Gerner v. Superior Court of L.A. Cnty.

204 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595, 1 Cal. App. 5th 301, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 559
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedJuly 8, 2016
DocketB268621
StatusPublished

This text of 204 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595 (Gerner v. Superior Court of L.A. Cnty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerner v. Superior Court of L.A. Cnty., 204 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595, 1 Cal. App. 5th 301, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 559 (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

CHANEY, Acting P.J.

Robert Gerner, M.D., a psychiatrist, petitioned on December 3, 2015, for review of a November 10, 2015 order of Respondent Court (Hon. Mark A. Borenstein), requiring compliance with an investigational administrative subpoena of the Department *598of Consumer Affairs, acting on behalf of the Medical Board of California (the Board), seeking a patient's records.1 The patient had made a complaint against Dr. Gerner, but then withdrew the complaint and directed Dr. Gerner not to disclose his treatment records, which include medical histories, treatment notes, lab data, and communications with the patient.

We issued a stay and an order requiring Respondent Court to show cause why it should not be ordered to vacate and reverse its order compelling compliance with the Board's subpoena. Granting the petition, we hold that the Board has failed to establish any exception to the patient's invocation of the phychotherapist-patient privilege provided by Evidence Code section 1014, which precludes the subpoena's enforcement.2

Background

Dr. Gerner, licensed as a physician by the Board since 1973, was Board Certified in Psychiatry in 1977. On March 23, 2014, the Board received a written consumer complaint from one of Dr. Gerner's patients-identified in this proceeding as T.O.-regarding care he had received from Dr. Gerner. Concluding that the complaint indicated Dr. Gerner may have engaged in unprofessional conduct, gross negligence, or excess treatment and prescribing in violation of various Business and Professions Code provisions, the Board opened an investigation.

On June 21, 2014, the investigation unit issued an Investigational Subpoena Duces Tecum To Produce Papers And Documents, for Dr. Gerner's treatment records concerning patient T.O. The subpoena commands Dr. Gerner to appear and "testify and to answer questions propounded to you in connection with the above titled investigation and to bring with you, and there produce, any and all writings ..., including but not limited to, all the papers, books, accounts, documents and records described in the attached list," or to produce a certified copy and a Declaration of Custodian of Records for each requested record.3

Dr. Gerner did not produce the subpoenaed records.

Over a year later, on August 4, 2015, the Board filed a Motion and Petition For Order Compelling Compliance With Investigational Subpoena, supported by declarations of the investigator and a medical consultant. (Awet Kidane, et al. v. Robert Hugh Gerner, M.D.,Super. Ct. L.A. County No. BS157033.) The investigator's declaration, and his attached draft investigation report, sets forth the events leading up to the subpoena's issuance.4

*599The investigator's report states that on May 16, 2014, a few days after the investigator's first conversation with patient T.O., he received from the patient a published report of a case study in which the patient had participated (apparently commenced while he was living and being treated in Switzerland), published in a 2012 issue of the Journal of Medical Case Reports, entitled, "High dose methylphenidate treatment in adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder : a case report." The study had indicated that the patient's symptoms of adult ADHD and obsessive compulsive disorder dramatically improved only after treatment with higher-than-normal doses of Ritalin.

On May 20, 2014, the investigator met with the patient and obtained his authorization for release of Dr. Gerner's treatment records. He mailed the authorization and a request for copies of the patient's records to Dr. Gerner on June 9, 2014. The investigator also obtained (apparently without subpoena) Dr. Gerner's Controlled Substances Utilization Review (CURES) Report ( Health & Saf.Code, § 11165 ), listing prescriptions Dr. Gerner had written for T.O.5

On June 12, 2014, however, the investigator received the patient's telephonic and email communication that he wanted to "rescind" his complaint against Dr. Gerner, stating it had been filed prematurely, when he was "not seeing clearly."6 The next day the patient provided the investigator with a copy of his request to Dr. Gerner that his records not be released to the Board-a request that Dr. Gerner honored.7

The patient's March 23, 2014 complaint to the Board (later withdrawn) about Dr. Gerner's treatment had been in the form of an Online Complaint Summary on the Board's Web site. The complaint included two references to communications with Dr. Gerner: It stated that Dr. Gerner "has lied to me about my treatment, trying to trick me to believe that the medication has not been slowly changed and substituted"; and that the patient was so depressed and sick "that I would contact [Dr. Gerner] out of desperation at least twice a week trying to feel better...."

The investigating officer's draft investigation report recounts a few additional communications about which patient T.O. had told him:

-At the outset of his treatment the patient agreed with Dr. Gerner's opinion to decrease his medications from 500 milligrams *600per day (which he had received from his doctor in Switzerland) to 150 milligrams per day;

-After treatment for about six months the patient persuaded Dr. Gerner to return him to his previous dosage, but Dr. Gerner "continuously told him this was too much medication";

-After about eight months, when Dr. Gerner sensed the patient was not taking his dosage advice, Dr. Gerner "started threatening [the patient] by telling him that the DEA was going to come to his house and arrest him for possessing an excessive amount of controlled substances"; and

-After about a year, and after having complained to the Board, the patient spoke to Dr. Gerner about changes in his body and reactions to the medication; Dr. Gerner told him he was taking too much medication, that it was having an effect on his body, and insisted it would work effectively if he took the recommended doses.

On July 6, 2014, the investigator asked the Board's physician-consultant, Dr. Jill Klessig, M.D., a licensee in internal medicine, to review the case. In her July 27, 2014 declaration supporting the subpoena request, Dr. Klessig concluded that "it appears possible that there was a serious violation of the standard of care committed by Dr. Gerner," based on what appeared to be unusually large doses of Ritalin-a central nervous system stimulant with serious potential side effects-and other related drugs.8 After briefly discussing usual dosages and risks of overdosage, she concluded (without providing any reasons or authority) that "[i]n order to determine that the allegations are true, it is necessary to obtain the medical records of [the patient] from Dr. Gerner. The records should be the complete medical records, including (but not limited to) progress notes, phone calls, prescriptions and refills, billing, diagnostic testing, outside medical records, and referrals/consultations."

At the November 10, 2015 unreported hearing on the Board's motion for the subpoena's enforcement, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
204 Cal. Rptr. 3d 595, 1 Cal. App. 5th 301, 2016 Cal. App. LEXIS 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerner-v-superior-court-of-la-cnty-calctapp5d-2016.