With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". (Fla.1992)). Generally no liability exists for another’s suicide in the absence of a specific duty of care. Kelley v. pecific duty of care to prevent the decedent from committing suicide. Although Regions allegedly .knew of the decedent’s mental state and .>agreed to withhold complex financial information from the decedent, Regions-could not undertake a duty to prevent the decedent’s suicide because the decedent was -not in Regions’s “custody or control.” See Kelley, 68 So.3d at 958. See also Paddock, 522 So.2d at 416 (“The duty [to prevent another’s suicide] is based solely on the fact of the patient’s confinement to the hospital, and the hospital’s ability to supervise, monitor and restrain the patient.”) (emphasis added); Tuten v. Faribozian, 84 So.3d 1063, 1068 (Fla. 1st DCA 2012) (<HOLDING>). Regions simply had no ability or

A: holding that a psychiatrist had no duty to detain a patient who killed himself and injured his wife because the patient was outside of the scope of the facilitys range of observation and control even when the psychiatrist agreed to treat the patient the patient had suicidal tendencies and the psychologist took the patient into custody but then later permitted him to leave
B: holding that when a psychiatrist determines or  should determine that a patient poses a serious threat of danger to a third party the psychiatrist has a duty of reasonable care to that party
C: holding that defendant medical center which allowed a patient who would likely cause bodily harm to his wife if he had the opportunity to leave the center for a weekend could be liable for the patients actions of killing his wife and her paramour during that weekend because inter alia when the course of treatment of a mental patient involves an exercise of control over him by a physician who knows or should know that the patient is likely to cause bodily harm to others an independent duty arises from that relationship and falls upon the physician to exercise that control with such reasonable care as to prevent harm to others at the hands of the patient punctuation omitted emphasis supplied
D: holding that psychiatrist had duty to protect individuals endangered by his epileptic patient
A.