Bailey v. Huggins Diagnostic & Rehabilitation Center, Inc.

952 P.2d 768, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 154, 1997 WL 352915
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 1997
Docket96CA0586
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 952 P.2d 768 (Bailey v. Huggins Diagnostic & Rehabilitation Center, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Huggins Diagnostic & Rehabilitation Center, Inc., 952 P.2d 768, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 154, 1997 WL 352915 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge CRISWELL.

Plaintiff, Diane Bailey, instituted this action against defendants, Gino Ortegon, D.D.S., and Hal A. Huggins, D.D.S., both of whom were employed by defendant Huggins Diagnostic and Rehabilitation Center, Inc. (Center) in which Huggins is the sole stockholder. She sought to recover damages allegedly resulting to her from Ortegon’s dental malpractice, damages against Huggins for his alleged negligent misrepresentation, and a judgment against the Center, based on the actions of both, under the doctrine of respon-deat superior. After a trial, a jury returned verdicts in favor of plaintiff for actual and exemplary damages against Ortegon and the Center, based on his malpractice, and for actual and exemplary damages against Huggins and the Center, based on his alleged negligent misrepresentation. Neither Orteg-on nor the Center appeals from the resulting judgment based upon Ortegon’s malpractice; both Huggins and the Center appeal from the resulting judgment based on Huggins’ alleged misrepresentation. We reverse.

Plaintiffs claim against Huggins for negligent misrepresentation arises from Huggins’ vigorous participation in an on-going debate over the question whether the use of dental amalgams can have a deleterious effect upon a patient’s general health. The evidence establishes that amalgams are used to fill cavities in teeth and for other dental purposes. They are a mixture of silver, mercury, and other substances, and everyone now concedes that, after placement in a patient’s mouth, the mercury and other metals emit vapors which are absorbed by various portions of the body. The debate centers on whether these emissions are in such quantities as to constitute a health hazard.

*770 The vast majority of dentists are adamant in insisting that the use of amalgams is completely safe. Huggins and a very small minority of dentists are equally insistent that the vapors emitted by the amalgams can result in muscular deficiencies, causing the patient to exhibit symptoms similar to muscular dystrophy, as well as other maladies. Huggins has publicly recommended that amalgams be removed, at least in some patients, and replaced with other materials.

In January 1993, the United States Department of Health and Human Services, based on a previous study, issued a report upon the issue, which was placed in evidence at trial. That report concluded that some portion of the mercury in an amalgam is absorbed by the body and that persons with dental amalgam “had higher concentrations of mercury in various tissues ... than those without amalgam.” In addition, it concluded that “a small proportion of individuals may manifest allergic reactions” to these. substances. However, that department could reach no definitive resolution upon the question whether a health hazard was. created.

The report determined, rather, that the department:

could not conclude with certainty whether or not the mercury in amalgam might pose a public health risk; on the one hand, there is no evidence at present that the health of people with ‘amalgam is compromised in any way. Likewise, there is- no evidence that removing amalgam has a beneficial effect on health, despite anecdotal reports of ‘improvements’ after amalgam removal in patients with certain chronic illnesses. (It should also be noted that the removal process itself may expose the patient to additional mercury, and that alternative dental restorative materials could have long-term toxicity problems of their own). On the other hand, given that the evaluation of potential health effects from dental restorative materials, including dental amalgam, will be an ongoing process, the possibility that these materials could pose health risks cannot be ruled out.

This debate was the subject of a segment on a national television program, “60 Minutes,” a videotape of which was placed in evidence. In that program, both the majority and minority viewpoints were represented. While Huggins did not appear, some dentists and medical providers interviewed insisted that amalgams present health risks. However, the president of the American Dental Association (ADA) and others presented the majority viewpoint and insisted that any dentist recommending the removal of amalgams for the sole purpose of eliminating the mercury vapors would be guilty of “unethical” conduct.

• As noted, Huggins has been an active participant in this debate. He has published a book in which he acknowledges' that the membership of the ADA and other health organizations have failed to recognize any health dangers from amalgams, but he engages in vigorous arguments, based upon his own alleged clinical studies and observations; that these substances are dangerous.

In addition, Huggins participated in a four-part news program, produced by a local Nevada television station, in which the course of treatment of several patients, who were depicted as being able to walk only with great difficulty before the, removal of their amalgams, but whose posture and gait apparently considerably improved thereafter, was described and followed. A videotape of this program,- in which Huggins argues his viewpoint upon the question, was also received in evidence.

Prior to the events giving rise to this litigation, plaintiff had amalgams placed in her mouth during the course of treatment from other dentists. Her husband, likewise, had received such treatment. However, plaintiffs husband, who was an employee of the Center, had his amalgams removed, and he attempted to persuade plaintiff to do likewise.

As part of his efforts to persuade plaintiff to adopt this course of action, plaintiffs husband brought home for her review Huggins’ book and videotapes of the two television programs described above. It is undisputed that all of these materials are made available to prospective patients at the Center. And, it is the contents of these materials that *771 plaintiff asserts contained the negligent misrepresentations made by Huggins upon which she relied.

Although plaintiff failed to designate any specific statement in Huggins’ book or in either of the videotapes as a material misrepresentation, she asserted that the alleged general message of these materials, that amalgams present a health risk and should be removed (which she rejects as “false”), was what convinced her to go to the Center for dental treatment. And, it was her treatment by Ortegon that resulted in her successful prosecution of the malpractice claim against him and the Center.

This -treatment consisted, among other things, in removing five of plaintiff’s “root canal” teeth and replacing the amalgams in other teeth with materials that plaintiff asserted were of inferior quality. Nothing within any of the three materials that plaintiff had previously reviewed referred to the removal of teeth with prior root canal work or to the relative quality of various materials with which amalgams can be replaced.

Huggins played no part in any of the treatment provided to plaintiff by Ortegon, nor was there ever a dentist-patient relationship established between plaintiff and Huggins.

I.

As a preliminary matter, plaintiff seeks to renew her motion, previously denied by another division, to dismiss this appeal because, she claims, it was not filed in a timely fashion.

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Bluebook (online)
952 P.2d 768, 1997 Colo. App. LEXIS 154, 1997 WL 352915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-huggins-diagnostic-rehabilitation-center-inc-coloctapp-1997.