Ajay Gaalla v. Citizens Medical Center, et

407 F. App'x 810
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 2011
Docket10-40246
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 407 F. App'x 810 (Ajay Gaalla v. Citizens Medical Center, et) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ajay Gaalla v. Citizens Medical Center, et, 407 F. App'x 810 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

Appellee, a county-owned hospital, appeals the district court’s order enjoining it from preventing Appellants, three cardiologists, from exercising their clinical privileges at the hospital. We REVERSE.

*811 I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Dr. Harish Chandna, Dr. Dakshesh Parikh, and Dr. Ajay Gaalla (collectively, “Cardiologists”) are cardiologists who hold staff privileges at two hospitals in Victoria, Texas: DeTar Hospital (“DeTar”) and Citizens Medical Center (“CMC”). CMC is a county-owned, nonprofit hospital run by a county-appointed board of managers (“Board”). Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 263.041. DeTar Hospital is a private, for-profit hospital. Because the Cardiologists have clinical privileges at both hospitals, they can practice cardiology and see patients at either hospital. Although the Cardiologists have staff privileges at CMC, they are not CMC staff because they have not signed a contract with CMC. The Cardiologists are the only cardiologists with privileges to practice at DeTar; they started the cardiology program at DeTar and own an interest in the equipment at the hospital.

CMC has five cardiologists and one cardiovascular surgeon, Dr. Yusuke Yahagi, who have clinical privileges and have also signed contracts with CMC. Yahagi joined the CMC staff in 2007 and has been CMC’s only cardiovascular surgeon since 2009. The relationship between the Cardiologists and Yahagi deteriorated quickly after Yahagi began working at CMC in 2007. CMC presented testimony that the interpersonal friction between the Cardiologists and CMC staff boiled over into shouting matches and name-calling on at least one occasion.

The Cardiologists eventually declined to refer them patients to Yahagi, stating that he had a high mortality rate and that he was performing inappropriate surgeries. They also testified that they were under intense pressure from CMC to refer their patients to Yahagi. Chandna attested that CMC’s Administrator and Yahagi confronted the Cardiologists about their lack of referrals for forty-five minutes at a cardiology department meeting. On December 16, 2009, CMC sent letters to the Cardiologists asking them to explain their failure to refer patients to Yahagi and informing them that their answers would be taken into account in deciding whether their clinical privileges at CMC would be renewed. After the Cardiologists filed this lawsuit, CMC sent the Cardiologists a letter retracting the request for information and stating that referrals would not be a consideration in renewing their privileges.

Yahagi testified that, prior to his arrival at CMC, the Cardiologists threatened to “run him out of town” if he did not sign a contract with DeTar, which he did not. Yahagi also alleged that the Cardiologists engaged in what amounted to a smear campaign against him by telling other physicians and patients that he was performing unnecessary surgeries, that he was not a good doctor, and that he had a high mortality rate. Yahagi testified that he told members of CMC staff, including the chief of staff, that if his problems with the Cardiologists were not resolved, he would leave.

On January 13, 2010, in response to Yahagi’s complaint, CMC’s chief of staff sent a letter to the chairman of the Board noting that “[tjhrough the years ... there have been many differences, disparities, and complaints originating from Citizens Medical Center staff, nursing staff, Medical Staff toward [the Cardiologists] and vice-versa.” The letter advised the Board that Yahagi had been the victim of harassment to the point that the “the community is in jeopardy of losing its cardiovascular surgical care.” The chief of staff referred Yahagi’s complaints to the Board for resolution.

In response to the letter, CMC negotiated a contract with Yahagi whereby Yahagi became the exclusive provider of cardio *812 vascular surgery at CMC. His contract was for one year, renewable annually, and terminable on ninety-days notice. The Board also considered closing the cardiology department so that only cardiologists contracted with CMC could see patients at the hospital. In preparation for a February 17, 2010 board meeting, the Board prepared a draft resolution closing the department. The draft resolution listed the Cardiologists by name.

On February 3, 2010, CMC hired an outside consultant, Michael Williamson, to consult on how the hospital should deal with the dispute between Yahagi and the Cardiologists. Williamson, a former executive at CMC, reviewed documents and interviewed CMC staff but did not interview the Cardiologists. At the February 17 meeting, Williamson presented the results of his research and agreed with the Board that closing the cardiology department was a reasonable solution to the problem. After Williamson made his presentation, the Board amended the resolution to remove the Cardiologists’ names and subsequently approved it. The final resolution (“Resolution”) stated that the hospital was “experiencing operational problems” that were “disruptive” to the “operations of the heart program,” and that the problems “materially threate[ed] the continued viability of the heart program.” According to the Resolution, “[o]nly those physicians who are contractually committed to [CMC] to participate in [CMC’s] on-call emergency room coverage program shall be permitted to exercise clinical privileges in the cardiology department or as part of [CMC’s] heart program.” The Resolution also ratified CMC’s exclusive contract with Yahagi. Because the Cardiologists were not under contract with CMC, the Resolution had the effect of preventing them from exercising their clinical privileges and treating patients at CMC.

B. Proceedings

The Cardiologists filed suit on the day that the Resolution was to take effect, seeking a temporary restraining order (“TRO”), preliminary and permanent injunctions, and damages. The suit alleged causes of action for violations of the Cardiologists’ substantive due process rights under the Fourteenth Amendment, violations of the Racketeer-Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act, and civil conspiracy. The district court granted the TRO, expressly predicating the grant only on the Cardiologists’ substantive due process claim.

On March 12, 2010, after a two-day hearing, the district court issued a preliminary injunction enjoining CMC from implementing the Resolution. The district court held that the Cardiologists had a property interest in their staff privileges at CMC. The district court found that the Board undertook this action “based upon economic considerations rather than ‘grounds that are reasonably related to the purpose of providing adequate medical care.’ ” It then found that: (1) the Cardiologists stood to suffer irreparable harm in the form of lost goodwill, patient loyalty, and reputation; (2) CMC had not shown any offsetting harm from the proposed injunction because the possibility that Yahagi would leave CMC was speculative; and (3) an injunction would serve the public interest by allowing patients a broader choice of cardiologists at CMC. CMC timely appealed.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

“A district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction is reviewed for abuse of discretion.”

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Bluebook (online)
407 F. App'x 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ajay-gaalla-v-citizens-medical-center-et-ca5-2011.