Kansas Medical Mutual Insurance v. Svaty

244 P.3d 642, 291 Kan. 597
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 10, 2010
Docket102,075, 102,164
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 244 P.3d 642 (Kansas Medical Mutual Insurance v. Svaty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansas Medical Mutual Insurance v. Svaty, 244 P.3d 642, 291 Kan. 597 (kan 2010).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

This case arises from the consolidation of an original action in mandamus and a collateral order appeal, both filed by Kansas Medical Mutual Insurance Co. (KaMMCO). KaMMCO seeks relief from a discovery order entered in a pending medical malpractice action. KaMMCO, which is not a party in the underlying medical malpractice action and does not insure the malpractice defendant, argues that the district court failed to “protect [its] privileges, to protect its confidential and proprietary information, [and] to reheve it from the undue burden of complying with the onerous discovery sought.” The plaintiff in the underlying medical *602 malpractice action argues the discovery is reasonably calculated to lead to evidence of bias on the part of the defense expert, who is insured by KaMMCO, and that KaMMCO has not met its burden of establishing the applicability of privileges or the burdensome nature of the discovery.

We first address our jurisdiction and conclude that we lack jurisdiction to consider this appeal under the collateral order doctrine. Consequently, the appeal from the district court’s decision (Case No. 102,164) is dismissed. We find, however, that a writ of mandamus is an available remedy in this case where a nonparty has asserted privileges that could not be protected on a direct appeal from the underlying action. We also conclude that a writ of mandamus is an appropriate remedy because the district court did not perform the duties imposed by this court in Berst v. Chipman, 232 Kan. 180, 653 P.2d 107 (1982), relating to discovery requests served on a nonparty who asserts objections of privilege, confidentiality, irrelevance, and burden. Consequently, we enter a writ of mandamus in Case No. 102,075, granting KaMMCO’s petition in part and denying it in part, and we remand for further proceedings.

Facts and Procedural Background

Jeanette Allen filed the underlying medical malpractice action against William Slater, M.D. During pretrial discovery, Dr. Slater designated Dr. Ted Macy as his expert witness. The use of Dr. Macy as an expert became a point of contention, leading Allen to file a motion to strike Dr. Macy as an expert. Judge Ron Svaty, the district judge presiding over the underlying medical malpractice action, denied the motion but allowed additional discovery regarding Dr. Macy and his opinions. In addition to interrogatories seeking supplementation of Dr. Macy’s opinions and some additional information, Allen served a notice of subpoena duces tecum to take the deposition of officials at KaMMCO. Dr. Macy is an insured of KaMMCO, and Allen believed this formed a connection between Dr. Macy and Dr. Slater because Dr. Slater testified at his deposition that he was insured “by KaMMCO or a branch of KaMMCO.”

*603 Allen, in the “Notice to Take Deposition and Subpoena Duces Tecum," included a section labeled “Background and Basis for Subpoena.” As part of that background, Allen noted that Ka-MMCO is a “ ‘member-owned’ insurance company providing insurance protection for health care professionals.” Quoting information from KaMMCO’s website, Allen pointed out that KaMMCO “recognizes that ‘avoiding claims and their financial consequences’ is important to health care professionals” and that KaMMCO “has established a claims policy that ‘aggressively defends members.’ ” Allen further quoted other statements on the website that referred to building a “ ‘defense team’ ” and to “the importance of a strong defense, ardent support, and ‘member involvement.’ ” Allen concluded the background and basis section of the document by stating: “One of the ‘duties and responsibilities’ of a KaMMCO Insurance Claim Adjustor/Medical Liability Analyst is to ‘locate and obtain experts.’ . . . Defendant William Slater, M.D., and his designated expert witness, Ted Macy, M.D. are fellow members of KaMMCO.”

Allen then made the following requests:

“1. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representaüve(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of‘member-owner’ benefits, interests and duties;
“2. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representaüve(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of ‘aggressive member defense and protection,’ including any advice, suggestions, tips and/or guidelines for giving testimony for both (a) members being sued for malpractice and (b) members who serve as defense expert witnesses in malpractice cases;
“3. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representative(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of the benefits of ‘avoiding the financial consequences of claims,’ including the financial impact of the cost of claims on the cost of insurance premiums;
“4. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representative(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of the methods, policies and procedures utilized when ‘locating and obtaining’ the expert witness services of Dr. Macy in this case; the nature and scope of Dr. Macy’s ‘member involvement’ as an expert witness on Dr. Slater’s ‘defense team’ in this case; the identities of any KaMMCO personnel who have had any contact with Dr. Macy regarding this case; and the information exchanged between KaMMCO and Dr. Macy regarding this case.
“5. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representative^) most knowledgeable in the areas of any claims, with the exception of the *604 claim by Jeanette Allen, reviewed by Dr. Macy for KaMMCO, regardless of whether any written report or expert testimony followed;
“6. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representative(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of any claims reviewed by Dr. Slater for KaMMCO, regardless of whether any written report or expert testimony followed;
“7. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representative(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of the history of any claims against Dr. Macy while a member of KaMMCO, regardless of whether a lawsuit was filed or compensation was paid; and
“8. Please designate and make available to testify the KaMMCO representaüve(s) most knowledgeable in the areas of the history of any claims against Dr. Slater while a member of KaMMCO, regardless of whether a lawsuit was filed or compensation was paid.”

In addition, the notice states that all designated deponents shall produce copies of the following documents at the deposition:

“1. All written materials, including but not limited to seminar materials and correspondence, used by KaMMCO in any fashion to educate members regarding the subjects of malpractice claim defense, including any tips on how to properly give a deposition and/or testify at trial, applicable to both defendants and defense expert witnesses;
“2. All written materials received from Dr. Slater pursuant to the contract of malpractice insurance between KaMMCO and Dr. Slater which provides coverage for Jeanette Allen’s claim. If any materials have been received from' Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 P.3d 642, 291 Kan. 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-medical-mutual-insurance-v-svaty-kan-2010.