of a patient's violent
behavior or threat of physical violence unless the patient is
referred to another practitioner or appropriate health care
facility.
Subd. 6. [EXCEPTION.] This section does not apply to a
threat to commit suicide or other threats by a patient to harm
the patient, or to a threat by a patient who is adjudicated
mentally ill and dangerous under chapter 253B.
Sec. 2. [148.976] [OPTIONAL DISCLOSURE; LIMITATION ON
LIABILITY.]
Subdivision 1. [OPTIONAL DISCLOSURE.] Nothing in section 1
shall be construed to prohibit a practitioner from disclosing
confidences to third parties in a good-faith effort to warn
against or take precautions against a patient's violent behavior
for which a duty to warn does not arise under section 1.
Subd. 2. [LIMITATION ON LIABILITY.] No monetary liability
and no cause of action, or disciplinary action by the state
board of psychology or board of nursing may arise against a
practitioner for disclosure of confidences to third parties, for
failure to disclose confidences to third parties, or for
erroneous disclosure of confidences to third parties in a
good-faith effort to warn against or take precautions against a
patient's violent behavior for which a duty to warn does not
arise under section 1.
Sec. 3. Minnesota Statutes 1985 Supplement, section
626.556, subdivision 4, is amended to read:
Subd. 4. [IMMUNITY FROM LIABILITY.] (a) The following
persons are immune from any civil or criminal liability that
otherwise might result from their actions, if they are acting in
good faith:
(1) any person making a voluntary or mandated report under
subdivision 3 or assisting in an assessment under this
section; and
(2) any social worker or supervisor employed by a local
welfare agency complying with subdivision 10d; and
(3) any public or private school, facility as defined in
subdivision 2, or the employee of any public or private school
or facility who permits access by a local welfare agency or
local law enforcement agency and assists in an investigation or
assessment pursuant to subdivision 10.
(b) A person who is a supervisor or social worker employed
by a local welfare agency complying with subdivisions 10 and 11
or any related rule or provision of law is immune from any civil
or criminal liability that might otherwise result from the
person's actions, if the person is acting in good faith and
exercising due care.
(c) This subdivision does not provide immunity to any
person for failure to make a required report or for committing
neglect, physical abuse, or sexual abuse of a child.
Sec. 4. [EFFECTIVE DATE.]
Section 3 is effective the day following final enactment.
Sections 1 and 2 are effective August 1, 1986, and apply to
causes of action arising on or after that date.
Approved March 19, 1986
Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes