Feyz v. Mercy Memorial Hospital

719 N.W.2d 1, 475 Mich. 663
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2006
DocketDocket 128059
StatusPublished
Cited by93 cases

This text of 719 N.W.2d 1 (Feyz v. Mercy Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feyz v. Mercy Memorial Hospital, 719 N.W.2d 1, 475 Mich. 663 (Mich. 2006).

Opinions

YOUNG, J.

Plaintiff is a physician with staff privileges at defendant Mercy Memorial Hospital. This lawsuit arises from an internecine dispute over nursing orders [666]*666for patient intake at the defendant hospital. Plaintiffs insistence on requiring the nursing staff to use his special standing orders instead of defendant hospital’s standing orders eventually led to a conflict with defendant hospital and a peer review of plaintiffs professional practices as well as disciplinary action.

Plaintiffs challenge of the peer review conducted by some of the defendants and the resulting disciplinary action taken against him requires that we consider the scope of immunity provided for peer review. In order to promote effective patient care in hospitals, the Legislature enacted MCL 331.531, commonly referred to as Michigan’s peer review immunity statute. The purpose of statutory peer review immunity is to foster the free exchange of information in investigations of hospital practices and practitioners, and thereby reduce patient mortality and improve patient care within hospitals. The Legislature obviously intended to protect peer review participants from liability for participation in this communicative and evaluative process. In order to create an environment in which such candid explorations of the quality of hospital patient care can occur, among other protections, the Legislature prohibited the discovery of communications made within the peer review process and granted immunity from liability to all who participate in peer review without “malice.”

The primary question posed in this appeal is the scope of judicial review of peer review permitted under MCL 331.531. A secondary question is whether the judicially created “doctrine of nonintervention” — a doctrine suggesting that staffing decisions of private hospitals are generally beyond the scope of judicial review — is compatible with the peer review immunity statute. Finally, we must also construe the undefined peer review statutory term “malice.”

[667]*667Because the peer review immunity statute establishes qualified immunity from liability for peer review communication and participants who provide such communications, we conclude that there is no justification for recognizing the nonintervention doctrine that the lower courts in this state have applied in considering claims arising from peer review. We therefore hold that this doctrine cannot supplement or supplant the statutory immunity granted by our Legislature. Furthermore, there is no basis, statutory or otherwise, to justify the application of a nonintervention doctrine to general staffing decisions of a private hospital. We also hold that, consistent with the objects of the peer review immunity statute, malice should be defined as set forth by the Court of Appeals in Veldhuis v Allan.1 Thus, we hold that malice can be established when a “person supplying information or data [to a peer review entity] does so with knowledge of its falsity or with reckless disregard of its truth or falsity. Similarly, a review entity is not immune from liability if it acts with knowledge of the falsity, or with reckless disregard of the truth or falsity, of information or data which it communicates or upon which it acts.”2

Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Monroe Circuit Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY3

Plaintiff is a physician with staff privileges at defendant Mercy Memorial Hospital.4 Plaintiff was dissatis[668]*668fied with defendant hospital’s standard nursing policy requiring nurses to document patients’ prescribed medications and dosages by either copying the label on their prescription containers or copying a list of medications carried by patients. As a consequence, plaintiff created his own specialized orders directing the nursing staff to obtain very specific information from plaintiffs incoming patients about their prescription drug use. Plaintiffs orders directed the nursing staff, as part of the admissions process for his patients, to assume a far more aggressive investigative role regarding patient medication.5

Defendants disapproved plaintiffs standing orders, and instructed the nursing staff to ignore them. In several cases where the nurses disregarded plaintiffs special orders and followed defendant hospital’s nursing directives, plaintiff prepared “incident reports” referring such cases to peer review committees for investigation of “potential medical errors.” Further, plaintiff began making notations in patient records that [669]*669his disregarded orders were intended to “[p]revent serious medication errors in the past.”

Defendants initiated peer review proceedings against plaintiff based on plaintiffs failure to complete medical records6 and his insistence that the nursing staff follow his standing orders rather than comply with hospital policy. An ad hoc investigatory committee reviewed plaintiffs conduct and released its findings to the executive committee of defendant medical staff.7 Relying on the ad hoc committee’s report, the executive committee referred plaintiff to the Health Professionals Recovery Program (HPRP) for a psychiatric examination.8 Plaintiff was placed on temporary probation.

Plaintiff alleges that he ceased writing his standard orders because, in compromise, defendant hospital gave plaintiff use of the pharmacy consult service to implement plaintiffs special orders. It appears that plaintiffs orders regarding patient medication overburdened the staff of the pharmacy consult service, so the hospital eventually discontinued this arrangement. Thereafter, plaintiff resumed placing his specialized orders in patients’ medical charts. As a consequence, defendants took further action and placed plaintiff on indefinite probation. Plaintiff continues to practice medicine and retains privileges at defendant hospital, but is restricted from using defendant hospital’s pharmacy consult service or insisting on compliance with his special orders.

[670]*670Plaintiff filed a complaint alleging violations of the Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act,9 the Americans with Disabilities Act,10 the Rehabilitation Act of 1973,* 11 and 42 USC 1983 and 1985; invasion of privacy; breach of fiduciary and public duties; and breach of contract. The trial court granted summary disposition to defendants, concluding that all of defendants’ actions arose out of the peer review process and therefore defendants were immune from liability under MCL 331.531. The court, as an alternative basis for granting summary disposition, relied on the doctrine of judicial nonintervention, which provides that courts will not review private hospitals’ staffing decisions.

The Court of Appeals, in a split decision, partially reversed the trial court’s award of summary disposition in favor of defendants,12 concluding that peer review immunity did not apply to statutory civil rights claims. The majority concluded that an alleged civil rights violation was not within the scope of peer review and that an alleged civil rights violation was “a malicious act.”13

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
719 N.W.2d 1, 475 Mich. 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feyz-v-mercy-memorial-hospital-mich-2006.