Martin v. Mem Hosp at Gulfport

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 1996
Docket95-60186
StatusPublished

This text of Martin v. Mem Hosp at Gulfport (Martin v. Mem Hosp at Gulfport) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Mem Hosp at Gulfport, (5th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Fifth Circuit.

No. 95-60186.

James P. MARTIN, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant,

v.

MEMORIAL HOSPITAL AT GULFPORT, Wray Anderson, Mitchell Salloum, Edward Reid, and Myrtis Franke, Defendants-Appellants, Cross- Appellees.

July 10, 1996.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi.

Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, and DEMOSS and DENNIS, Circuit Judges.

DENNIS, Circuit Judge:

The principal question presented by this case is whether a

hospital, owned and operated by a municipality and a state

subdivision hospital district, and the hospital's board of

trustees, are immune from an antitrust claim under the Parker v.

Brown, 317 U.S. 341, 63 S.Ct. 307, 87 L.Ed. 315 (1943) state action

doctrine.

A nephrologist brought this antitrust action against the

hospital and its board seeking to enjoin the enforcement of the

hospital's contract with the medical supervisor (also a

nephrologist) of its End Stage Renal Disease facility (ESRD). The

contract grants the medical supervisor authority to plan, organize,

conduct and direct the professional ESRD services and to provide

and maintain complete physician care of ESRD patients personally or

through his designated representative. Subsequently the hospital

adopted a resolution formally interpreting the contract to mean

1 that only the medical supervisor or his medical practice associate

working under the direction and control of the medical supervisor,

for whom the supervisor accepts full responsibility, has the right

to perform chronic dialysis in the ESRD. Because the plaintiff

nephrologist is not associated with the medical supervisor in

practice, the hospital's enforcement of the contract and its

resolution prevents the nephrologist from personally performing

chronic renal dialysis for his patients in the hospital's ESRD.

The district court denied the hospital and the board a summary

judgment declaring them to be immune from the federal antitrust

claim, and they appealed. We reverse and remand for the entry of

a summary judgment dismissing the federal antitrust action. We

have jurisdiction of the appeal under the collateral order doctrine

because the district court's ruling conclusively determines the

disputed question, resolves an important issue completely separate

from the merits of the action, and is effectively unreviewable on

appeal from a final judgment. The state action doctrine immunizes

the enforcement of the municipal-state subdivision hospital's

exclusive contract with its ESRD supervisor because suppression of

competition was the foreseeable result of the state statutes which

(1) authorize only a health care provider having obtained a

certificate of need to establish an ESRD, and (2) empower the

hospital to contract with any individual for the providing of

services by or to the hospital regarding any facet of the operation

of the hospital or any division or department thereof, or any

related activity, and to terminate such contract when deemed in the

2 best interests of the hospital.

1. Facts and Procedural History

The parties by itemizations and responses stipulated to the

facts for purposes of the motion for summary judgment. End Stage

Renal Disease (ESRD) units are kidney dialysis units in which

chronic renal dialysis is performed. Mississippi law prohibits the

establishment, expansion, or relocation of an ESRD unless a

Certificate of Need is first obtained from the state department of

health. The Memorial Hospital at Gulfport obtained certificates of

need for several ESRD facilities including the one involved in this

case. The hospital began the operation of its ESRD units in 1981.

Subsequently, the hospital entered into an exclusive medical

director contract with Dr. Douglas Lanier whereby only Dr. Lanier

or his designated representative had the right to perform chronic

dialysis in the hospital's ESRD units. In 1986, the hospital and

Dr. Lanier recruited Dr. James Martin to come to Gulfport to

practice with Dr. Lanier as his associate. Dr. Martin was granted

full medical staff privileges including the authority to perform

chronic dialysis in the hospital's ESRD units. In November 1988,

Dr. Martin and Dr. Lanier encountered some differences and

terminated their relationship. Dr. Martin began practicing

separately from Dr. Lanier. Afterwards, Dr. Martin did not attempt

to perform chronic dialysis at the hospital's ESRD unit until March

1989 when he sought to admit a patient for chronic dialysis. The

hospital refused to allow him to perform the chronic dialysis

basing its action on the exclusive contract with Dr. Lanier. Dr.

3 Martin wrote to the hospital asserting that he had a right to treat

patients in the chronic ESRD unit. On June 26, 1989, the board of

trustees of the hospital reevaluated whether Dr. Lanier's contract

should remain exclusive and passed a resolution that reaffirmed the

exclusive medical director contract, interpreting the contract to

mean that only a physician in practice with and under the

supervision and control of Dr. Lanier could perform chronic

dialysis in the ESRD unit. In November f 1990, Dr. Martin's

medical staff privileges were renewed with the exception of his

right to personally perform chronic dialysis in the ESRD units,

which the hospital denied based on the exclusive contract with Dr.

Martin. Dr. Martin retained the authority to admit patients to the

hospital and perform acute ESRD services on them as in-patients,

but he must permit the medical supervisor or his associate-designee

to perform chronic ESRD services for them as out-patients. The

Memorial Hospital at Gulfport is a community hospital existing

under Miss.Code Ann. § 41-13-10 et seq., and is jointly owned by

the City of Gulfport and the Gulfport-West Harrison County Hospital

District, a subdivision of the State of Mississippi. See Enroth v.

Memorial Hospital at Gulfport, 566 So.2d 202, 206 (Miss.1990).

In 1990, Dr. Martin filed suit in the district court alleging

that the hospital and its board had violated federal antitrust

laws, violated his constitutional due process rights, interfered

with his contractual relationships with his patients, and violated

the state antitrust laws. The hospital and its board moved for

summary judgment on all claims. The district court granted the

4 defendants' motions in part and denied them in part. The

hospital's motion for summary judgment was granted only to the

extent of dismissing plaintiff's claims for damages under the

general prohibition against recovery of damages for antitrust

violations from any local government. 15 USCS § 35. The

hospital's motion for summary judgment was denied as to all other

claims for relief by plaintiff. The motion for summary judgment by

the individual hospital board members was denied insofar as the

plaintiff's claims for injunctive relief, attorneys fees and court

costs under the federal anti-trust laws.

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