in Re: Texas Health Resources and Trumbull Insurance Company

472 S.W.3d 895, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 8988, 2015 WL 5029272
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2015
Docket05-15-00813-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 472 S.W.3d 895 (in Re: Texas Health Resources and Trumbull Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re: Texas Health Resources and Trumbull Insurance Company, 472 S.W.3d 895, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 8988, 2015 WL 5029272 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by Chief Justice Wright

This petition for writ of mandamus concerns the trial court’s July 1, 2015 order that requires production of a portion of a January 15, 2015 note maintained in the file related to a claim on an insurance policy written by Trumbull Insurance Company. After inspecting the document in camera, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion in ordering portions of the document produced.

Factual and Procedural Background

This is a lawsuit filed by Nina Pham, a nurse who contracted the Ebola virus while caring for a patient at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas. Shortly after learning Pham had contracted the Ebola virus, Presbyterian filed a first report of injury on behalf of Pham. Pham is presently receiving workers’ compensation benefits.

Texas Health Resources is the corporate parent of Presbyterian. Pham contends that Texas Health Resources failed to properly prepare its affiliated hospitals, including Presbyterian, to respond to Ebola and that Texas Health Resources, in an attempt to mitigate the economic and rep-utational damage of the incident, improperly invaded Pham’s privacy while she was being treated as a patient at Presbyterian. She has brought causes of action against Texas Health Resources for negligence, negligent undertaking, gross negligence, premises liability, invasion of privacy, and fraud. Texas Health Resources is the only defendant in the case.

In conjunction with its answer, Texas Health Resources filed a plea in abatement and plea to the jurisdiction in which it contended that Pham’s claims should be dismissed or abated because the Texas Department of Insurance Division of Workers’ Compensation has exclusive jurisdiction over the question whether Texas Health Resources was Pham’s employer under the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act at the time she contracted the Ebola virus. Around the same time, Trumbull Insurance Company, the insurer who wrote the single insurance policy that provides workers’ compensation and employers’ liability coverage to Texas Health Resources and to Presbyterian as an additional insured under the policy issued to Texas Health Resources, 1 sought a benefit *899 review conference with the Division of Workers’ Compensation concerning whether Texas Health Resources and Presbyterian were Pham’s co-employers for purposes of the workers’ compensation act. 2 Pham sought a temporary restraining order and temporary injunction seeking, among other things, to prevent Texas Health Resources or Presbyterian from claiming or designating Pham as an employee of Texas Health Resources before any other adjudicative body in a manner that would affect the case in the trial court, to restrain the benefit review conference, and to prohibit Texas Health Resources and Presbyterian from submitting any of the matters then pending before the trial court for adjudication before any other court, tribunal, or administrative agency. Pham also served Texas Health Resources and Trumbull with subpoenas seeking the testimony of corporate representatives of Texas Health Resources and Trumbull at the temporary injunction hearing and requiring the production of documents prior to the- date of the temporary injunction hearing.

The trial court granted and subsequently extended by agreement of the parties a temporary restraining order prohibiting Texas Health Resources .and Trumbull from “undertaking any act or attempt to adjudicate whether THR and Presbyterian are co-employers of Nina Pham for, purposes of application of the Workers’ Compensation Act in front of the Division of Workers Compensation.” .The trial court also ordered discovery, including the production of documents, on the issues raised in the plea in abatement, plea to the jurisdiction, and application for temporary injunction. The trial court ordered that the discovery take, place before the expiration of the temporary restraining order.

*900 Among the documents responsive to the subpoena was a January 15, 2015 claim note, specifically the 1/15/2015 — 1:17 p.m. entry on pages 6-8 of the “Part II — Claim Diary Notes,” that is the subject of this petition for writ of mandamus. The note was written by Lisa Zacchia, a claims adjustor employed by The Hartford. The inandamus record -shows that Hartford and Trumbull are affiliated entities and Hartford administers policies and processes claims for Trumbull. The note documents a conversation among Zacchia, Don Collins, associate general counsel for Texas Health Resources, and Liz Spurgeon, risk manager for Texas Health Resources. At least with respect to some portions of the note, the note does not reveal whose thoughts are reflected in the note. 3 According to Trumbull, the note was included in a file maintained to document communications and activities related to the investigation and defense of claims under the employers’ liability portion of the Texas Health Resources workers’ compensation and employers’ liability policy. All of the notes were made after Pham sent a demand letter outlining her claims to Texas Health Resources and Presbyterian. The note that is the subject of the petition for writ of mandamus was made before Pham filed suit against Texas Health Resources. Texas Health Resources and Trumbull objected to the production of the note and certain other notes in the same file, asserted the' lawyer-client privilege and work product privilege, and withheld the documents.

Pham argued that the communications withheld were discoverable and sought to compel their production. Following a hearing and inspection of the withheld documents, the trial court signed an order compelling production of only portions 4 of a single note — the January 15, 2015 1:17 p.m. claim note that is the subject of this petition for writ of mandamus.

Availability of Mandamus Relief

Pham argues that mandamus relief is not appropriate because interlocutory review of the trial court’s determination of the application for temporary injunction provides an adequate appellate remedy for the harm that relators contend they will suffer if the trial court’s order is' allowed to stand. We reject this argument. Mandamus may issue when a trial court erroneously orders the production of privileged information, and no other adequate remedy at law exists. Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 843 (Tex.1992) (orig.proceeding). An order that erroneously compels disclosure of privileged information, such as documents covered by the attorney-client privilege, that materially affects the rights of the aggrieved party cannot be cured by reversal on appeal. Walker, 827 S.W.2d at 843. As our sister court has noted, “Clearly, once privileged information is disclosed, there is no way to retrieve it; therefore, mandamus is an appropriate remedy to prevent the publication of confidential documents.” Pittsburgh Corning Corp. v. Caldwell, 861 S.W.2d 423, 424 (Tex. *901

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Bluebook (online)
472 S.W.3d 895, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 8988, 2015 WL 5029272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-texas-health-resources-and-trumbull-insurance-company-texapp-2015.