Hughes v. Boris CA2/5

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 29, 2022
DocketB306291
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hughes v. Boris CA2/5 (Hughes v. Boris CA2/5) 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
Hughes v. Boris CA2/5, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 11/29/22 Hughes v. Boris CA2/5 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION FIVE

KENNETH B. HUGHES, B306291

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. v. No. BC594068)

GEORGE THEO BORIS et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Maureen Duffy-Lewis, Judge. Affirmed. Prindle, Goetz, Barnes, & Reinholtz and Jack R. Reinholtz; Darius Asly for Defendants and Appellants. Law Offices of Howard A. Kapp and Howard A. Kapp; Finnegan & Diba, Kasey Diba, and Matthew Sichi for Plaintiff and Respondent. Kenneth B. Hughes (Hughes), a plastic surgeon, sued George Theo Boris (Boris), a fellow surgeon, for breach of contract, conversion, intentional interference with contractual relations, and defamation (among other things). A jury found in favor of Hughes and awarded him $3.4 million in compensatory and punitive damages. We consider Boris’s various challenges to the judgment: (1) whether the trial court erred by allowing one of Hughes’s damages experts to opine about the average price Hughes was paid for surgeries and another damages expert to assign lost profits from Hughes’s corporation to Hughes individually, (2) whether the court erred in limiting evidence of malpractice claims asserted against Hughes that Boris was permitted to introduce, (3) whether substantial evidence supports the jury’s award of emotional distress damages, (4) whether oral testimony about the content of patient consent forms was properly admitted and (5) whether damages awarded for intentional interference with contractual relations are excessive.

I. BACKGROUND In 2011, after completing a six-year residency and a one- year fellowship in plastic and cosmetic surgery at, respectively, the University of Kansas and Harvard University, Hughes moved to Los Angeles and began work for Boris, who operated an ambulatory surgery center, Boris Cosmetic. Under the terms of a written agreement drafted by Hughes, Hughes would provide Boris with cosmetic surgery services on an independent contractor basis for a period of three years in return for a salary that would grow over the course of the first year to $375,000. Seven months after Hughes began working for Boris, the parties renegotiated their written agreement to reflect the

2 growth in Hughes’s practice so that he would be paid at an annual rate of $550,000. The parties subsequently amended their agreement again so that Hughes was paid at a rate of $40,000 per month or $480,000 per year. Beginning in July 2014, Hughes directed Boris’s bookkeeper to make all payments to a corporation he formed in December 2013: Elite Plastic Surgery, Inc. (Elite). In September 2014, the parties orally agreed on a yet another change in the terms of Hughes’s compensation because Hughes was performing the lion’s share of the center’s surgeries. Under the new arrangement, fees from patients seeking Hughes’s services would be split evenly between the parties. Boris’s share of the split fees was meant to compensate him for providing Hughes with access to the surgery center, its nurses, supplies, and administrative staff. A few months later, the parties revised the fee-splitting agreement so that Hughes received an increased share of the revenue (55/45). In August 2015, as a result of ongoing disputes over compensation and the surgery center’s loss of accreditation due to improper record-keeping, Hughes stopped working for Boris. The following month, Hughes sued Boris and various entities owned by Boris. Hughes’s operative complaint asserts 12 causes of action against Boris and the related defendants. In the main, the claims allege Boris failed to pay Hughes in accordance with their oral agreements; converted “before and after” photographs from Hughes’s time at the University of Kansas and Harvard University by placing them on Boris’s website without Hughes’s permission; intentionally interfered with Hughes’s contractual relations with patients; and defamed Hughes. The allegedly

3 defamatory statements did not refer to Hughes’s corporation Elite—only to Hughes himself. A significant portion of the 18-day trial on the operative complaint was devoted to testimony from Hughes and a number of current and former employees of the surgery center concerning a pattern of irregular business practices and record-keeping by Boris with regard to patient referrals, files, and payments. Hughes testified he found his patients were often redirected to other doctors at the center, he was denied credit for bringing patients to the center, and he was unable to calculate what Boris owed him by looking at patient files because some files were incomplete and other files were entirely missing. A former medical assistant supported Hughes’s testimony in this regard. The medical assistant explained patient intake forms were routinely altered so that they falsely credited Boris with patients brought in by Hughes. The assistant also revealed that Boris, unbeknownst to Hughes, regularly offered discounts to Hughes’s patients if they agreed to have their surgery performed by a doctor at the center other than Hughes. Staff from the center also testified that patient files were often missing, incomplete, inaccurately reconstructed, and lacked proper documentation for cash payments and payments from patient credit agencies. Staff also testified that even after Hughes stopped working at the surgery center they were directed by Boris, or his son who managed the surgery center, not to tell Hughes’s patients of his departure in order to retain them as patients of the center.1

1 At trial, Boris conceded Hughes did at least half of the center’s surgeries in 2014 and 2015. Staff from Boris’s surgery

4 Hughes called two damages experts to testify at trial, and the proof of damages was influenced by the evidence presented (and just recounted) regarding the deficiencies and inaccuracies in the patient files. The first expert was David Nolte (Nolte), a certified public accountant who calculated the number of surgeries performed by Hughes during the relevant period.2 A second expert, David Dass (Dass), a plastic surgeon who had worked at Boris Cosmetic during part of Hughes’s tenure and later competed with Hughes for patients after leaving Boris Cosmetic, calculated an average price for each surgery identified by Nolte. Nolte relied on these average price numbers from Dass (plus Nolte’s own count of the number of surgeries) to calculate the amounts owed to Hughes as a result of Boris’s alleged breach of contract and Hughes’s lost profits. Boris presented testimony from a single damages expert at trial: Victoria Wilkerson, a certified public accountant. She assumed the patient files maintained by Boris were accurate and complete in arriving at her different damages calculation. The trial jury, after four days of deliberations, returned a verdict in favor of Hughes on several causes of action. The jury awarded Hughes $3,275,752 in compensatory damages: $511,284 for breach of contract or quantum meruit; $1,681,696 for lost profits; $422,000 in emotional distress damages; and $660,772 for

center estimated Hughes performed more than half of the center’s surgeries. 2 Although Nolte reviewed various financial and patient records from the surgery center, he ultimately did not rely on them; instead, he relied on a surgery log.

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Bluebook (online)
Hughes v. Boris CA2/5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-boris-ca25-calctapp-2022.