Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 3, 2013
DocketG046922
StatusUnpublished

This text of Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3 (Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3) 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
Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 12/3/13 Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

ISRAEL P. CHAMBI,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G046922

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2009-00122960)

WMC-SA, INC. et al., OPINION

Defendants and Respondents.

Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Orange County, Kirk H. Nakamura, Judge. Affirmed. Law Offices of William J. Kopeny and William J. Kopeny for Plaintiff and Appellant. Horvitz & Levy, David M. Axelrad, S. Thomas Todd; Fenigstein & Kaufman, Ron S. Kaufman, Sara McDuffie; Law Offices of James R. Lahana and James R. Lahana for Defendants and Respondents. * * * In this appeal we determine: (1) The provision in Business and Professions Code section 809.2, subdivision (a), requiring the presence of a member of a physician’s own specialty in any peer review hearing “where feasible,” is mandatory, not permissive.1 (2) The feasibility of having a fellow specialist present in any peer review hearing includes consideration of the economic cost of procuring such a specialist. (3) The hospital bringing charges against a physician must pay for the specialist if he or she comes from outside the hospital staff, and also bears the burden of showing that the economic cost of procuring a fellow specialist for a peer review hearing is prohibitive. (4) In this case, defendant hospital, Western Medical Center, did not bear its burden of showing that the cost of having a fellow neurosurgeon on the peer review panel charged with adjudicating charges against plaintiff Dr. Israel Chambi was prohibitive. (5) However, Dr. Chambi has failed to carry his own burden on appeal of showing that Western Medical’s failure to honor his request to have a fellow neurosurgeon on the peer review panel was itself prejudicial so as to require reversal of the judgment against him in this case. Consequently, we affirm that judgment. I. FACTS Dr. Israel Chambi had privileges as a neurosurgeon at Western Medical Center in Santa Ana.2 In 2003 charges were brought against him for substandard medical care, generally consisting of either (1) operating where not necessary in a number of

1 All statutory references in this opinion will be to the Business and Professions Code. All otherwise undesignated references to any subdivision of a statute will be to section 809.2 of that code. 2 Technically known as “WMC-SA” in the complaint. Most residents of Orange County know the hospital as Western Medical Center, so we will refer to it as Western Medical in this opinion.

2 cases or (2) errors in technique in a number of cases.3 There is no question that Dr. Chambi timely requested the presence of a fellow neurosurgeon on the peer review panel, which was to consist of five members. The request was rejected, however, because all the neurosurgeons on Western Medical’s staff would have been biased, one way or the other, and the medical staff thought it was too expensive to go outside Western Medical to procure the services of an outside neurosurgeon for the purpose. The peer review panel rendered its decision in 2007, recommending termination of Dr. Chambi’s privileges.4 Later in 2007 the hospital’s governing board adopted the panel’s recommendation and the decision to terminate privileges became final. There is no question Dr. Chambi exhausted his administrative remedies. Dr. Chambi filed this case in May 2009, seeking a petition for administrative mandate to invalidate the decision and reinstate his staff privileges at the hospital. Among other issues, the petition complained about the lack of a neurosurgeon on the peer review panel. The trial court heard the matter in the Spring of 2012 and denied the petition. Dr. Chambi filed a timely notice of appeal and presents basically but one claim of error: that the lack of a fellow neurosurgeon on the peer review panel deprived him of a fair hearing.

3 The question of exactly how many cases there were in which Western Medical might have charged Dr. Chambi with having been guilty of substandard practice is immaterial to this appeal. Dr. Chambi’s brief emphasizes the number of charges involved less than 16 patients, and the charges were sustained as to less than half of those. The record shows Western Medical’s initial charges involved about 30 patients, and the charges basically consisted of Dr. Chambi having too often chosen surgery when not called for (his operation rate was 150 percent of fellow neurosurgeons), errors in technique leading to brain infarction and hemorrhage, and failure to obtain postoperative angiograms. However, it appears that Western Medical reduced the charges to 16 patients in the interest of expediting the hearing. (There was a 17th charge – for not disclosing a previous suspension from UC Irvine in 1995 and termination from its faculty.) 4 The panel’s decision is complete with a judicial-style caption entitled “In re: The Medical Staff Membership and Privileges of Israel Chambi, M.D.”and reads like a statement of decision in the trial court. Superficially at least, the decision appears fair and balanced. For example, it agreed with Dr. Chambi that it needed to be proven that a given surgery was not necessary. “Simply being aggressive is not seen as a vice.” The panel further recognized that “unless risky, low probability of success surgery is nevertheless performed, patients and malpractice plaintiffs may claim that not every possible action was taken by the surgeon.” However, the panel’s decision is undated. We take Dr. Chambi’s brief’s word for it that it was rendered in February 2007.

3 II. DISCUSSION A. Section 809.2, Subdivision (a)’s Requirement of a Fellow Specialist Where Feasible is Mandatory In California, hospital bylaws involving the termination of physicians’ privileges must implement Business and Professions Code sections 809 to 809.8. (See § 809, subd. (a)(8); Unnamed Physician v. Board of Trustees (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 607, 617.) These statutes set out minimum standards of procedural protections for physicians. (Id. at pp. 622-623.) In the case before us, Western Medical’s bylaws (specifically section 8.3.5) contain the same “where feasible” language contained in section 809.2, so we will treat the specialization clause of the hospital’s bylaws as synonymous with the statute.5 The record contains a letter from the hospital’s lawyer to Dr. Chambi’s lawyer rejecting his request for a fellow neurosurgeon on his peer review panel because the requirement of a fellow specialist was “permissive in nature and not mandatory.” We reject that position. The “shall” language and syntax of section 809.2, subdivision (a) admits of no other reading but that the requirement – to be sure, qualified by the “where feasible” language – is mandatory. The text reads: “If a licentiate timely requests a hearing concerning a final proposed action for which a report is required to be filed under Section 805, the following shall apply: [¶] (a) The hearing shall be held, as determined by the peer review body, before a trier of fact, which shall be an arbitrator or arbitrators selected by a process mutually acceptable to the licentiate and the peer review body, or before a panel of unbiased individuals who shall gain no direct financial benefit from the

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Chambi v. WMC-SA CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chambi-v-wmc-sa-ca43-calctapp-2013.