Franco v. Yale University

161 F. Supp. 2d 133, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14350, 2001 WL 987670
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedAugust 10, 2001
Docket3:00CV1927(GLG)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 F. Supp. 2d 133 (Franco v. Yale University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franco v. Yale University, 161 F. Supp. 2d 133, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14350, 2001 WL 987670 (D. Conn. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION

GOETTEL, District Judge.

This case involves a doctor who is having difficulty remedying a disease which he finds difficult to diagnose. The defendants move to dismiss the Amended Complaint.

The Amended Complaint, in stark disregard of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2) (stating that the Complaint should contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief’), contains some ninety-two paragraphs running twenty-three pages. We will attempt to summarize this opus.

After the jurisdictional and venue allegations (which are not contested), the plaintiff sets forth his training as a ear-diothoracic surgeon and his experience. Paragraph 8 of the Complaint notes that the plaintiff “reasonably anticipated being able to work productively and profitably in his chosen profession, support his family in a way reflecting his accomplishments, and compensate from age 36 onward for the protracted years of training and residency at meager rates of compensation.” The Complaint then sets forth the three appointments which the plaintiff had at the Yale University School of Medicine (“School of Medicine” or “Medical School”). The Complaint also notes that the School of Medicine is located in the Yale-New Haven Hospital but that neither Yale University nor the Medical School owns, operates, or controls the Hospital which was the primary facility for surgical procedures performed by Medical School physicians and outside community physicians. (The significance of this distinction will be noted subsequently.) The Complaint then describes the three individual doctor defendants as being “Yale employees in the section of Cardiothoracic surgery.” 1

The Complaint then describes the plaintiffs three full-time appointments at the School of Medicine, the first two for a three year period and the third for a five year period, which would have expired on June 30, 1999 but was extended by the School of Medicine for another six months (at half pay) at the plaintiffs urgent request. The Complaint also states that “[ajside from written designations of salary and other emoluments, the terms and conditions and mutual promises and obligations of Dr. Franco’s employment were not memorialized.” (CompU 13.) The next paragraph of the Complaint alleges that the terms and conditions were “comprised of, and understood to be, matters of professional custom and usage .... ” (ComplJ 14.)

The Complaint then launches into a twelve page description of internal political battles in the cardiology section of the Hospital between community physicians (i.e., private surgeons) headed by the individually named defendant doctors, and alleges that the individual defendants did not refer cases to the plaintiff, and that the doctors in the cardiology group engaged in private practice at significantly higher levels of compensation than they would have been earned as academic members of the cardiology department. The last named individual defendant, Dr. Ronald Merrill, became Chair of the Cardiology Department in 1993. The Complaint alleges that *136 Merrill was generally not accepted by the senior faculty of the School of Medicine who believed that “he was in the service of [the Hospital] advancing private physician interests over those of the Medical School faculty.” (Comply 23.) The Complaint further alleges that the first named individual defendant, Dr. Elefteriades, became Section Chief of Cardiology 2 in 1995 and shortly thereafter informed the plaintiff that “we do not anticipate offering reappointment at the expiration [on June 30, 1999] of your present term of appointment.” (ComplJ 29.) Plaintiff also alleges that Dr. Elefteriades “adduced bogus charges of inadequate performance and lack of productivity” on the part of the plaintiff. (ComplJ 30.) The Complaint further alleges that, starting in 1995, the referral of surgical cases to the plaintiff decreased and that Yale administrators condoned this situation. The Complaint continues that the plaintiffs salary declined from $260,000 in 1993 and 1994 to $188,000 during his last few years at the Hospital, and that as a result, the plaintiff “spent his life savings and all tax rebates and incurred significant debt.” 3 (ComplJ 36.)

The Complaint then goes into great detail concerning the formation of Cardiotho-racic Surgical Associates, P.C. (“the Group”) which was to become the primary clinical practice vehicle of the section within the School of Medicine. Formation of the Group integrated two cardiothoracic surgery practices to create the first combined Yale and privately based surgical group in the New Haven area. The Complaint does not tell us precisely how many doctors were a part of the Group, but does mention that the letterhead listed six doctors who were shareholders in the Group. (Another allegation of the Complaint indicates that there were more than thirty doctors in the section). The six listed doctors included Dr. Elefteriades and Dr. Kopf, another named individual defendant. Plaintiff asserts that Yale allowed this “Group” to form because those doctors would otherwise have left the Medical School, taking their patients and referrals elsewhere. Plaintiff also asserts that the remainder of doctors in this section, who were not members of the Group, were to function as an independent cost center responsible for meeting its own expenses and generating its own revenues. The “Group” had no responsibility for the clinical practice or other activities or expenses of the remainder of the section. This, according to the Complaint, amounted to Yale “willfully and arbitrarily disenfranchising] the ‘remainder of the Section.’ ” (ComplJ 44.) The Complaint alleges that this was financially very beneficial to members of the Group but caused financial loss to the other surgeons from the Medical School.

The Complaint then sets forth six paragraphs concerning other indignities that the plaintiff contends he suffered at the Hospital under the heading “Continuing Actions Adverse to Dr. Franco.” The next twelve paragraphs concern the plaintiffs efforts to relocate to another institution and the claim that the plaintiff did not get support in his relocation efforts from the defendants, and that this “contravened professional protocol, custom and usage, [and] was purposeful and malicious .... ” (ComplJ 58.) Plaintiff claims that the defendant doctors “maliciously impeded Dr. *137 Franco’s relocation efforts by disparaging and defaming Dr. Franco in his profession to prospective employers.” (Comply 60.) We assume by the foregoing allegations that the plaintiff means they did not give him a favorable recommendation, which conforms to their earlier opinions about him.

The Complaint then re-alleges that during Ms last four years at the Hospital as a result of the foregoing, the plaintiff “was in danger of mortgage and other loan defaults and was living with his family on a stringent budget, entirely inappropriate to an Associate Professor of Surgery at the Medical School.” (Comply 64.) The Complaint then states that at the conclusion of his extended appointment, the plaintiff secured a position at Nebraska University School of Medicine. (See infra

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 F. Supp. 2d 133, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14350, 2001 WL 987670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franco-v-yale-university-ctd-2001.