Brackett v. St. Mary's Hospital, No. X01-Cv-97 0140111s (Jan. 31, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 1297, 31 Conn. L. Rptr. 429
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 2002
DocketNo. X01-CV-97 0140111S
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 1297 (Brackett v. St. Mary's Hospital, No. X01-Cv-97 0140111s (Jan. 31, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brackett v. St. Mary's Hospital, No. X01-Cv-97 0140111s (Jan. 31, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 1297, 31 Conn. L. Rptr. 429 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

RULING ON MOTIONS TO QUASH
At a case management conference conducted by this court on January 8, 2002, counsel for several hospitals that had been served by the defendant St. Mary's Hospital ("St. Mary's") with subpoenas duces tecum stated that a hearing was needed to determine whether the subpoenas should be quashed because the information requested was protected by Connecticut's Peer Review Statute, Conn. Gen. Stat. § 19a-17b, or for other reasons. The plaintiff in this case, Dr. Mary Jane Brackett, has sued St. Mary's Hospital seeking money damages because St. Mary's suspended her hospital privileges in 1997. St. Mary's has explained that it seeks information from other hospitals where Dr. Brackett worked to counter her claims that her alleged lost earnings were caused by her suspension rather than by other causes that would be revealed by the information subpoenaed.

This court entered a case management order scheduling an evidentiary hearing on the issue for January 22, 2002. The text of that order, in relevant part, is as follows:

A hearing of all pending motions to quash subpoenas to witnesses will be conducted on January 22, 2002 at 2:00 in courtroom 3C, 400 Grand [St.], Waterbury. Counsel should be prepared to present at that hearing all evidence on which they rely in connection with these motions. Counsel may submit any stipulated facts or exhibits and any pre-hearing briefs by noon on January 18, 2002.

The plaintiff, Mary Jane Brackett, M.D. filed no motion to quash. Her counsel was present at the hearing and did not advocate any outcome as to any of the motions or portions thereof.

ISSUES

Bristol Hospital, Waterbury Hospital, Day Kimball Hospital ("Day Kimball"), and Midstate Medical Center ("Midstate") have filed motions to CT Page 1297-a quash the subpoenas described above.

At the hearing, counsel for St. Mary's Hospital, the issuer of the contested subpoenas, announced that St. Mary's had agreed to change its requests for documents to be produced to the following items, in lieu of the items listed in the text of the subpoenas issued. Counsel for St. Mary's also stated that it had reached an agreement with Bristol Hospital. That agreement was not put on the record by counsel.

St. Mary's revised list of subpoenaed documents is as follows. These descriptions replace the descriptions of the documents sought in the subpoenaes duces tecum.

1(a). Personnel File 1(b). Credentials File

* * *

A. All of Dr. Brackett's applications for appointment and reappointment, with supporting data (but excluding evaluation letters);

B. All Delineation of Privileges forms (including medical staff membership classification and all privilege checklists);

C. Verification of whether staff privileges have been terminated or restricted, including the specific restriction(s) imposed, if any. (We would also like to know the date of any action taken).

2. Quality Assurance Files Any and all statistical data maintained on Dr. Brackett with regard to quality indicators.

3. Admission Data Admission data as requested in the Subpoena (including ICD9 codes, DRG codes, procedures performed, patient zip code, payor type, and whether inpatient or outpatient), to the extent reasonably available from Waterbury's computer database, dating back to 1995.

4. Rules, Regulations and Medical Staff Bylaws The Hospital's Rules, Regulations and Medical Staff Bylaws dating back to 1995."

The movants have asserted that some of the documents sought in the revised text set forth above are protected from discovery by Connecticut's medical peer review statute, § 19a-17b. They have also asserted that some of the requests for documents are either too CT Page 1297-b burdensome and unreasonable or unlikely to lead to admissible evidence.

AGREEMENTS

The parties stated that they had reached the following agreements. The numbers used below correspond to the topics listed above:

1(a). Waterbury Hospital represented that it had no such files and will so state in writing, sworn to by a competent affiant.

2. Waterbury Hospital represented that it has nothing responsive except DRG statistics and will supply them.

3. Waterbury Hospital will produce those admission data records accessible by a computer run but objects to any records for which hand-tabulation or redactions would be necessary. Day Kimball will respond that Dr. Brackett admitted no patients. Request is moot as to Midstate, as Dr. Brackett worked there in 1991.

4. Waterbury, Day Kimball and Midstate Hospitals agreed to provide rules, regulations and bylaws to St. Mary's.

EVIDENCE

None of the movants presented evidence in support of any claims that the information sought had been part of a peer review process or on any other ground relied upon in their motions to quash. Day Kimball Hospital had appended to its brief an affidavit. When the court inquired whether St. Mary's agreed to submission of this document in evidence, St. Mary's counsel responded in the negative. Because an affidavit is most certainly hearsay, the court sustained the objection and pointed out that this Court's order set forth above stated that the proceeding concerning the motion to quash was to be a hearing, not simply oral argument, since some of the matters in controversy might require testimony to establish what records existed, how they were created, and what their relationship was to peer review. The court recessed to allow counsel for the movants an opportunity to telephone any necessary witnesses. None was presented.

MOTION TO QUASH

Practice Book § 13-28(e) provides that a party served with a subpoena accompanied by a command that the deponent produce and permit inspection of designed items may file a motion to quash or modify the subpoena "if it is unreasonable and oppressive or if it seeks the production of materials not subject to production. . . ." CT Page 1297-c

GROUNDS ASSERTED

The movants object to producing some documents defined in the subpoenas duces tecum, notably, documents concerning each patient admitted to their facility by Dr. Brackett, on the grounds that the documents are not material to the subject matter involved in the pending action and are "not reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence," the general standards for discovery set forth at Practice Book § 13-2. They also assert that the request is too burdensome and oppressive and because Practice Book § 13-5 authorizes limiting discovery on the former ground; and Practice Book § 13-28(e) authorizes an order quashing a subpoena on the latter ground.

The movants also assert that St. Mary's is not entitled to production pursuant to a subpoena duces tecum of some of the documents identified above because the provisions of Connecticut's medical peer review statute, Conn. Gen. Stat. § 19a-17b, preclude such discovery.

The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled in Babcock v. Bridgeport Hospital,251 Conn. 790, 847-849

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 1297, 31 Conn. L. Rptr. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brackett-v-st-marys-hospital-no-x01-cv-97-0140111s-jan-31-2002-connsuperct-2002.