Maleki v. Fine-Lando Clinic Chartered, S.C.

453 N.W.2d 208, 154 Wis. 2d 471, 1990 Wisc. App. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJanuary 25, 1990
Docket88-2027
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 453 N.W.2d 208 (Maleki v. Fine-Lando Clinic Chartered, S.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maleki v. Fine-Lando Clinic Chartered, S.C., 453 N.W.2d 208, 154 Wis. 2d 471, 1990 Wisc. App. LEXIS 47 (Wis. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

FINE, J. 1

This is an action brought by Massoud Maleki, M.D., under sec. 134.01, Stats., alleging, as pertinent to this appeal, that he was the victim of a conspiracy between the Fine-Lando Clinic and Eddy D. Co, M.D. 2 A jury returned a verdict that was partially in Maleki's favor, and awarded him $331,833 in compensatory damages and $510,000 in punitive damages. We reverse.

*474 I.

Maleki and Co are invasive cardiologists, physicians who perform catheterizations, angioplasties, and pacemaker implantations. At the time of trial, Fine-Lando was a multi-specialty medical clinic employing fourteen full-time and three part-time physicians. The clinic is owned by thirteen shareholders, all of whom are physicians.

Maleki testified that in 1976, Robert C. Tabet, M.D., an officer of Fine-Lando, and then chief of internal medicine at Trinity, asked Maleki to practice cardiology at Trinity, which was located four or five blocks from the clinic. According to Maleki, Tabet told him that physicians at Fine-Lando wanted Maleki to work with them and to be available for patient referrals. Maleki testified that he explained to Tabet that he was reluctant to accept the invitation because he had "other staff privileges and other commitments in other hospitals," some of which he would have to relinquish if he took staff privileges at Trinity, and that he would need "assurance that I would have their support." Maleki told the jury that Fine-Lando promised to "be supportive of my practice." Maleki admitted, however, that neither a definite number nor any specific percentage of patient referrals from Fine-Lando was ever discussed.

Maleki testified that he believed Tabet's proposal was a good one, and that he therefore applied for staff privileges at Trinity, though he recognized that it, like any other "business decision," as he characterized it during the course of his testimony, involved a risk. He explained to the jury:

Well, really my only expectation at that point — I think they had invited me, I had accepted and that's as far as I could expect insofar as their part goes. The *475 rest was up to me to be there, be present, be available and prove that I can provide what they were seeking and then develop more and more practice.

Maleki's application for staff privileges at Trinity was accepted in early 1978, and he started to perform cardiac procedures at Trinity on referrals from Fine-Lando.

Tabet's recollection of his conversations with Maleki differed from Maleki's testimony. Tabet testified that in the mid-1970s, Trinity had opened a cardiac catheterization department, and the hospital was anxious to recruit cardiologists to make use of that facility. Tabet told the jury that he "talked to all the cardiologists that [he had] met at one time or another to let them know that it was an open Cardiac Catheterization Department," adding that "[a]nybody could apply to get into it." He testified that Maleki was one of the cardiologists to whom he had spoken, and that he told Maleki that " [i]t was an open department and he could, if he so desired, put in his application." Tabet denied telling Maleki that Fine-Lando would support his practice.

According to Trinity records, Maleki performed twenty-one cardiac catheterizations at the hospital in 1978, forty-two in 1979, thirty-six in 1980, twenty-eight in 1981, and four in 1982. He performed no cardiac cath-eterizations at Trinity from 1983 through 1986. During that same period, however, Maleki was busy elsewhere. Indeed, Maleki performed a total of two hundred and one cardiac procedures in 1980 (including the thirty-six catheterizations at Trinity), a total of two hundred and twenty-three in 1981 (including the twenty-eight cathe-terizations at Trinity), a total of two hundred and thirty - six in 1982 (including the four catheterizations at Trinity), two hundred and forty-two in 1983, two hundred and fifteen in 1984, two hundred and forty-six in 1985, *476 and two hundred and eighty-four in 1986. In 1981, Maleki's gross income exceeded $353,000; it was more than $444,000 in 1982; more than $492,000 in 1983; more than $432,000 in 1984; more than $520,000 in 1985; and more than $504,000 in 1986.

Maleki claimed that his failure to do any procedures at Trinity after 1982 was the result of his refusal to split with Fine-Lando the fees he earned as a result of referrals from the clinic. Maleki testified that in the summer of 1981, a member of Fine-Lando, Ali Tavaf, M.D., told him that the clinic wanted to have a more formal, contractual, relationship with him. Maleki described for the jury Tavaf s proposal as follows:

That they would continue referring patients to me as they did before, but they would be doing the billing and that I had to agree to pay a certain percentage of that, of the bills that I was generating to the clinic for their costs and the rest then would be my portion.

Maleki testified that he told Tavaf the proposal sounded like fee splitting, and that he was "not interested in that." Tavaf and Tabet both disputed Maleki's testimony, and denied that Fine-Lando had ever suggested the arrangement.

Maleki testified that following his rejection of Tavafs proposal, there was a "slow-down of referrals" from Fine-Lando that was "rather rapid," until he received no referrals at all. There was also testimony concerning two of Maleki's patients from which the jury could have concluded that Fine-Lando physicians were not aggressive in accommodating one patient's desire to have Maleki perform a catheterization for her, or in referring the other patient to Maleki. Additionally, an invasive cardiologist testified that ”[o]n one occasion" a physician with Fine-Lando, whom he declined to name, *477 told him not to use Maleki for an angioplasty. Two Fine-Lando physicians testified, however, that even after the alleged Fine-Lando/Co conspiracy they continued to refer patients to Maleki for either procedures that were done at St. Luke's Hospital, or consultations. As noted earlier, although he had a substantial practice elsewhere, Maleki performed no cardiac catheterizations at Trinity from 1983 through 1986, and did only four such procedures in 1982. There was no evidence, however, that Maleki's privileges at Trinity were affected.

Although he did not have documentary proof at the time his referrals from Fine-Lando declined, Maleki told the jury that he suspected "that there was some kind of arrangements [sic] made between Dr. Co and Fine-Lando." In fact, Co, who had been doing procedures at Trinity since 1976, contracted with the clinic, effective November 1, 1981. 3 The provisions of the Fine-Lando/ Co contract were similar to the proposal Maleki testified he rejected. Under the contract, Co was to provide consulting cardiology services for Fine-Lando patients, and Fine-Lando was to furnish various support services such as office space, record keeping, insurance, and nursing. Co was to be paid sixty percent of what was collected by the clinic for his services.

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453 N.W.2d 208, 154 Wis. 2d 471, 1990 Wisc. App. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maleki-v-fine-lando-clinic-chartered-sc-wisctapp-1990.