Marik v. Superior Court

191 Cal. App. 3d 1136, 236 Cal. Rptr. 751, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1710
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 11, 1987
DocketB026270
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 191 Cal. App. 3d 1136 (Marik v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marik v. Superior Court, 191 Cal. App. 3d 1136, 236 Cal. Rptr. 751, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1710 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion

FEINERMAN, P. J.

The issue in this original proceeding is whether an individual appointed by the court as a provisional director of a professional medical corporation must be a physician or other “licensed person” as that term is defined by Corporations Code sections 13401 and 13401.5. 1 Petitioner Jaroslav Marik, M.D., objects to an order of the respondent court appointing a retired judge as provisional director of the Tyler Medical Clinic, a professional corporation, owned jointly by Dr. Marik and Dr. Stanley Friedman.

We conclude that the respondent court erred. The matter having been fully briefed, issuance of an alternative writ would add nothing to the exposition of the issues. We therefore direct the issuance of a peremptory writ of mandate.

Facts

Doctors Marik and Friedman each own 50 percent of the stock of the Tyler Medical Clinic and they are the corporation’s only two directors.

In 1983, differences arose between the doctors and they could not agree on how the corporation was to be run. Dr. Friedman initiated a superior court action requesting the appointment of a provisional director. The court appointed Bruce Rolf, M.D., a candidate recruited by Dr. Friedman, who declined to serve after Dr. Friedman requested that he not accept the appointment. The court then appointed retired superior court judge Arthur K. Marshall, who served for several months. The court then appointed *1138 retired superior court judge Bernard Selber, who served from mid-1984 until he resigned in March 1986.

The corporation was without a provisional director until late 1986, when Dr. Friedman filed a motion requesting that the court appoint retired superior court Judge Robert Wenke to serve as provisional director. Dr. Marik opposed the appointment and requested that Dr. Bruce Rolf be appointed instead. The court granted Dr. Friedman’s motion and denied Dr. Marik’s motion for reconsideration in which he once again requested the appointment of Dr. Rolf. On February 18, 1987, the court entered its order appointing Judge Wenke. Dr. Marik filed a notice of appeal from that order and also filed the within petition asking that this court immediately resolve the issue. We determined that extraordinary relief was warranted in this case to insure the effective operation of the Tyler Medical Clinic.

Discussion

Corporations Code section 308 provides for the appointment of a provisional director in circumstances where a corporation has an even number of directors who are equally divided and cannot agree as to the management of the corporation’s affairs, “so that its business can no longer be conducted to advantage or so that there is danger that its property and business will be impaired or lost,...” A provisional director must be an impartial person who is neither a shareholder nor a creditor of the corporation, “nor related by consanguinity or affinity within the third degree according to the common law to any of the other directors of the corporation or to any judge of the court by which such provisional director is appointed.” (Corp. Code, § 308, subd. (c).) A provisional director has all of the rights and powers of the corporation’s other directors. (Ibid.) The latter provision of section 308 has special implications in a case such as this one, where the corporation involved is a professional corporation subject to special statutory restrictions.

Business and Professions Code section 2408 provides: “Except as provided in Sections 13401.5 and 13403 of the Corporations Code, each shareholder, director and officer of a medical or podiatry corporation, except an assistant secretary or an assistant treasurer, shall be a licensed person as defined in Section 13401 of the Corporations Code.” (Italics added.) Section 13401 defines “professional corporation” as “a corporation organized under the General Corporation Law which is engaged in rendering professional services in a single profession, except as otherwise authorized in Section 13401.5, pursuant to a certificate of registration issued by the governmental agency regulating the profession____However, any professional corporation rendering professional services by persons duly licensed by the Board of *1139 Medical Quality Assurance ... shall not be required to obtain a certificate of registration in order to render those professional services.” 2

Corporations Code section 13401.5 lists the “licensed persons,” in addition to physicians, who may serve as shareholders, directors, officers or professional employees of a professional corporation. In the case of a medical corporation, those persons are licensed podiatrists, licensed psychologists, registered nurses, optometrists, licensed marriage, family and child counselors, licensed clinical social workers, and licensed physicians’ assistants. Section 13403 provides a limited exception which is inapplicable to this case. 3

Prior to the enactment of the Moscone-Knox Act in 1968, practitioners of certain professions were not permitted to incorporate, the prevailing case law being that a corporation, as an artificial entity, could not “practice” that profession. In his petition before this court, Dr. Marik articulates the concerns underlying the public policy against permitting lay persons to exercise control over decisions made by healing arts practitioners: that laymen, who are not bound by the ethical standards governing the profession, might seek to enhance the corporation’s “commercial advantage” rather than conform to professional strictures. (See California Physicians’ Service v. Garrison (1946) 28 Cal.2d 790, 810 [172 P.2d 4, 167 A.L.R. 306]; Painless Parker v. Board of Dental Examiners (1932) 216 Cal. 285 [14 P.2d 67]; California Assn. of Dispensing Opticians v. Pearle Vision Center, Inc. (1983) 143 Cal.App.3d 419, 427 [191 Cal.Rptr. 762].)

These public policy concerns were incorporated into the Moscone-Knox Act, which prohibits persons other than those answerable to the licensing authority of the particular profession from becoming shareholders or directors of a corporation engaged in rendering the services of that profession.

Dr. Friedman, in his answer to the petition (and in his opposition to Dr. Marik’s motion for reconsideration below), acknowledges the statutory restrictions discussed above and the public policy reasons behind them: “One *1140 need not be too imaginative to envision the possibility of non-medical persons owning a medical corporation and dictating how or in what manner medical services would be rendered or provided to patients.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 Cal. App. 3d 1136, 236 Cal. Rptr. 751, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 1710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marik-v-superior-court-calctapp-1987.