Fox v. Kramer

994 P.2d 343, 93 Cal. Rptr. 2d 497, 22 Cal. 4th 531, 22 Cal. 531, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 2805, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2082, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 1566
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 2000
DocketS077861
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 994 P.2d 343 (Fox v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Kramer, 994 P.2d 343, 93 Cal. Rptr. 2d 497, 22 Cal. 4th 531, 22 Cal. 531, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 2805, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2082, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 1566 (Cal. 2000).

Opinion

Opinion

MOSK, J.

In this matter we address the question whether plaintiffs in a malpractice action could subpoena the expert trial testimony of an investigator for the California Department of Health Services (hereafter DHS), or refer at trial to a draft preliminary report he prepared for the DHS, when the investigator had relied substantially on hospital peer review committee records in forming his opinions. The superior court granted a motion by the DHS to quash the subpoena; it also ruled that plaintiffs could not introduce or refer to the draft preliminary report summarizing his conclusions.

*535 As will appear, we conclude that the superior court properly excluded the testimony and draft preliminary report of the DHS investigator, who reviewed the confidential hospital peer review materials in the course of his official duties. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.

I

Plaintiffs are Wendy Fox (hereafter Ms. Fox) and her husband, Richard B. Fox, M.D., who has staff privileges at Good Samaritan Hospital (hereafter the hospital), a defendant herein. In 1992, Ms. Fox underwent a colonoscopy procedure at hospital, performed by defendants Richard J. Kramer, M.D., and Michael J. Kushlan, M.D.

In the procedure, the interior of the large intestine is examined for abnormalities by use of an endoscope, a flexible rod inserted through the rectum. Ms. Fox was informed of certain risks associated with the procedure, including bowel perforation and possible discomfort and pain; she gave her informed consent. The procedure was performed using a form of anesthesia known as “conscious sedation,” in which pain- and anxiety-relieving medication is administered that does not render the patient completely unconscious, permitting the patient to communicate discomfort and change positions as necessary.

Ms. Fox was anxious when she arrived at the hospital and while awaiting the procedure, but said she “always gets this way” and wanted to go forward with the colonoscopy. During the procedure, she experienced pain and moaned or asked the physicians to wait or stop a moment; they did so, administered more medication, and, after she indicated that it was all right to continue, completed the procedure. She recalls that she moaned and asked the physicians to “wait a minute,” but otherwise does not remember anything about the procedure except two or three periods of consciousness, of two or three seconds each, during which she felt pain.

In the recovery area, Ms. Fox dreamed that she screamed during the colonoscopy, begged the physicians to stop, and fought them off. In the succeeding days, she began to believe that she had been abused during the colonoscopy. She developed a fear of medical personnel and suffered from nightmares.

Dr. and Ms. Fox complained to the hospital, which discussed the incident at a peer review committee meeting attended by Dr. Fox. Dr. Fox later claimed that one of the nurses who assisted at the colonoscopy stated at the meeting that Ms. Fox screamed during the procedure.

*536 In September 1993, Dr. and Ms. Fox commenced this action for malpractice, alleging, inter alia, that Ms. Fox was inappropriately sedated and that the physicians proceeded with the colonoscopy procedure after she withdrew her consent. They sought damages for injuries to Ms. Fox, including post-traumatic stress syndrome from the pain and trauma, and, on behalf of Dr. Fox, for loss of consortium.

More than three years later, in November 1996, Dr. and Ms. Fox lodged a complaint with the DHS concerning the hospital’s handling of the colonoscopy procedure. Michael Schnitzer, M.D., was assigned to investigate. To this end, he interviewed Dr. Fox, examined Ms. Fox’s medical records, and reviewed the minutes of the hospital peer review committee meeting; he did not interview the physicians who performed the colonoscopy. He prepared a draft preliminary report dated November 22, 1996. The report was never finalized and the DHS took no administrative action against the hospital on the basis of the investigation.

Shortly before trial, plaintiffs subpoenaed the DHS draft preliminary report; they received a redacted copy from DHS counsel on January 29, 1997. Several paragraphs of the report were blacked out or crossed out. The unredacted portions of the report summarized the allegation that Ms. Fox had asked the physicians to stop the colonoscopy procedure. The report included a section entitled “Conclusions”; its first subsection, “Patient’s Rights,” which was crossed out and initialed by Dr. Schnitzer, states that “the patient at the time of the procedure was in obvious distress and the procedure should have been stopped.” The last page of the report recites facts from Dr. Kramer’s “operative report” to the effect that Ms. Fox was extremely anxious at the beginning of the procedure and was crying, panting, and hyperventilating. The final paragraph states: “During [Ms.] Fox’s procedure, even though her mind was clouded by the medication given, I believe she did ask her physicians to stop the procedure and her wishes were not respected. She did not receive appropriate considerate and respectful care.”

Four days before trial, Dr. and Ms. Fox moved to augment their expert list to include Dr. Schnitzer and subpoenaed his testimony. The DHS, through the Attorney General, moved to quash the subpoena on the ground that Dr. Schnitzer’s conclusions relied on hospital peer review materials unavailable to the public under Evidence Code section 1157, but produced to the DHS in confidence in compliance with its statutory mandate to oversee the licensing and regulation of California hospitals. The DHS contended that Dr. Schnitzer’s opinions and conclusions were also entitled to the “official information” privilege of Evidence Code section 1040, because he could not *537 testify “without immediately implicating and compromising the confidentiality of the materials he reviewed.”

Dr. Schnitzer submitted a declaration averring that he had “relied substantially upon the peer review materials” in formulating his understanding of the facts and in reaching the opinions and conclusions in the draft preliminary report; although he had reviewed other materials in the course of the investigation he was unable to offer opinion testimony without reference to and reliance on the hospital peer review committee records. The superior court granted the motion to quash.

At the hearing on the motion, plaintiffs also sought to subpoena Dr. Schnitzer as an expert on patient’s rights; that motion, too, was denied. The superior court explained: “It is inappropriate at this late stage to introduce Dr. Schnitzer. It appears that he very well may not be competent to testify in the area indicated. In addition, it is certainly very late in the game, too late in the game at this point, to call him in.”

Dr. Kramer and Dr. Kushlan made a motion in limine, citing Evidence Code section 1157, to instruct Dr. and Ms. Fox “to at no time, or in any manner, allude to, reference, or disclose to the jury that peer review/quality assurance meetings were conducted” at the hospital after the procedure performed on Ms. Fox. The motion was granted.

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994 P.2d 343, 93 Cal. Rptr. 2d 497, 22 Cal. 4th 531, 22 Cal. 531, 2000 Daily Journal DAR 2805, 2000 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 2082, 2000 Cal. LEXIS 1566, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-kramer-cal-2000.