Eight Unnamed Physicians v. Medical Executive Committee

59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 150 Cal. App. 4th 503
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 2007
DocketA113456
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100 (Eight Unnamed Physicians v. Medical Executive Committee) 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
Eight Unnamed Physicians v. Medical Executive Committee, 59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 150 Cal. App. 4th 503 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

MARCHIANO, P. J.

The Medical Executive Committee (MEC) of the Medical Staff (Medical Staff) of Washington Township Hospital (Hospital) appeals from the judgment granting the petition of Eight Unnamed Physicians (Physicians) for a writ of mandate in a dispute over procedure in a medical disciplinary proceeding; The MEC recommended that the Physicians’ Medical Staff membership and clinical privileges at the Hospital be terminated, and the Physicians have each requested a hearing pursuant to the Medical Staff bylaws to contest the recommendation. The dispute involves the manner in which the hearings are to proceed: the Physicians want the hearings consolidated into one proceeding, and the MEC wants separate hearings for each physician.

The peremptory writ of mandate ordered in the judgment commands the MEC to submit to a consolidated hearing. The MEC argues that the judgment must be reversed because the Physicians have failed to exhaust their administrative remedies, or because MEC has discretion to require individual hearings. We conclude that reversal is required because of the failure to exhaust administrative remedies, and need not determine whether the MEC’s refusal to agree to consolidation was an-abuse of discretion.

I. BACKGROUND

The Physicians were- eight of 11 members of a medical group that, according to the MEC’s charges, had for years arranged to provide all necessary anesthesia services at the Hospital in return for a virtually exclusive opportunity to do so. On Saturday, November 20, 2004, the Hospital learned that the Physicians would be moving their practices to another hospital on the following Monday, November 22. The MEC seeks to discipline the Physicians individually for this “precipitous withdrawal” of services that allegedly could have jeopardized patient safety and undermined public confidence in the Hospital. The Physicians deny the charges and contend arrangements for coverage were in place.

*507 The MEC recommended that the Hospital board of directors (Board) terminate the Physicians’ clinical privileges and Medical Staff membership, and the Physicians each requested a judicial review committee (JRC) hearing to dispute the recommendation; 1 The Medical Staff bylaws provide that members can challenge adverse actions such as those involved here by requesting a hearing before a JRC comprised of at least three Medical Staff members. (Articles 7.2, 7.3-5; all references to Articles are to the Medical Staff bylaws.) The MEC and the member present evidence to the JRC at the hearing (Article 7.4-5), and the JRC, acting as a decision maker, determines whether the adverse action is “reasonable and warranted” (Article 7.4-7.C).

The MEC appoints a hearing officer, functioning as a legal facilitator, to preside at the hearing. (Article 7.4-3.) “The Hearing Officer shall endeavor to assure that all participants in the hearing have a reasonable opportunity to be heard and to present relevant oral and documentary evidence in a[n] efficient and expeditious manner, and that proper decorum is maintained. The Hearing Officer shall be entitled to determine the order of or procedure for presenting evidence and argument during the hearing and shall have the authority and discretion to make all rulings on questions which pertain to matters of law, procedure or the admissibility of evidence. If the Hearing Officer determines that either side in a hearing is not proceeding in an efficient and expeditious manner, the Hearing Officer may take such discretionary action as seems warranted by the circumstances.” (Article 7.4-3.)

The JRC’s decision is “considered final” under the bylaws unless it is appealed to the Board. Article 7.5-1 of the bylaws pertaining to the time for such an appeal provides in full: “Within fifteen (15) days after receipt of the decision of the JRC, either the. member or the MEC may request an appellate review. A written request for such review shall be delivered to the Chief of Staff, the CEO, and the other party in the hearing. If a request for appellate review is not requested within such period, the Board shall then approve, reject, or modify the recommendation.” 2 Article 7.5-2 pertaining to the grounds for such an appeal states in full: “A written request for an appeal shall include an identification of the grounds for appeal and a clear and concise statement of the facts in support of the appeal. The grounds for appeal from the hearing shall be: a) substantial non-compliance with the procedures required by these Bylaws or applicable law which has created demonstrable prejudice; b) the decision was not supported by substantial *508 evidence based upon the hearing record.” An appeal board of the Board holds “an appellate hearing based upon the record of the hearing before the JRC,” and recommends to the Board whether to “affirm, modify, or reverse the JRC decision, or remand the matter to the JRC for further review and decision.” (Article 7.5-5.) The Board then renders a final decision. (Articles 7.5-6.A, 7.5-7.)

The bylaws stipulate that members must exhaust the foregoing remedies “before resorting to legal action.” (Article 7.1-1.) ■

After requesting their JRC hearings, the Physicians each waived their right to an individual hearing and asked that the.hearings be consolidáted. The MEC denied the request, - and appointed eight JRC panels and eight hearing officers to hear each of the cases separately. The Physicians moved in each of the eight proceedings for consolidation. 3 Five of the eight hearing officers (Schnier, Kaplan, Di Benedetto, Phillips, LaPallo) denied the consolidation motions on the ground that they had no authority to issue rulings governing hearings over which they did not preside. One hearing officer (Singer) denied the consolidation motion- on the principal ground that the decision whether to consolidate was committed to the MFC’s discretion. One hearing officer (Bartel) found that he had no authority to “arbitrarily intrude into the other pending proceedings, usurp the authority and discretion of the other Hearing Officers, and peremptorily order consolidation,” but thought that all of the hearing officers should decide whether consolidation was advisable in principle, and then engage with the parties and counsel in a ‘-‘a meet and confer process” to “work out the appropriate subsequent processes.” One hearing officer (O’Connell) determined that she had authority under the bylaws to order consolidation and granted the motion to consolidate. ■

Various communications between the hearing officers and parties ensued. The Physicians wrote a letter to the hearing officers and the MEC, stating they understood that the hearings had been consolidated before Hearing Officer O’Connell, and that all other scheduled dates were off calendar. Hearing Officers Schnier, Kaplan, Di Benedetto, Phillips, and Singer responded that they did not acknowledge O’Connell’s authority to rule with respect to their hearings, and said that they planned to proceed with them. O’Connell wrote *509

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Cal. Rptr. 3d 100, 150 Cal. App. 4th 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eight-unnamed-physicians-v-medical-executive-committee-calctapp-2007.