Joshi v. Professional Health Services, Inc.

817 F.2d 877, 260 U.S. App. D.C. 154
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1987
DocketNos. 85-5633 to 85-5635
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 817 F.2d 877 (Joshi v. Professional Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joshi v. Professional Health Services, Inc., 817 F.2d 877, 260 U.S. App. D.C. 154 (D.C. Cir. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion Per Curiam.

PER CURIAM:

This appeal raises a variety of questions arising out of a physician’s wide-ranging employment discrimination suit against her former employer, a one-time prospective employer, and several physicians. Holding that the defendants had not violated their obligations under a consent decree settling prior litigation among the parties and that the prospective employer had not refused to hire the plaintiff for unlawful reasons, the District Court granted judgment in their favor. In addition, the District Court sanctioned the plaintiff for discovery abuse. After review, we affirm the judgment in all respects.

I

Neither the long history of this litigation nor the saga of the parties’ stormy relationship need be recounted in detail. The following should suffice to set the stage for the questions before us. From July 2, 1978 until June 30, 1981, Professional Health Services, Inc. (Professional Health) provided emergency room physician services to Greater Southeast Community Hospital (the Hospital). Under their respective employment contracts with Professional Health, three physicians who were destined to meet one another in the trenches of litigation, Drs. Pratibha Joshi, Celeste Szewczyk, and Martha Gramlich, were employed in the Hospital’s emergency room.

In July 1980, shortly after being passed over for two promotions, Dr. Joshi filed two complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), and eventually lawsuits in federal district court in Maryland, asserting claims under the Equal Pay Act and alleging harassment and racially discriminatory denial of a promotion. In September 1980, concluding that her intractable behavior vis-a-vis her colleagues had made her impossible to work with, Professional Health fired Dr. Joshi. Pursuant to a consent order, however, the litigation was terminated and Dr. Joshi was reinstated in November of that year.

On June 30, 1981, the underlying contract between Professional Health and the [156]*156Hospital terminated in accordance with its terms. Conducting its own emergency room hiring, the Hospital chose not to hire Dr. Joshi. As a result, Dr. Joshi promptly filed suit in Maryland once again, alleging violations of the consent order by Professional Health, the Hospital, Dr. Szewczyk, and Dr. Gramlich; in addition, she alleged retaliation in violation of Title VII arising out of her 1980 EEOC complaints against the Hospital, Professional Health, and Dr. Szewczyk.1

The case was transferred to the District of Columbia where, following a six-day bench trial, the District Court held in favor of defendants on all claims. In addition, the trial court concluded that Dr. Joshi had abused the discovery process by failing to supply a requested disciplinary memorandum in her possession and that she had lied under oath during the course of a hearing before a United States Magistrate on the discovery issue. The District Court accordingly imposed sanctions on Dr. Joshi, requiring her to pay the costs incurred by defendants in obtaining the memo and litigating the discovery question.

II

Before this court, Dr. Joshi challenges all three aspects of the District Court’s decision. We discuss each in turn.

A

In her initial line of attack, Dr. Joshi charges that defendants violated the consent order in several respects, and thus should have been held in contempt.2 First, she claims that defendants failed to comply with paragraph 3 of the order, which states:

Plaintiff, Prathiba Joshi, will execute the [employment] contract ... attached to this Order.

Dr. Joshi contends that Professional Health’s two-month delay in signing the contract violated the provision. As the District Court correctly pointed out, however, the order neither specified a date by which the contract was to be executed nor required that it be executed promptly. (Indeed, the provision by its express terms imposed no obligation at all on Professional Health, but solely on Dr. Joshi.) The court therefore determined, and we agree, that the delay was not contemptuous.

Dr. Joshi next claims that the Hospital’s decision not to hire her when its contract with Professional Health expired violated the consent order. She argues that under her employment contract with Professional Health she could only be fired for cause; that the Hospital was bound as Professional Health’s successor; and that the Hospital’s decision not to rehire her (which she equates with a decision to fire her) was not grounded on cause. This line of reasoning is scarcely compelling, but whatever the merits of the argument may be, Dr. Joshi’s contentions in this respect are wholly irrelevant to her contempt claim. Dr. Joshi chose not to sue for breach of contract, but only for contempt of the consent order. This tack was ill-considered inasmuch as Professional Health fulfilled its specific duties under the order with respect to the employment contract [157]*157once it executed the agreement. In our view, Dr. Joshi’s contract claims, if any, lie outside the scope of the consent order itself; they cannot do service as the basis for a contempt citation.

Second, Dr. Joshi invokes paragraph 6 of the consent order, requiring that:

Defendant, Professional Health Services, Inc., shall remove from the personnel file of Plaintiff, Pratibha Joshi, all material documenting complaints or incidents entered in such file subsequent to July 18, 1980.

Apparently, two files that could be considered "personnel” files were maintained. A file located at Professional Health’s corporate office contained items such as Dr.' Joshi’s pay stubs, tax forms, and expense vouchers, and an emergency room file contained, among other things, complaints and accounts of incidents involving Dr. Joshi. Dr. Joshi contends that the consent order contemplated expungement of the emergency room file, and that defendants violated the order by expunging only the file at the corporate office. We agree with the District Court, however, that the import of this rather general provision is unclear and imprecise. The consent order directs Professional Health to expunge Dr. Joshi’s “personnel file.” That directive, framed in the singular, would thus seem on its face to require Professional Health to expunge its personnel file on Dr. Joshi, which it of course did. Dr. Joshi failed to establish that the file in the emergency room was under Professional Health’s control; indeed, quite the contrary appears to be the case. The evidence suggests that the file situated in the Hospital’s emergency room was a working file maintained by the Hospital’s staff.

As made clear by the confusion in this case, “personnel file” is not a self-defining term that admits of only one meaning, especially in a context where, as here, the professional employee is rendering contract services away from the employer’s premises. At the time that the consent order was drafted, Dr. Joshi obviously had an opportunity to specify the exact file or files to be expunged or otherwise to ensure that the provision was crafted in terms broad enough clearly to encompass all files containing adverse documents. Cfi 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6) (1982) (FOIA exemption for “personnel and medical files and similar files ”) (emphasis added).

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817 F.2d 877, 260 U.S. App. D.C. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joshi-v-professional-health-services-inc-cadc-1987.