KPH Consolidation Inc. D/B/A Columbia Kingwood Medical Center v. Romero, Dolores, Individually and O/B/O Incapacitated Romero, Ricardo A/N/F Romero, Ricardo, Jr., a Minor, Romero, Jennifer and Romero, Joanna

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 2003
Docket14-00-01177-CV
StatusPublished

This text of KPH Consolidation Inc. D/B/A Columbia Kingwood Medical Center v. Romero, Dolores, Individually and O/B/O Incapacitated Romero, Ricardo A/N/F Romero, Ricardo, Jr., a Minor, Romero, Jennifer and Romero, Joanna (KPH Consolidation Inc. D/B/A Columbia Kingwood Medical Center v. Romero, Dolores, Individually and O/B/O Incapacitated Romero, Ricardo A/N/F Romero, Ricardo, Jr., a Minor, Romero, Jennifer and Romero, Joanna) 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.

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KPH Consolidation Inc. D/B/A Columbia Kingwood Medical Center v. Romero, Dolores, Individually and O/B/O Incapacitated Romero, Ricardo A/N/F Romero, Ricardo, Jr., a Minor, Romero, Jennifer and Romero, Joanna, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Reversed and Remanded and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed January 9, 2003

Reversed and Remanded and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed January 9, 2003.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-00-01177-CV

KPH CONSOLIDATION, INC. d/b/a

COLUMBIA KINGWOOD MEDICAL CENTER, Appellant

V.

DOLORES ROMERO, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF INCAPACITATED PLAINTIFF RICARDO ROMERO, AND AS NEXT FRIEND OF RICARDO ROMERO, JR., A MINOR, JENNIFER ROMERO

and JOANNA ROMERO, Appellees

On Appeal from the 295th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 98-48856

M A J O R I T Y   O P I N I O N


Appellant, KPH Consolidation, Inc., d/b/a Columbia Kingwood Medical Center (AHospital@), appeals a $23 million judgment against it based in part on the jury=s finding that the Hospital acted maliciously when it credentialed Dr. Merrimon Baker.  The suit was filed by a patient of Dr. Baker who suffered severe neurological and physical impairments after an operation Baker performed.  For two reasons, we conclude the judgment must be reversed and rendered on the malice claim, and reversed and remanded on the negligence claim.  First, the record reveals no evidence showing that the Hospital acted with malice Cspecifically with conscious indifferenceCwhen it credentialed Dr. Baker and therefore, the jury should not have been asked about actual malice.  Second, because the jury found that the Hospital acted with malice, this finding forms at least part of the basis for the jury=s award of actual damages, requiring us to reverse all of the damages.

I.          PROCEDURAL HISTORY.

Ricardo Romero and his family brought this suit to redress severe neurological and physical injuries Mr. Romero suffered as a result of surgery Baker performed.  The Romeros sued Baker, a group of anesthesiologists, a certified nurse-anesthetist, and the Hospital. 

Before trial, the Romeros settled with the doctors; at trial the only defendants were the nurse-anesthetist and the Hospital. 

The Romeros= claims against the Hospital were based on two theories.  However, the only one at issue here is their claim that the Hospital acted with malice by credentialing Baker to practice medicine at the HospitalCeven though it knew that he abused prescription drugs and was an incompetent surgeon.[1]

The jury found that the Hospital acted with malice in granting and maintaining Baker=s credentials, and that the Hospital, Baker, and one of the anesthesiologists, Dr. Huie, were negligent.  It assessed 40% of the fault to Baker, 20% to Dr. Huie, and 40% to the Hospital; it awarded $40,600,000 in damages against all parties.  The jury=s award included a finding  that the Hospital should pay Mr. Romero and Mrs. Romero a total of $12,000,000 in punitive damages. 


The trial court rendered judgment against the Hospital for $11,440,000 in actual damages.


II.        FACTUAL BACKGROUND.

We will briefly review the surgery itself, then, because the Hospital challenges only the malicious credentialing finding, the remainder of the fact section will focus on two factual issues that control the outcome of that claim:  the Hospital=s credentialing process and the decision to credential Baker.

A.        The Surgery.

Ricardo Romero was referred to Baker for back surgery.  During surgery, Romero experienced significant blood loss.  In fact, Romero lost almost all the blood in his body.  Shortly after a blood transfusion, he went into cardiac arrest and had to be resuscitated.  He suffered severe brain damage that left him totally disabled.

B.        The Credentialing Process and Confidentiality.

 Barbara Pickett, the Director of Quality and Resource Management at the Hospital, testified regarding the credentialing process.  As she explained, physicians applying for privileges are required to complete an extensive questionnaire and provide peer recommendations.  The Hospital verifies the information the applying doctor provides, checks the peer recommendations, reviews licenses in other states, and contacts various agencies, including the Texas Board of Medical Examiners, the Department of Public Safety, and the Drug Enforcement Agency.  The information gathered is reviewed by the chairman of the surgery department, who recommends to the Medical Executive Committee whether to grant credentials.  The Medical Executive Committee then reviews the applicant=s credentials and makes a recommendation to the Hospital=s Board of Trustees; it makes the final decision.

Both Pickett and Dr. Robert Rosen, a former member of the Hospital=s surgery committee, testified that the communications and deliberations of the Medical Executive Committee are confidential. 

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Justice Fowler correctly concluded that Crown Life Ins. Co. v. Casteel, 22 S.W.3d 378 (Tex. 2000), does not apply in this case.  However, Casteel provides some additional guidance here C that is, as the supreme court noted, ARule 277 is not absolute; rather it mandates broad-form submission >whenever feasible.=@  Id. at 390 (quoting Tex. R. Civ. P. 277, emphasis added).

It has become commonplace in the arena of civil litigation to interpret Rule 277 as mandating broad-form submission.  See id. at 389 (noting Casteel=s argument that Rule 277 required a single broad-form question); Texas Dep=t of Human Servs. v. E.B., 802 S.W.2d 647, 649 (Tex. 1990) (interpreting Rule 277 as an unequivocal mandate for broad-form submission); William V. Dorsaneo, II, Broad-Form Submission of Jury Questions and the Standard of Review, 46 SMU L. Rev. 601, 603 (1992) (discussing the changing trend from discretionary to mandatory broad-form submission).  However, as Professor Dorsaneo notes, Aa blind adherence to the broad-form submission may make it difficult to attain the goals that the broad-form submission was intended to achieve, namely to reduce appeals and retrials.@  Dorsaneo, supra, at 603.


The initial position of the supreme court was, Aunless extraordinary circumstances@ make submission infeasible, broad-form questions must be asked.  E.B., 802 S.W. at 649.  AWhenever feasible@ was defined as Ain any and every instance in which it is capable of being accomplished.@  Id.  Many litigants and trail courts have been operating under the impression that the supreme court completely ignored Professor Dorsaneo=s warning.  However, the court took a more relaxed position in subsequent cases.  See, e.g., H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Warner, 845 S.W.2d 258, 259 (Tex. 1992); Westgate, Ltd. v. State, 843 S.W.2d 448, 455 n.6 (Tex. 1992).  In H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Warner, the court decided submitting a case in granulated-form, instead of the broad-form Amandated@ by Rule 277, did not constitute reversible error Abecause the charge fairly submitted to the jury the disputed issues of fact and because the charge incorporated a correct legal standard for the jury to apply . . . .@  Warner, 845 S.W.2d at 259.  Further, in Westgate, Ltd. v. State, the court recognized that submitting alternative liability standards when the governing law is unsettled might also be a situation where broad-form is not feasible.  Westgate, Ltd., 843 S.W.2d at 455 n.6.  While this court=s opinion was in final stage for issuance, the supreme court further clarified its position on broad-form submission.  In Harris County, Texas v. Smith, No. 01-0531, 2002 WL 31833884, at * 4, (Tex. Dec. 19, 2002), the court reiterated the necessity for a granulated charge when a party specifically objects to submission of valid and invalid elements of damage in a single question.

Appellees seek damages under two legal theories:  (1) negligence and (2) malicious credentialing.  Texas law pertaining to malicious credentialing of physicians is somewhat unsettled.  The Texas Supreme Court first recognized the claim five years ago in St. Luke=s Episcopal Hospital v. Agbor, 952 S.W.2d 503 (Tex. 1997).  The court iterated that negligent credentialing was not a well-recognized, common law cause of action and reserved deciding whether such a common law action existed.  Id. at 508.  More importantly, the court held the claim required proof of an essential element not required of a typical negligence claim C malice.  Id. at 509. 


The trial court properly submitted two liability questions, separating liability for negligence from liability for malicious credentialing.  However, the trial court erred by submitting a single apportionment question.  In jury question number three, the court asked the jury to allocate Apercentage of the conduct@ notwithstanding the fact that appellees were prosecuting claims under two distinct theories of liability.  The record reflects that the trial court was fully cognizant of this problem and the court warned the parties regarding the potential for error in submitting one apportionment of liability question.  However, counsel for appellee suggested that the supreme court favors Abroad form@ submission.  The result: this case must now be sent back to the trial court for retrial and possibly a subsequent appeal, wasting valuable and limited judicial resources.  A Agranulated charge@ would have directed the jury to separately allocate responsibility and award damages under each theory of liability supported by evidence presented during the trial.  Such a charge would have fairly submitted to the jury the disputed issues of fact and incorporated the correct legal standards for the jury to apply, all the while making the questions easy for the jury to comprehend and answer.  See Warner, 845 S.W.2d at 259; E.B., 802 S.W.2d at 649.  More importantly, this court would be able to determine whether there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict.

This case illustrates why bench and bar must be acutely aware of all the reasons why Rule 277 is not absolute.  I would encourage trial courts to exercise their broad discretion in favor of granulated-form submission, especially in cases involving multiple theories of liability.

/s/        Charles W. Seymore

Judgment rendered and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed January 9, 2003.

Panel consists of Chief Justice Brister, Justices Fowler and Seymore. 



[1]  The other theory was based on negligence and alleged that the Hospital was negligent in its delivery of blood products to the operating room.

[2]  But, in spite of the Hospital=s assertion of the privilege, expert testimony from both plaintiff=s and defendants= experts showed what information the Hospital would have known about Baker when it credentialed himCeven though we do not know what the committee said or did in response to the information.

[3]  The Agbor Court=s decision was based upon its interpretation of sections 5.06(l) and (m) of the then-existing codification of the Texas Medical Practice Act.  See Act of June 1, 1987, 70th Leg., R.S., ch. 596, ' 18, 1987 Tex. Gen. Laws 2325, 2335 (repealed 1999) (current version at Tex. Occ. Code Ann. ' 160.010 (Vernon Supp. 2002)).

[4]   The definition of malice under section 41.001(7)(B) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code mirrors the Texas Supreme Court’s definition of gross negligence in Moriel.  See Moriel, 879 S.W.2d at 23.  Therefore, the case law addressing gross negligence informs our analysis of the quality of the evidence required to prove malice.

[5]  Additionally, the jury charge in this case included an instruction that “[a] fact may be established by direct or circumstantial evidence or both.”  Because the Hospital did not object to this instruction as submitted in the charge, the evidence is reviewed in light of the charge as given.  Bradford v. Vento, 48 S.W.3d 749, 754 (Tex. 2001).

[6]  The Hospital urges us to apply the less deferential standard of review articulated in Turner v. KTRK Television, Inc., 38 S.W.3d 103 (Tex. 2000), in which the Court held that federal constitutional law mandated a standard of review higher than the typical Ano-evidence@ or legal sufficiency standard in a public figure defamation case in which actual malice must be proved by clear and convincing evidence.  The Hospital identifies no similar constitutional dimension in the present case; we therefore decline to apply a heightened standard of review.

[7]  Some exceptions exist, but they are not relevant here.

[8]  The peer review is not only of doctors but also of other health-care providers.

[9]  Under federal law, each entity, including an insurance company, that makes a payment under an insurance policy, self-insurance, or otherwise, for the benefit of a physician in settlement of, or in satisfaction in whole or in part of, a claim or judgment against a physician for medical malpractice, must report detailed information on the payment to the National Practitioner Data Bank.  45 C.F.R. ' 60.7 (2001).  Hospitals must request information from the National Practitioner Data Bank at the time a physician applies for a position on its medical staff or for clinical privileges at the hospital, and every two years thereafter for any physician on its medical staff or who has clinical privileges.  Id. ' 60.10(a).  A hospital that fails to request the information as required is presumed to have knowledge of any information reported to the Data Bank concerning the physician.  Id. ' 60.10(b).

[10]  By letter dated September 7, 1999, Cleveland Regional informed Baker of its final decision to permanently suspend his privileges because of violations that included Anumerous delinquent medical charts, failure to make daily rounds for all patients as required . . ., and failure to enter timely progress notes for all patients.@ 

[11]  There was evidence that, during the three years Baker was licensed in Mississippi, no disciplinary orders were entered against him.  There was also evidence that he had a license in good standing in South Carolina.

[12]  Dr. Eichhorn did testify that Baker should have been suspended from the Hospital prior to the Romero surgery, but his testimony is vague as to when and why: 

Q.         (By Mr. Mithoff)  Was Dr. Baker still on the staff at the time of the Romero surgery?

A.         Yes, definitely.  Obviously.  He operated that day.

Q.         He had been suspended from Cleveland a couple of months before?

A.         Yes, he had.

Q.         Is that what [the Hospital] should have done in this case?

A.         Yes, definitely.

Q.         And if that had been done, this tragedy could have been avoided?

A.         He would not have been there that day doing this.

Dr. Eichhorn offered no basis for the opinion that Baker should have been suspended at the Hospital other than the evidence that he was suspended from Cleveland Regional.  However, as we have discussed, there is no evidence that the Hospital knew of Baker=s suspension at Cleveland Regional or the reasons for it, and we can make no assumptions from the lack of evidence.

[13]  The Hospital objected to this evidence as legally insufficient because (1) it was based on insufficient data and lacked a necessary rationale, and (2) Dr. Eichhorn was not qualified to give such an opinion.  In response, the Romeros contend that the Hospital=s objections go to admissibility, not sufficiency, and it waived those objections by failing to make them to the trial court.  Our resolution of the malice issue does not require that we address this contention.

[14]  The Romeros did not challenge the trial court=s ruling upholding the Hospital=s objection to this testimony.

[15]  Reversible error is also committed if the error prevented the appellant from properly presenting its case to the court of appeals.  Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a)(2).

[16]  The Romeros= closing argument emphasizes that the Hospital should bear the brunt of the liability, not the individuals listed in question 1:

The hospital will tell you Baker should be punished because he held the knife and he did hold the knife, but it was the hospital that let him hold it. 

He is an addict, but every addict has an enabler.  And the hospital was his enabler . . . .  I suggest to you that the overwhelming responsibility for what happened here lies with Columbia Kingwood.

Now, the assessment is your own judgment, but I suggest to you that when you take into account all of what happened with respect to the delay in the blood and all of what happened with respect to their awareness of the actual risks when they allowed this man to come on to the staff and stay on to the staff, that the responsibility of the hospital clearly exceeds 80 percent of responsibility for this tragedy. 

When specifically addressing the apportionment question, counsel further explained:

I suggest that you simply ask yourself who was in the best position, who was in the best position to prevent what happened to protect Mr. Romero, to protect his family?  Was it Dr. Baker, the addict?  Was Dr. Baker in the best position to remove himself from the hospital staff?  Was Dr. Baker in the best position to remove himself from operating on patients at that hospital?  He couldn=t even admit that he had a problem.  He certainly couldn=t quit. 

Were the anesthesiologists in the best position?  They were caught in the middle.  They had to depend upon Baker to control the bleeding, stop the bleeding, and they had to depend on the hospital to get them the blood. 

I suggest that the lion=s share of the responsibility, the vast responsibility, 80 percent of the responsibility would be a reasonable percentage to impose upon this hospital. 

Related

Crown Life Insurance Company v. Casteel
22 S.W.3d 378 (Texas Supreme Court, 2000)
Harris County v. Smith
96 S.W.3d 230 (Texas Supreme Court, 2002)
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802 S.W.2d 647 (Texas Supreme Court, 1990)
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Mobil Oil Corp. v. Ellender
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Memorial Hospital-The Woodlands v. McCown
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Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Alexander
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Lozano v. Lozano
52 S.W.3d 141 (Texas Supreme Court, 2001)
State Department of Highways & Public Transportation v. Payne
838 S.W.2d 235 (Texas Supreme Court, 1992)
Transportation Insurance Co. v. Moriel
879 S.W.2d 10 (Texas Supreme Court, 1994)
Turner v. KTRK Television, Inc.
38 S.W.3d 103 (Texas Supreme Court, 2000)
North American Van Lines, Inc. v. Emmons
50 S.W.3d 103 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Bradford v. Vento
48 S.W.3d 749 (Texas Supreme Court, 2001)
Westgate, Ltd. v. State
843 S.W.2d 448 (Texas Supreme Court, 1992)
Schlumberger Well Surveying Corp. v. Nortex Oil & Gas Corp.
435 S.W.2d 854 (Texas Supreme Court, 1968)
St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital v. Agbor
952 S.W.2d 503 (Texas Supreme Court, 1997)
General Motors Corp. v. Sanchez
997 S.W.2d 584 (Texas Supreme Court, 1999)
H.E. Butt Grocery Co. v. Warner
845 S.W.2d 258 (Texas Supreme Court, 1993)

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KPH Consolidation Inc. D/B/A Columbia Kingwood Medical Center v. Romero, Dolores, Individually and O/B/O Incapacitated Romero, Ricardo A/N/F Romero, Ricardo, Jr., a Minor, Romero, Jennifer and Romero, Joanna, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kph-consolidation-inc-dba-columbia-kingwood-medical-center-v-romero-texapp-2003.