Monroe Medical Clinic, Inc. v. Hospital Corp. of Am.

622 So. 2d 760, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2616, 1993 WL 271037
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1993
Docket24426-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 622 So. 2d 760 (Monroe Medical Clinic, Inc. v. Hospital Corp. of Am.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe Medical Clinic, Inc. v. Hospital Corp. of Am., 622 So. 2d 760, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2616, 1993 WL 271037 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

622 So.2d 760 (1993)

MONROE MEDICAL CLINIC, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
HOSPITAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA, et al., Defendants-Appellants.

No. 24426-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

July 21, 1993.

*762 M.F. "Rick" Fayard, Jr., Fred R. McGaha, Boissier City, for Monroe Medical Clinic plaintiff-appellant.

McLeod, Verlander, Eade and Verlander by David E. Verlander, III, Robert P. McLeod and Paul J. Verlander, Monroe, for HCA, et al. defendants-appellants.

*763 K. Gregory Tucker, Nashville, TN, for HCA, defendant-appellant.

Before MARVIN, LINDSAY and WILLIAMS, JJ.

MARVIN, Chief Judge.

In this action under the Unfair Trade Practices Law, the defendants, Arlen Reynolds, the former hospital administrator, and two corporations that controlled and operated the North Monroe Community Hospital, appeal a $600,000 judgment founded on a jury verdict in favor of Monroe Medical Clinic, Inc., owned and managed by Dr. Henry Jones, M.D., a family medical practitioner. LRS 51:1401 et seq.

Defendants complain of the jury's findings (four assignments), the trial court's rulings on evidentiary matters (three assignments) and refusal to give requested jury instructions (two assignments). Plaintiff also appeals, seeking to increase the judgment to $1,200,000.

Finding no error or abuse of discretion, we affirm.

POSTURE

While the remaining plaintiff is a medical corporation through which its owner practices medicine, for simplicity, we shall sometimes refer to plaintiff as Dr. Jones, as Dr. Jones's clinic, or as MMC. In dismissing Dr. Jones individually as a co-plaintiff, the trial court appropriately commented that his medical corporation was Dr. Jones's "alter ego."

The corporate defendants are HCA Health Services of Louisiana, Inc., a/k/a North Monroe Community Hospital, and its parent corporation, Hospital Corporation of America, Inc. Defendant Arlen Reynolds was the administrator of the hospital during the time in question in this lawsuit. We shall sometimes refer to the parent corporation simply as HCA and to the other corporation as the hospital or as NMCH.

LRS 51:1405 does not define what is "unfair" or "deceptive," but simply states that unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of any trade or commerce are unlawful. The trial court's instructions to the jury included this explanation of the nature of the action, which, in our opinion, is correctly derived from the Louisiana statute and case law:

A trade practice is "unfair" when it offends established public policy and when it is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous. A trade practice is deceptive when it amounts to fraud, deceit, or misrepresentation. A trade practice does not have to be both unfair and deceptive to violate the law.
* * * * * *
... plaintiff must prove that the actions of defendants were undertaken with the intent to injure plaintiff's business.

Emphasis in original.

Our statute tracks closely the language of the federal statute, 15 U.S.C. § 45(a), which was intentionally broadly written, leaving the determination of individual violations to the courts. Our legislature has expressed a similar intention in patterning our law on the federal statute. Guste v. Demars, 330 So.2d 123 (La.App. 1st Cir.1976).

Louisiana law grants a private right of action to "any person," natural or juridical, "who suffers any ascertainable loss of money or movable property, corporeal or incorporeal, as a result of the use or employment by another person of an unfair or deceptive method, act or practice declared unlawful by R.S. 51:1405." Sections 51:1402(8), 15:1409. The term "person" includes, but is not limited to business competitors and consumers. Roustabouts, Inc. v. Hamer, 447 So.2d 543 (La.App. 1st Cir. 1984); Jarrell v. Carter, 577 So.2d 120 (La.App. 1st Cir.1991), writ denied.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

After purchasing undeveloped acreage, HCA caused the hospital to be built in north Monroe in 1983 to compete with Monroe's other private hospital, St. Francis Medical Center. For several decades most Monroe physicians had maintained their offices in the downtown area of the city where St. Francis was located.

*764 To induce physicians to practice on or near the North Monroe hospital "campus," defendants arranged to have a builder and financing readily available to doctors, offering them inducements and lots for the construction and sale or lease of medical facilities. Dr. Jones purchased a lot on the campus on which he constructed his clinic.

To some doctors HCA provided, in some instances, sizeable financial inducements such as rent subsidies, assuming a doctor's lease obligation to his or her lessor of property located elsewhere, income guarantees, low or delayed interest loans, and prepaid cash "relocation expenses" which were often greatly in excess of actual or reasonable moving costs.

HCA offered Dr. Jones $60,000 as a relocation expense to move his clinic from downtown Monroe to the hospital campus. Initially electing to maintain an office near each hospital, Dr. Jones declined the $60,000 offer and accepted instead a mobile office or trailer which HCA provided rent-free while Dr. Jones's clinic was being constructed. Dr. Jones had other doctors in his employ. He and they continued to see patients in both locations until October 1988, when he closed and sold his north Monroe clinic.

Dr. Jones became the first chief of the hospital's medical staff and apparently worked well and harmoniously with Pat Gandy, who was the hospital's first administrator. Defendant Arlen Reynolds replaced Gandy as administrator in September 1984. The relationship between Reynolds and Dr. Jones gradually deteriorated after Dr. Jones resigned as chief of staff of the hospital in November 1984. Dr. Jones thereafter continued to admit patients to the hospital, retaining his status on the medical staff of the hospital until he resigned that privilege January 1, 1989.

Dr. Jones's resignation as chief of staff was prompted primarily by a dispute with Reynolds over whether Reynolds had authority under hospital bylaws to grant what Dr. Jones considered was an "exclusive" radiology contract to a doctor who was "new" to the area. Before this dispute arose, Dr. Jones had questioned the ethical propriety of the hospital's encouraging doctors to respond to the hospital's goal or policy to maintain a profitable patient census (85 percent of patient capacity). Specifically, Dr. Jones had complained to Reynolds that some of his clinic patients were subjected to what he thought were medically unnecessary and expensive consultations and diagnostic procedures by some medical specialists whom he thought were being financially underwritten or supported by the hospital.

LOT ONE DISPUTE

Dr. Jones's differences with Reynolds at first were not public, but were known by some of the hospital employees and by some in the medical community. The more acrimonious and public dispute, which involved all defendants and apparently provoked this litigation, arose in the spring of 1986 over Lot One on the hospital campus contiguous to Dr. Jones's lot and clinic. We relate some of the history of this dispute:

Reynolds sought and gained authority from HCA, and informally agreed, to sell Lot One to Dr. Jones to allow him to expand his clinic.

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622 So. 2d 760, 1993 La. App. LEXIS 2616, 1993 WL 271037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-medical-clinic-inc-v-hospital-corp-of-am-lactapp-1993.