Boling v. Superior Court

105 Cal. App. 3d 430, 164 Cal. Rptr. 432, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1791
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1980
DocketCiv. 47970
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 Cal. App. 3d 430 (Boling v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boling v. Superior Court, 105 Cal. App. 3d 430, 164 Cal. Rptr. 432, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1791 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

This original proceeding interrupts the pretrial stage of an action pending in respondent court. Petitioner Thelma Boling brought the action to recover damages for the allegedly wrongful death *433 of her son. Real party in interest Economy Medical Equipment Company, Inc., one of the defendants, moved respondent court for an order requiring a hospital to produce certain records pertaining to the decedent. Petitioner opposed the motion as to parts of the records, claiming the psychotherapist-patient privilege. (Evid. Code, § 1010 et seq.) Respondent court rejected her claim of privilege, granted real party’s motion, and filed a formal discovery order directing the hospital to produce all of its records pertaining to the decedent. Plaintiff thereupon petitioned this court for a writ of mandate annulling the order on the ground of the privilege claimed.

Pretrial resort to a prerogative writ is proper in these circumstances. (Roberts v. Superior Court (1973) 9 Cal.3d 330, 335-336 [107 Cal.Rptr. 309, 508 P.2d 309].) We therefore issued an alternative writ of mandate. Real party in interest has not made a return, but it had previously filed extensive opposition to the petition pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 56(b). It also appeared at oral argument of the cause. The record made below was fully presented with the petition. We may accordingly proceed with the merits.

The record must be summarized in some detail because it presents statutory and procedural complications which both parties have ignored.

The Action

The pertinent procedural sequence commenced when petitioner (hereinafter plaintiff) filed an amended complaint in her action. The defendants named in it are Lois Denzer Lundquist (who is not a party to the present proceeding) and real party in interest. The amended complaint pleads five counts, in each of which plaintiff states a cause of action for the wrongful death of Mark Wayne Boling, her son, on November 28, 1978. In the first count, plaintiff charges Lundquist with liability by alleging that her son died as the result of injuries he received in an automobile accident proximately caused by Lundquist’s negligence on August 7, 1978.

Each of the remaining four counts charges real party in interest (hereinafter defendant) with liability for the allegedly wrongful death. Plaintiff alleges in each that the decedent had rented a “bed, mattress, sheets and blankets” from defendant for use in his home while he was recovering from injuries he had received in the automobile accident on *434 August 7, 1978; that defendant had “negligently and carelessly designed, manufactured, tested, inspected,... and installed” the rented bed and bedding, with the result that they were “defective in that they were highly flammable”; that the decedent, “while. ..reclining upon the bed in his home” on November 28, 1978, was thereby “caused to be entrapped in a fire in the said bed”; and that its “high flammability” directly and proximately resulted in his “burning to death at said time and place.” The four counts are otherwise worded to state causes of action against defendant on the respective theories of negligence, strict products liability, and breach of express and implied warranties.

Plaintiff alleges in each of the five counts that she brings the action as the “natural mother” and “sole surviving heir” of the decedent, and that “as a direct and proximate result” of the wrongful conduct charged to the respective defendant she has been “deprived of the care, comfort, society, support, companionship and consortium of her son, Mark Wayne Boling, all to her general damage in an amount within the jurisdictional limits” of respondent court. She does not allege that she is the executrix or administratrix of the decedent’s estate.

Defendant’s Motion

The full record made on the motion to compel production of hospital records supports the following recitals:

Mark Wayne Boling was admitted to El Camino Hospital on August 7, 1978, for treatment of injuries he had received in the automobile accident which had involved Lundquist on that date. He was discharged from the hospital on a subsequent date not shown. While he was subsequently recovering from his injuries at home, he used a hospital bed that had been rented from defendant. When he was in the bed on November 28, 1978, it caught fire and he was burned to death.

After plaintiff had filed her amended complaint in the wrongful death action, defendant caused El Camino Hospital to be served with a subpoena duces tecum directing it to deliver all its records of the decedent’s hospitalization to Robert A. Cook, a notary public, for inspection by defendant and copying. The hospital’s custodian of records informed Cook by letter that certain “information” shown in the records would be “withheld” because it was protected against disclosure by Welfare *435 and Institutions Code section 5328 and the psychotherapist-patient privilege. 1

The motion to compel production of the records was made after the hospital’s response to the subpoena had been communicated to defendant by notary public Cook. Defendant stated in its notice of the motion as follows:

The motion was “for an order requiring plaintiff and El Camino Hospital to produce all medical records... pertaining to all treatment rendered to Mark Wayne Boling, plaintiff’s decedent, at El Camino Hospital,... and to permit inspection and photocopying by the attorneys for defendant ] or a representative from Robert A. Cook, Notary Public. [¶] This motion is based on the grounds that these documents, and all of them, constitute or contain evidence material and relevant to this action and that they are not privileged.... [¶] [S]aid records are needed in connection with the defense of the pending matter herein and are necessary to the administration of justice.” (Italics added.)

The notice of motion was addressed on its face to “plaintiff and to her attorneys of record and to El Camino Hospital,” but the record does not show that the moving papers were served on the hospital. Plaintiff filed nothing in opposition to the motion, on which respondent court heard brief oral argument. No appearance was made on behalf of El Camino Hospital. Defendant’s attorney argued that the hospital’s so-called “psychiatric records” were discoverable because they were not privileged. Plaintiff’s attorney had not seen them, and he had no idea what they showed, but he in effect claimed the psychotherapist-patient privilege on the basis of the hospital’s view that it applied. (See fn. 1 and the accompanying text, ante.) No one mentioned Welfare and Institutions Code section 5328, which the hospital had cited as an alternative basis for nondisclosure of the so-called “psychiatric records.” (See ibid.) Respondent court accepted defendant’s view that the records were not privileged, and granted the motion from the bench.

*436

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 Cal. App. 3d 430, 164 Cal. Rptr. 432, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boling-v-superior-court-calctapp-1980.