Drennan v. Community Health Investment Corp.

905 S.W.2d 811, 1995 WL 519143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 29, 1995
Docket07-94-0053-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 905 S.W.2d 811 (Drennan v. Community Health Investment Corp.) 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.

Bluebook
Drennan v. Community Health Investment Corp., 905 S.W.2d 811, 1995 WL 519143 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

REYNOLDS, Chief Justice.

In our 18 May 1995 original opinion, we articulated the reasons why we affirmed the take-nothing summary judgment rendered in the action brought by Sharon Drennan, individually and on behalf of her minor daughter, Amy Lytal, against Community Health Investment Corporation, C.H.S. Management Corporation d/b/a Highland Medical Center (the Hospital); Owen Health Care, Inc., individually and d/b/a Highland Medical Center Pharmacy; and Todd Dipprey, registered pharmacist. To additionally address con-cems expressed by Drennan in her motion for rehearing, we withdraw our original opinion, overrule the motion for rehearing, and issue this opinion to explain the affirmance of the trial court’s judgment.

The intricacies of the underlying action necessitate a recitation of the events and proceedings leading to this appeal. The events began with Amy Lytal’s need for surgery. Amy had been in the care of John P. Theo, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, for treatment of scoliosis since 25 June 1986, and in 1990, Dr. Theo recommended the placement of rods in her back to correct the curvature of her spine.

It is undisputed that all arrangements for the surgery were made by Dr. Theo from his office, outside the Hospital’s premises, but the surgery was to be conducted using the Hospital’s facilities. It was in his office that Dr. Theo explained to Drennan the need for the surgery and the procedures necessary to accomplish it, including placing Amy under general anesthesia. Drennan understood that Amy would be completely asleep, but she did not ask who would be administering the anesthesia.

For the preceding ten years, Dr. Theo had worked with Ben Harman, a certified registered nurse anesthetist (CRNA), in performing surgeries. Dr. Theo believed Harman to be qualified to put Amy to sleep for the surgery, and arranged, from his office, to engage Harman’s services. Prior to her admission to the Hospital’s facilities, Hal Green, M.D., an internist, examined Amy and gave clearance for her surgery.

Todd Dipprey, a registered pharmacist, operated the branch of Owen Health Care, Inc., doing business as Highland Medical Center Pharmacy, 1 on the Hospital’s premises, where it maintained its floor stock. 2 The Pharmacy provided summary judgment evidence that (1) it was not a pharmacy open to the public; (2) despite the name and its *816 location on the Hospital’s premises, it was associated with the Hospital only by a business relationship; and (3) Todd Dipprey was not an employee of the Hospital, but of Owen Health Care, Inc.

On 20 March 1990, Amy was admitted to the Hospital’s facilities for her scheduled surgery. Based upon Dr. Theo’s order for “general anesthesia,” and in accordance with his customary practice, Harman procured Sodium Pentothal and Atracurium from the floor stock of the Pharmacy.

Drennan’s sister, Sandra Lytal, recalled Harman coming to Amy’s room and explaining he would be putting her to sleep, and asking if there were any questions he could answer. Harman was not asked whether, nor did he volunteer that, he was a CRNA and not a medical doctor.

Present at Amy’s surgery were Harman; Dr. Theo and his assistant, Wesley R. Stra-han, M.D.; Armondo Lopez, a scrub technician; Rick Boratia, who monitored Amy’s spinal cord; and an unidentified woman assisting Boratia. Harman administered the Sodium Pentothal and Atracurium, and placed Amy under general anesthesia.

As the surgery progressed, Harman monitored Amy’s vital signs and, upon noticing a cardiac arrhythmia, asked Dr. Theo to stop the surgery. Harman first administered Adrenalin and Lidocaine, then administered cardio pulmonary resuscitation until her heart rhythms converted to normal patterns. The surgery was aborted.

Amy had an adverse reaction to the Atra-curium, which Dr. Theo, believed to be unforeseeable because she was a “healthy adolescent in whom there should have been no problem.” Nevertheless, the operating room events resulted in neurological damage to Amy.

Alleging negligence in the administration of anesthesia, Drennan filed her sixth amended petition in January of 1992, against Dr. Theo, Dr. Strahan, Harman, Dr. Green, Dr. Ivan Barber, and C.H.S. Management Corporation d/b/a Highland Medical Center. Doctors Strahan and Green were later dismissed from the suit upon Drennan’s decision not to pursue any action against them. Har-man and Dr. Theo entered into settlement agreements with Drennan, which are not made part of the record before us. Doctor Ivan Barber, the anesthesiologist who served as the medical staff chief of anesthesia, moved for and was granted summary judgment.

By her eighth amended original petition, Drennan added the Pharmacy to the list of defendants. At the same time, she also modified her pleadings to restyle her action against C.H.S. Management Corporation d/b/a Highland Medical Center as being against “Community Health Investment Corporation, formerly known as C.H.S. Management Corporation and formerly known as Community Health Systems of Texas, individually and d/b/a Highland Medical Center; C.H.S. Management Corporation d/b/a Highland Medical Center.” The Hospital maintained at trial, and maintains on appeal, that Community Health Investment Corporation was an improper party.

The Hospital and the Pharmacy separately moved for summary judgment on the allegations contained in Drennan’s eighth amended original petition, which is not found in the record before this Court. Subsequent to the filing of the motions, Drennan filed her tenth amended original petition, wherein she alleged negligence and, for the first time, negligence per se in the dispensing of Atraeuri-um to Harman, and violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act (DTPA). 3 Drennan based her cause of action against the Hospital on the imputation of the negligence and negligence per se of Dr. Theo, Dr. Barber, Harman, and the Pharmacy, and further alleged that all were engaged in a joint enterprise. The focus of her cause of action against the Pharmacy was the per se negligence of dispensing the drugs to Harman.

The Hospital countered by filing its first and second amended motions for summary judgment, alleging there was no employment, *817 nor any joint enterprise, relationship between it and any of the remaining defendants. Furthermore, the Hospital alleged, Drennan was statutorily precluded from bringing a cause of action under the DTPA because, first, the action was barred by limitations, and second, the Hospital was excluded from liability for DTPA actions founded on allegations of negligence. Finally, the Hospital alleged that all actions by it, as well as Harman and Dr. Theo, were in accordance with governing statutes. The Hospital concluded Drennan had failed to state a cause of action against it.

By its motion for summary judgment, the Pharmacy alleged that Dipprey was solely the employee of Owen Health Care, Inc., not the Hospital, it was not involved in any joint venture, and that it had complied with all governing statutes in relation to dispensing drugs to Harman. Further, the Pharmacy contended that Drennan’s DTPA cause of action was barred by limitations.

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Bluebook (online)
905 S.W.2d 811, 1995 WL 519143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drennan-v-community-health-investment-corp-texapp-1995.