Krebsbach v. Henley

1986 OK 58, 725 P.2d 852, 1986 Okla. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1986
Docket61248
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1986 OK 58 (Krebsbach v. Henley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krebsbach v. Henley, 1986 OK 58, 725 P.2d 852, 1986 Okla. LEXIS 180 (Okla. 1986).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice:

Appellant, Bob Krebsbach, M.D., initiated this action against appellees, Drs. William G. Henley, Robert R. Hillis and Phillip R. Harwell, alleging that appellees had slandered him, had interfered with his business relations, and had entered into a conspiracy to slander and interfere with his business relations. Appellees answered these allegations with a general denial.

The parties to this case engaged in substantial discovery. Numerous depositions of witnesses were taken as well as the depositional testimony of appellant. Interrogatories from appellant to appellee Hillis were answered. All of this material was filed of record in the case.

Following this discovery period both appellant and appellees presented the trial court with motions for summary judgment. The parties agreed that the facts of the case were not in controversy and that these facts supported the rendering of judgment. The only disagreement present in these motions concerned for whom they felt judgment should be rendered.

The trial court heard argument on the motions and took the matter under advisement. After consideration, the trial court sustained the motion of appellees and entered judgment in their favor. Appellant now challenges that ruling on the ground that the facts supported the rendition of judgment in his favor, or at least that the facts were in controversy so as to require submission to a jury.

It is the function of a summary judgment procedure to eliminate a useless trial where there is no conflicting evidence as to factual issues bearing significantly on the outcome of the case, and under these facts reasonable people could draw only a set of conclusions which would support judgment for one of the parties. 1 In ruling on a summary judgment motion all inferences and conclusions to be drawn from the underlying facts contained in the materials submitted in support of the motion must be viewed in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion. 2 The materials *854 supplied to the trial court to support the motions of both appellant and appellees in this case consisted of the depositions taken and the one set of interrogatories. In reviewing the ruling by the trial court this Court will examine the evidentiary materials submitted, in conjunction with the pleadings, to determine what facts are material to the plaintiff’s (appellant’s) cause of action, and then determine whether there is a controversy as to a material fact or whether the uncontroverted facts support the trial court’s ruling. 3

The facts which may be drawn from the materials submitted with the motions for summary judgment present a long and complex ^background to this case.

It appears that appellant first came to the Lawton, Oklahoma, area as a doctor with the Public Health Service at the Indian Hospital located at Lawton. Appellant continued to work with the Indian Health Division for several years in the area but decided to leave the Public Health Service in 1978 over a dispute regarding his next duty assignment. Appellant chose at that time to enter private practice. At the time appellant left the Public Health Service he had achieved a specialty category as a pediatrician. Additionally, while working at the Indian Hospital, appellant did amass some experience in delivering babies. However, as stated in his deposition, appellant never felt comfortable dealing with difficult deliveries.

Upon leaving the Public Health Service appellant applied for privileges at Comanche County Memorial Hospital. Appellant’s request for obstetrical privileges was denied, but his requests for pediatric and family practice privileges were granted. It appears that the denial of obstetrical privileges constituted a crucial link in the evolution of this case.

In his private practice appellant developed a reputation of being available to people of limited means and to women and families on welfare. However, since appellant did not have obstetrical privileges at Memorial Hospital, he could not deliver the children of his patients after seeing them prenatally. Instead, appellant would give his patients prenatal care and then send them to Memorial Hospital to be delivered by the doctor on call. This raised a great deal of contention in the medical community because appellant was not sending along any prenatal medical records with his pregnant patients. This created problems for the delivering doctor since he was not being made aware of the potential for problems with the birth.

Partially in response to this situation, the Lawton medical community instituted a prenatal medical care program through the Comanche County Health Department. Under this program care was provided to pregnant women who would not otherwise have been able to afford it. As part of the program the women agreed that when it was time for the delivery, the birth would be handled by one of the obstetricians participating in the program on call at Memorial Hospital and the baby would be checked out by the participating pediatrician on call. When this program was instituted appellant agreed to no longer furnish prenatal care. Appellant did not participate in the Health Department program.

About a year prior to appellant’s agreement to terminate his delivery of prenatal care, appellees, practicing as Great Plains Women’s Clinic, Inc., sent appellant a letter, the text of which read:

The Physician members of the Great Plains Women’s Clinic, Inc. have decided, at this time, to notify you of our intentions toward future referrals from you. We choose to refuse any future referrals from you to our office for either Gynecological or Obstetrical care.
We also choose to accept no Obstetrical patients who will be using you as their Pediatrician. Lastly, we will be making no referrals to you.

The reasoning of appellee physicians in sending this letter was explained by appel- *855 lee Hillis in the answers to interrogatones. In response to a question as to why appellant would not have been called as a pediatrician for the care of a newborn child in the delivery of a walk-in patient at Memorial Hospital, appellee Hillis stated:

Finally, you have asked “why” Dr. Krebsbach would not have been called. Again, I answer this from my point of view. It is felt that the possible complications of delivery are such that I should be able to work hand and glove with a pediatrician in whom I have confidence and a certain degree of rapport. Frankly, I do not and did not have this with Dr. Krebsbach. It is my opinion that when a patient has had nine months of pregnancy to seek obstetrical and pediatric care, she has had ample opportunity to do so. Appearing at a hospital in labor, without records and with little or no information concerning the medical aspects of her pregnancy, I feel she puts the O.B. physician in a rather precarious position and if anything, heightens the necessity for working with a pediatrician in whom he has confidence and rapport should a complication develop.

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Bluebook (online)
1986 OK 58, 725 P.2d 852, 1986 Okla. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krebsbach-v-henley-okla-1986.