Bryan v. Tent, Inc., d/b/a: University Medical Ctr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 25, 1997
Docket01A01-9703-CH-00132
StatusPublished

This text of Bryan v. Tent, Inc., d/b/a: University Medical Ctr. (Bryan v. Tent, Inc., d/b/a: University Medical Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan v. Tent, Inc., d/b/a: University Medical Ctr., (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

DR. JOE BRYANT, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Wilson Chancery ) No. 96332 VS. ) ) TENET, INC. (NATIONAL MEDICAL ) ENTERPRISES) d/b/a UNIVERSITY ) Appeal No. MEDICAL CENTER, ) 01A01-9703-CH-00132 ) Defendant/Appellee. ) FILED IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE November 25, 1997 MIDDLE SECTION AT NASHVILLE Cecil W. Crowson APPEAL FROM CHANCERY COURT OF WILSON COUNTY Appellate Court Clerk AT LEBANON, TENNESSEE

HONORABLE C. K. SMITH, CHANCELLOR

Mr. Henry Clay Barry 106 S. College Street Lebanon, Tennessee 37087 ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

Mr. William C. Moody 95 White Bridge Road Suite 509, Cavalier Bldg. Nashville, Tennessee 37205-1427 ATTORNEY FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

D I S S E N T.

HENRY F. TODD PRESIDING JUDGE, MIDDLE SECTION DR. JOE BRYANT, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) Wilson Chancery ) No. 96332 VS. ) ) TENET, INC. (NATIONAL MEDICAL ) ENTERPRISES) d/b/a UNIVERSITY ) Appeal No. MEDICAL CENTER, ) 01A01-9703-CH-00132 ) Defendant/Appellee. )

DISSENT

The only difference of opinion in this Court is whether the information in the record is

sufficient to justify the result reached by the majority. The original opinion, which was not

accepted by the majority, is now filed as a dissent to demonstrate the necessity for a remand for

further information.

The defendant, Tenet, Inc., d/b/a University Medical Center, has appealed from a non jury

judgment of the Trial Court regarding the practice of medicine by the plaintiff, Dr. Joe Bryant,

in the defendant’s hospital.

The judgment of the Trial Court states:

This case having come on to be heard on September 12, 1996, upon the plaintiff’s complaint for injunctive relief, the Court having considered the pleadings, statements of counsel, stipulations, exhibits and testimony of witnesses and it appearing to the Court that a permanent injunction should be issued prohibiting the defendant from conducting any further disciplinary action against the plaintiff as a result of the circumstances giving rise to this suit until the defendant has provided the plaintiff with a written notice of the complaints being investigated ten days prior to an Executive Committee meeting held to investigate such complaints at which the plaintiff shall have an attorney present for consultation and advice only, it appearing to the Court that the defendant’s by-laws have deprived the plaintiff of his rights guaranteed by Section VIII, Article I, of the Tennessee Constitution, and the plaintiff’s right to due process under the by-laws themselves.

-2- IT IS HEREBY DECREED, that the defendant is enjoined from conducting any further disciplinary actions pursuant to its by-laws against the plaintiff as a result of the circumstances from which this suit arises until such time as the defendant has provided the plaintiff with written notice of the complaints it is investigating and the defendant schedules a new Executive Committee investigation more than ten days thereafter at which the plaintiff shall have the right to have an attorney present for his own consultation and advice.

In this Court, the defendant states the issues as follows:

1. When a medical staff committee of a private hospital takes action, pursuant to its bylaws, that limits a staff member’s privileges, is that staff member entitled to procedural due process at each step of the proceedings by Article 1, § 8 of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee?

2. If so, do the provisions of the defendant’s bylaws, for taking action which limits the privileges of staff members, comply with Article 1, § 8 of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee?

3. Do the defendant’s bylaws guarantee the plaintiff procedural due process, as the term is understood in a legal context, at the Executive Committee Stage?

4. Is injunctive relief appropriate at this stage of the proceeding or must the plaintiff exhaust all of his administrative remedies?

The plaintiff states the issues as follows:

1. Is a doctor entitled to “Due Process”, or fairness and justice, before his privileges or liberties may be adversely affected by the Defendant or it’s Executive Committee, under the fact of this case?

2. Do these by-laws, either upon their face or by their operation in this case, violate Due Process, which the same guarantee?

The following facts are essentially undisputed:

Dr. Bryant has practiced as a general surgeon at University Medical Center for many

years. University Medical Center, (hereafter, UMC) is a private hospital owned by Tenet, Inc.

Some time in early June 1996, he performed a PEG procedure on a comatose patient who was

-3- on a morphine drip. During this procedure, he apparently had a dispute with nurses in the

operating room about his decision not to anesthetize the patient during the procedure.

Following the procedure, one or more nurses filed a formal complaint with UMC’s

administrator and reported the incident on Tenet’s patient abuse hotline.

At UMC there is a “chief of staff”, who is presumably selected by the physicians

practicing in the hospital. Whether he is also an official of the hospital itself does not appear

from the record.

One or two weeks after the above described incident, the “chief of staff” discussed the

incident with Dr. Bryant and asked him to attend a meeting of “the executive committee” to

review the incident. The record does not disclose whether the “executive committee” of the

medical staff is a part of the management of the hospital, itself. Dr. Bryant declined to attend

stating “unless I had a written letter from someone, I wouldn’t be there.” Several days later, Dr.

Bryant received written notice of the executive committee meeting. He also received notice of

the number of the patient’s chart and was even given a copy of the chart which he showed to

other physicians before the hearing. Apparently he was not given the incident report that had

been filed by one or more of the operating room nurses.

Prior to the meeting, Dr. Bryant wrote a lengthy, detailed letter to UMC’s administrator

presenting his response to the nurses’ complaints and accusing the nurses of ineffectiveness in

the operating room. On the day of the executive committee’s meeting, Dr. Bryant insisted that

the committee permit his lawyer to attend the meeting. After the committee denied his request,

Dr. Bryant refused to attend the meeting. The record does not indicate what, if any, action was

taken by the committee after Dr. Bryant’s departure.

Shortly thereafter, Dr. Bryant filed suit this against Tenet seeking to enjoin the hospital

“from proceeding against...[him] under the said by-laws.” It is not clear whether the by-laws

-4- were those of the medical staff or of the management of the hospital. He asserted that the

hospital’s by-laws permitted a “star-chamber type proceeding” and that the by-laws

“unconstitutionally deprive the Plaintiff of his constitutional right to due process of the law.”

At the hearing on the application for permanent injunction, the trial court granted Dr. Bryant’s

oral motion to amend to add a breach of contract claim to his complaint. The trial court

determined that the hospital procedures did not violate Dr. Bryant’s federal constitutional rights

but that they did violate Dr. Bryant’s state constitutional and contractual rights. Accordingly,

the trial court entered an order enjoining UMC from conducting any further disciplinary

proceedings against Dr. Bryant until it (1) provides him with written notice of the complaints

against him, (2) commences a new executive committee investigation, and (3) allows Dr. Bryant

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393 S.W.2d 739 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1965)
State Ex Rel. v. Cummings
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Bryan v. Tent, Inc., d/b/a: University Medical Ctr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-tent-inc-dba-university-medical-ctr-tennctapp-1997.