Johansen v. Myers

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedAugust 28, 2025
Docket1:23-cv-00006
StatusUnknown

This text of Johansen v. Myers (Johansen v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johansen v. Myers, (S.D. Miss. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI SOUTHERN DIVISION

LANCE JOHANSEN and MISSISSIPPI ORTHOPEDIC INSTITUTE, PLLC PLAINTIFFS

v. CAUSE NO. 1:23CV6-LG-BWR

PHILIP MYERS; SINGING RIVER HEALTH SYSTEM. and JOHN DOES 1–10 DEFENDANTS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER CONCERNING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND PLAINTIFFS’ MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Plaintiff Lance Johansen and Defendant Philip Myers are orthopedic surgeons. Dr. Johansen operates his practice under the name Mississippi Orthopedic Institute, PLLC (“MOI”). Dr. Myers began working for MOI in August 2019. After several disputes arose between Dr. Johansen and Dr. Myers, but before the Employment Agreement expired, Singing River Health System (“SRHS”) hired Dr. Myers to open a competing orthopedic surgery clinic in the same building where MOI operated. Dr. Johansen and MOI sued for damages that allegedly arose from SRHS’s employment of Dr. Myers. Plaintiffs further claim that SRHS wrongfully failed to consider Dr. Johansen’s application for appointment and clinical privileges to practice medicine at its hospital. Dr. Myers has also filed counterclaims against Plaintiffs. Dr. Myers and SRHS have filed a [82] Motion for Summary Judgment, which has been fully briefed by the parties. Plaintiffs have filed a [84] Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, which is opposed by Dr. Myers. After reviewing the submissions of the parties, the record in this matter, and the applicable law, the Court finds that both Motions should be granted in part and denied in part for the reasons set forth below.1

BACKGROUND Dr. Myers entered into an Employment Agreement with Dr. Johansen’s business, MOI, in April 2019, and he began working for MOI as an orthopedic surgeon in August 2019. At that time, Dr. Johansen had privileges to practice medicine at Garden Park Hospital, which was owned by HCA Healthcare. Dr. Myers and Garden Park entered into a Recruiting Agreement in which Dr. Myers agreed to “maintain medical staff membership and privileges at [Garden Park]

Hospital in good standing . . . for at least forty-eight (48) months.” Ex. 3 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-3] at 3. Garden Park also gave Dr. Myers a $100,000 sign-on bonus, which Dr. Myers agreed to put in a joint account owned by MOI. In early 2020, Dr. Myers sent Dr. Johansen a letter claiming that the sign-on bonus had been misappropriated, that MOI had failed to pay him for “call coverage,” and that rent had been improperly deducted from his paychecks.

“Effective October 1, 2020, SRHS formally acquired Garden Park Hospital from HCA and renamed the hospital ‘Singing River Gulfport.’” Def.’s Memo. [83] at

1 The Court has conducted an independent jurisdictional inquiry and determined that it has jurisdiction over this case pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331. See Riley v. Bondi, 145 S. Ct. 2190, 2201 (2025)(holding that even if the parties fail to spot a jurisdictional issue or agree that the court has jurisdiction, the court cannot proceed unless it makes an independent determination that it has jurisdiction). 6. Dr. Johansen and other Garden Park physicians “were grandfathered onto the Medical Staff” at Singing River Gulfport when it acquired Garden Park. Ex. 12 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-12] at 1. However, Garden Park physicians were advised that they

“would have to go through the full credentialing process if [they] wanted to remain on the Medical Staff.” Id. On the same day that SRHS acquired Garden Park, Dr. Myers notified Plaintiffs by letter that Plaintiffs’ “continuing and material breaches of the Employment Agreement have left [him] no choice other than to terminate [his] employment under such agreement and seek employment elsewhere.” Ex. 7 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-8]. He stated that he would comply with the Employment

Agreement’s requirement of ninety days’ advance written notice of termination. After receipt of the ninety-day notice, Plaintiffs allegedly refused to continue paying Dr. Myers, so he stopped working for MOI on October 9, 2020. “In mid-to-late October 2020, SRHS opened an orthopedic clinic with Dr. Myers at the helm and in the Bayou Bernard office building where MOI was located.” Defs.’ Mem. [83] at 7. In April 2021, Dr. Johansen filed an application for

appointment and clinical privileges to practice medicine at Singing River Gulfport. On May 4, 2021, SRHS notified Dr. Johansen that it would begin “undertaking [a] full credentialing review which [would] include an evaluation of [his] ‘current competence, character, ethics, and other qualifications’ to determine whether [he satisfied] its standards to be a member of the Medical Staff [at Singing River Gulfport] with clinical privileges.” Ex. 12 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-12] at 1. SRHS requested information and releases from Dr. Johansen so that it could conduct this evaluation. Dr. Johansen signed the releases. It is unclear from the record whether Dr. Johansen submitted additional information in response to this request.

SRHS notified Dr. Johansen by letter dated October 26, 2021, that “a number of significant concerns have been raised relating to [his] qualifications for appointment and clinical privileges,” and it requested additional information from Dr. Johansen. Ex. 14 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-14] at 1. Dr. Johansen responded to this request on December 23, 2021, and he met with SRHS’s Credentials Committee on January 11, 2022. After that meeting, SRHS notified Dr. Johansen by letter that his application was still incomplete, and it cautioned him that “no further action

[would] be taken until [he provides] the information requested . . . and fully resolve[s] the questions and doubts that have been raised.” Id. It imposed a February 18, 2022, deadline for Dr. Johansen to “fully, completely, and accurately” respond to its request. Dr. Johansen responded to SRHS’s request by letter dated February 18, 2022. In March 2022, someone anonymously provided SRHS with a

multidisciplinary evaluation of Dr. Johansen that had been performed by Acumen Assessments in February 2020. SRHS took the position that Dr. Johansen should have voluntarily provided the Acumen evaluation to SRHS during the application and credentialing process. It asked Dr. Johansen to sign a release so that it could “communicate directly with Acumen” in order to learn “why [Dr. Johansen] obtained the evaluation, the results of the evaluation, and [Acumen’s findings and recommendations].” Ex. 23 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-23] at 1. Dr. Johansen refused to sign the release because he believed SRHS did not have the right to obtain his “personal medical information” that is protected by HIPAA. Ex. 1 to Defs.’ Mot. [82-1] at 41.

SRHS’s Credentials Committee determined that Dr. Johansen’s application was incomplete because he did not sign the Acumen-related release. On April 21, 2022, SRHS notified Dr. Johansen that it had decided not to process his application, so his Medical Staff appointment and clinical privileges to practice at Singing River Gulfport would expire on April 27, 2022. Oschner Health, the owner of the Bayou Bernard office building, required Plaintiffs to move out of the office building because the lease required Dr. Johansen to be part of the active medical staff of Singing

River Gulfport. Plaintiffs originally filed this lawsuit against Dr. Myers, SRHS, and several of MOI’s former employees2 in the Circuit Court of Harrison County, Mississippi, First Judicial District. All of the defendants removed the case to this Court, and Plaintiffs filed an [29] Amended Complaint. Defendants filed a [3] Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ state law claims. The Court granted Defendants’ Motion and

permitted Plaintiffs to amend their Complaint.

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