Douglas K. Brocail v. Kyle Anderson, M.D. and Henry Ford Health System, William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine A/K/a, D/B/A and/or F/K/A Center for Athletic Medicine

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 2004
Docket14-03-00239-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Douglas K. Brocail v. Kyle Anderson, M.D. and Henry Ford Health System, William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine A/K/a, D/B/A and/or F/K/A Center for Athletic Medicine (Douglas K. Brocail v. Kyle Anderson, M.D. and Henry Ford Health System, William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine A/K/a, D/B/A and/or F/K/A Center for Athletic Medicine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Douglas K. Brocail v. Kyle Anderson, M.D. and Henry Ford Health System, William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine A/K/a, D/B/A and/or F/K/A Center for Athletic Medicine, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed March 11, 2004

Affirmed and Opinion filed March 11, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-03-00239-CV

DOUGLAS K. BROCAIL, Appellant

V.

KYLE ANDERSON, M.D., HENRY FORD HEALTH SYSTEM, WILLIAM CLAY FORD CENTER FOR ATHLETIC MEDICINE A/K/A, D/B/A AND F/K/A CENTER FOR ATHLETIC MEDICINE, Appellees

On Appeal from the 125th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 02-48741

O P I N I O N


In this appeal we must consider if a Michigan doctor, by agreeing to prescribe post-operative physical therapy through a Texas health care provider, had sufficient contacts with Texas to be subject to personal jurisdiction in the courts of this State.  Douglas K. Brocail, formerly a pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, sued appellees Kyle Anderson, M.D., Henry Ford Health System, and the Center for Athletic Medicine,[1] all medical care providers for the Detroit Tigers, alleging that he sustained physical injury resulting from their medical negligence, gross negligence, and fraud in failing to discover or treat a torn ligament in his elbow and in failing to inform him of the full extent of his injury.  The trial court granted appellees= special appearance and dismissed the claims against them.  On appeal, Brocail argues that appellees= contacts with Texas were sufficient to confer personal jurisdiction over them because Anderson, a doctor employed by the Henry Ford Health System and the Center for Athletic Medicine, prescribed, approved, and monitored his post-surgery physical therapy in Texas for approximately three months.  Finding that the physical therapy Anderson prescribed was follow-up physical therapy for elbow surgeryCand that the follow-up care was done in Texas at Brocail=s request and without any monetary benefit to AndersonCwe affirm.

Factual Background

Brocail was a professional baseball pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, a major league baseball team.  The Tigers used the Henry Ford Health System (HFHS), a Michigan-based health care provider and regional medical center, to provide medical care for their players.  In 2000, when Brocail injured his pitching elbow during baseball season, the  Tigers referred him to Anderson, an employee of HFHS and a team doctor for the Tigers.  Anderson practiced orthopedic surgery at various HFHS locations in Michigan.

Anderson recommended arthroscopic surgery for the elbow.  Before the surgery, Anderson discussed with Brocail his treatment plan, outlining both the surgical procedure and the contemplated rehabilitation of the elbow.  On September 22, 2000, Anderson performed the surgery in Michigan, and after the surgery, he prescribed physical therapy for Brocail.  However, baseball season was over for the Tigers, and Brocail decided to return to his home in Texas.  At Brocail=s request, Anderson agreed to prescribe physical therapy through a provider in Texas.


On October 4, 2000, Anderson faxed a prescription for physical therapy for Brocail to HealthSouth, a health care provider in Sugar Land, Texas.[2]  Because physical therapy requires a doctor=s approval, HealthSouth faxed a proposed Acare plan@ from Texas to Anderson for approval.  Anderson reviewed the care plan and faxed his approval of the plan to Texas.  Thereafter, Brocail underwent physical therapy at HealthSouth with a therapist named Wayne Brewer.  Brewer prepared progress reports and faxed them from HealthSouth in Texas to Anderson in Michigan.  On October 23, 2001, Anderson wrote a second prescription for additional physical therapy, including instructions  to begin a Atoss program@ at eight to ten weeks after the surgery, and faxed it to HealthSouth.  Additionally, on October 30, 2000, he faxed to HealthSouth a prescription for the application of a dynamic elbow splint.  Approximately one month later, on November 28, 2000, Brewer faxed a proposed treatment plan for Brocail that included initiating Alight tossing@ in mid-December.  Anderson reviewed the plan, approved it, and faxed it back the next day.  In his affidavit, Brocail stated that he and Anderson discussed Brocail=s physical therapy by telephone, and Anderson also discussed Brocail=s treatment with the physical therapy staff in Texas, but Anderson testified he did not recall any such conversations.

The therapy continued until early January 2001, when Brocail was discharged from treatment.  On January 25, 2001, the Tigers sent a letter to HealthSouth to explain that they had traded Brocail to the Houston Astros.  The letter directed that any medical bills after December 20, 2000, should be directed to the Astros rather than the Tigers. 


On September 20, 2002, Brocail brought this lawsuit in Harris County, Texas, against appellees and other defendants, including the Detroit Tigers.  He alleged medical negligence, gross negligence, and fraud.  In response, Anderson and HFHS filed special appearances.[3]

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Douglas K. Brocail v. Kyle Anderson, M.D. and Henry Ford Health System, William Clay Ford Center for Athletic Medicine A/K/a, D/B/A and/or F/K/A Center for Athletic Medicine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-k-brocail-v-kyle-anderson-md-and-henry-ford-health-system-texapp-2004.