Anvar v. Greenville Hospital System

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 10, 2007
Docket2007-UP-004
StatusUnpublished

This text of Anvar v. Greenville Hospital System (Anvar v. Greenville Hospital System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anvar v. Greenville Hospital System, (S.C. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

THIS OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE.  IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 239(d)(2), SCACR.

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals

Stephen Anvar, M.D., Appellant,

v.

Greenville Hospital System, John R. Sanders, M.D., John Rowell, M.D., Tim Sullivan, M.D., Robin Kelley, M.D., Fleming Mattox, M.D.,


Appeal From Greenville County
 D. Garrison Hill, Circuit Court Judge


Unpublished Opinion No. 2007-UP-004
Heard December 4, 2006 – Filed January 10, 2007


AFFIRMED


L. Henry McKellar, Christian Stegmaier, and Suzanne C. Boulware, all of Columbia, for Appellant.

Sally M. Purnell and Matthew P. Utecht, both of Greenville, for Respondents.

PER CURIAM:  In this civil conspiracy case, Dr. Stephen Anvar appeals the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment to Greenville Hospital System (individually, “Hospital”) and its agents and employees, Dr. John R. Sanders, Dr. John Rowell, Dr. Tim Sullivan, Dr. Robin Kelley, and Dr. Fleming Mattox (these physicians and Hospital, collectively, are “Respondents”).  We affirm.

FACTS

Because this appeal is from a grant of summary judgment to Respondents, we view the facts, as we must, in the light most favorable to Dr. Anvar.  See, e.g., Summer v. Carpenter, 328 S.C. 36, 42, 492 S.E.2d 55, 58 (1997) (“In determining whether any triable issue of fact exists, the evidence and all inferences which can be reasonably drawn therefrom must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”).

Dr. Anvar practices medicine as a radiologist and a neurointerventionalist.  During the time this case arose, he was employed by Greenville Radiology, a private group of radiologists.  Although Dr. Anvar was not employed by Hospital, he had privileges to perform radiological procedures at Hospital.  He is specially trained to perform a carotid angioplasty/stenting (“CAS”) procedure. 

On May 25, 2001, Dr. Sella Littlepage contacted Dr. Anvar and asked him to perform an emergency diagnostic angiogram on a patient at Hospital.[1]  Dr. Littlepage had already performed a carotid endarterectomy (“CEA”) on the patient, and Dr. Anvar’s angiogram thereafter revealed a ninety percent stenosis, or narrowing, of the patient’s carotid artery.  After reviewing several alternatives, Dr. Littlepage and Dr. Anvar concluded Dr. Anvar should perform a CAS procedure to attempt to remove the blockage and prevent a stroke. 

During the stenting procedure, Dr. Anvar remembered a conversation he previously had with his colleague, Dr. Lee Madeline, about the Angioguard, a device made by Cordis, a Johnson & Johnson Company, used to catch clots that break off during a CEA or CAS procedure and prevent them from traveling into the cerebral circulation.  Dr. Madeline was a partner of Dr. Anvar’s employed at Greenville Radiology as a neurointerventionalist.  Dr. Anvar sent a technician, Ralph Scott, to retrieve the device from an operating room, and Dr. Anvar used it on the patient.  The patient was thereafter returned to the surgical recovery area. 

Dr. Madeline, Dr. Sullivan, and other physicians were studying the Angioguard as part of a clinical trial program, called the SAPPHIRE[2] Trial, at Hospital.  Dr. Sullivan, a vascular surgeon employed by Hospital, was the principal investigator for the SAPPHIRE Trial at Hospital.  The Angioguard was labeled at the time of this incident as being suitable for “investigational use only” and was classified as a device of “significant risk” by the Federal Drug Administration (“FDA”).  As an investigational device, the Angioguard could be used only in a clinical setting as part of a trial, and regulations required a physician to obtain a patient’s informed consent before using it.  At the time he used the Angioguard on the patient, Dr. Anvar had not received the patient’s consent, had not seen the device used, and had never been trained to use it. 

Dr. Sullivan, upset over the unauthorized use of the Angioguard device, contacted Hospital administration.  Dr. Sanders, the vice president of Medical Staff Affairs at Hospital, investigated the incident.  Dr. Sanders was concerned because the Angioguard device was to be used only in the investigational study and because there were concerns raised about whether Dr. Anvar knew how to use the device.   

Dr. Sanders notified Dr. Kelley, chairperson of Hospital’s Institutional Research Committee (“IRC”), the body charged with administering Hospital’s clinical trials.  Dr. Kelley appointed an IRC subcommittee, chaired by Dr. Mattox, to conduct an inquiry.  At the same time, Dr. Sanders asked Dr. Rowell, president of Hospital’s Medical Staff, to investigate Dr. Anvar’s conduct.  Dr. Rowell appointed an Ad Hoc Committee in conjunction with Hospital’s Medical Executive Committee (“MEC”), of which Dr. Rowell was also president.  Hospital’s IRC Policies and Procedures allow the IRC to report research misconduct to the medical staff, but the IRC has no jurisdiction to suspend a physician’s ability to practice medicine at Hospital.  Hospital’s Bylaws allow the MEC to conduct “patient care quality and appropriateness reviews.” 

The IRC ultimately decided Dr. Anvar’s participation in research at Hospital should be suspended for five years.  In a report dated July 19, 2001, the MEC recommended to Hospital’s Board of Trustees that Dr. Anvar be placed on probation for twelve months and be given a letter of reprimand.  After considering the MEC’s recommendation, the Board of Trustees, by letter dated July 24, 2001, placed Dr. Anvar on probation for five years, required him to complete a bioethics course within one year, and issued a letter of reprimand.     

In May 2003, Dr. Anvar filed a complaint against Respondents, alleging a civil conspiracy and violation of due process.  Dr. Anvar asserted his suspension and probation were solely the result of Respondents’ combined intent to injure him because of a “turf battle” at Hospital between radiologists who were not Hospital employees, such as Dr. Anvar, and vascular surgeons who were employed by Hospital, such as Dr. Sullivan, over which medical procedure was going to be performed by which medical specialty. 

Respondents answered and later moved for summary judgment.  The circuit court initially denied the motion.  After Respondents filed a motion to alter or amend the order, the circuit court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Respondents on Dr. Anvar’s civil conspiracy claim.[3]  Specifically, the circuit court granted summary judgment because Dr. Anvar (1) alleged a conspiracy between Hospital and its agents and employees acting within the scope of their authority, but Hospital can act only through its agents and employees and a legal entity such as Hospital cannot conspire with itself under South Carolina law; (2) produced no evidence of a combination or agreement among Respondents with the intent to injure him; and (3) produced no evidence of special damages.  Dr.

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Anvar v. Greenville Hospital System, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anvar-v-greenville-hospital-system-scctapp-2007.