Octavio Polanco, M.D. v. Charles Fager, M.D.

886 F.2d 66, 16 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2388, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14078, 1989 WL 106667
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 19, 1989
Docket88-3599
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 886 F.2d 66 (Octavio Polanco, M.D. v. Charles Fager, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Octavio Polanco, M.D. v. Charles Fager, M.D., 886 F.2d 66, 16 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2388, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14078, 1989 WL 106667 (4th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

HARRISON L. WINTER, Circuit Judge:

Defendant, Dr. Charles Fager, amplified the testimony he had given in the course of a proceeding before a Health Claims Arbitration Panel by a letter to the presiding officer of that panel. Dr. Octavio Polanco thereafter brought suit against Fager, claiming that Fager’s letter defamed him by stating that he had performed an operation because of “egotism and greed.” The district court gave summary judgment for Fager, ruling that Fager was protected by the qualified privilege of fair comment and that Fager had not abused the privilege.

Polanco appeals. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I.

As a result of a complaint filed with the Maryland Health Claims Arbitration Office by Barbara Cady, one of Dr. Polanco’s patients, a Health Claims Arbitration Panel conducted a hearing on the question of whether Dr. Polanco had performed an unnecessary spinal fusion operation on Ms. Cady which caused her permanent physical injury. Dr. Fager, a physician from Boston, was called as an expert witness in support of Ms. Cady’s claim.

Dr. Fager testified that Dr. Polanco violated the applicable standard of care in treating Ms. Cady and that the spinal fusion proceeding was unnecessary due to the absence of confirming clinical and radiological findings. Dr. Fager was then interrogated by the presiding officer as to why Dr. Polanco had performed the operation. The following is his testimony in this regard:

Q.If you had stood before Dr. Polanco, either alongside of him or over his shoulder and watched him, why do you think he did it?
A. That’s a question that is difficult for me to answer, and I can’t answer it. I don’t feel — I don’t understand. Because it really violates a number of the principles that I believe in and that I taught him.
Q. All of the time that you have been reviewing this case, you are still not able to, in your own mind, come to the conclusion of why Dr. Polanco performed such a procedure?
A. No, I think that is a question that you would have to ask Dr. Polanco in terms of what I’ve said today. I don’t feel I can say that. I see a lot of surgery that’s been done over the years, Mr. Chernikoff [the presiding officer], that I think is not justifiable. But I can’t say what’s behind the surgeons [sic] mind in doing it.
Q. Doctor, with all due respect, I’m sorry, I can’t accept your — I can’t go further.
A. Well, I don’t want to say what I think may be behind it, because I don’t *68 think that’s fair. That’s not part of this hearing. I consider it a departure from acceptable standards.
Q. Doctor, you were brought here as an expert witness. Mr. Horowitz has brought you here and I think that you could answer the question that is posed to you.
A. Yes, but Mr. Chernikoff, I can’t answer what Dr. Polanco’s motivation is. I don’t see how I can tell you what his motivation is.
Q. Doctor, I’ll leave that question with you.
A. Yes.

Despite his reluctance at the hearing to express any view about Dr. Polanco’s motivation, Dr. Fager, upon his return to Boston, wrote a letter to Robert L. Chernikoff, Esq., the chairman of the hearing panel, stating in pertinent part:

Your “philosophical” question has not been put to me in an open public forum and you must have been aware of my reluctance, largely because I had concern for my own immunity in that surrounding.
Your comparison of our professions was accurate in that we both have conservative and aggressive practitioners. However, far more to the point is that you have your “ambulance chasers” and we have our physicians & surgeons who engage in excessive treatments & unnecessary surgery. The motives are much the same — egotism and greedW Somehow I did not feel I could give this “philosophical” answer.
I thought you conducted a fair hearing which was equitable to both sides.

Suit in this case was filed originally in state court but removed to federal district court because of diversity of citizenship and the amount in controversy. Dr. Fager thereafter filed a motion for summary judgment contending that (1) he had absolute immunity as a witness in an administrative proceeding, and (2) he had a qualified privilege for fair comment which he did not exceed. The district court gave summary judgment to Dr. Fager. Although the court ruled that he did not have absolute immunity as a witness since the judicial proceeding did not extend to gratuitous letter writing undertaken after he ceased being a witness, it did recognize that he had qualified immunity which had not been exceeded.

The opinion of the district court was somewhat enigmatic. It deemed Dr. Fag-er’s statement “an expression of opinion or fair comment.” Its conclusion was based upon the subsidiary findings that all of the facts on which Dr. Fager based his opinion were established at the administrative hearing, and that his letter was a philosophical statement that doctors who perform unnecessary surgery are like ambulance chasers and are motivated by egotism and greed. At the same time, the district court apparently found that the comment was not made with respect to Dr. Polanco, but was “a comment about the professions of law and medicine,” although the district court conceded that the recipient of the letter, Mr. Chernikoff, could believe that Dr. Fager equated Dr. Polanco with the category of doctors who perform unnecessary surgery for egotism and greed.

Having concluded that the doctrine of fair comment was applicable, the district court considered whether that qualified privilege had been exceeded. It concluded that Dr. Polanco’s evidence was legally insufficient to show that the letter was written “to injure and solely by ill will” so as to obviate application of the privilege.

II.

Before us Dr. Polanco argues that the doctrine of fair comment is inapplicable and, even if applicable, that there was evidence of malice and ill will on the part of Dr. Fager, so as to remove the shield of qualified immunity. Dr. Fager does not seek to sustain his summary judgment on the ground that he was entitled to absolute immunity as a witness in a judicial proceeding.

The issues before us on appeal require us to consider in the summary judgment context — in which a party may prevail only if the material facts are undisputed and he is *69 entitled to judgment as a matter of law * — (1) whether Dr. Fager’s statement could be defamatory of Dr. Polanco, (2) whether, if defamatory, Dr. Fager’s statement is entitled to the qualified privilege of fair comment, and (3) if the privilege is otherwise applicable, whether it was abused and thereby lost. We consider these issues in order.

III.

Unlike the district court, we do not think that it can be said that, beyond dispute, Dr. Fager’s statement was about “the professions of law and medicine,” and not specifically about Dr.

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886 F.2d 66, 16 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 2388, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 14078, 1989 WL 106667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/octavio-polanco-md-v-charles-fager-md-ca4-1989.