Offor v. Mercy Medical Center, Rockville Centre Division

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 1, 2021
Docket2:15-cv-02219
StatusUnknown

This text of Offor v. Mercy Medical Center, Rockville Centre Division (Offor v. Mercy Medical Center, Rockville Centre Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Offor v. Mercy Medical Center, Rockville Centre Division, (E.D.N.Y. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK ---------------------------------------------------------------X DOCTOR CHINWE OFFOR, Plaintiff, ORDER ADOPTING REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION - against - 2:15-cv-2219 (DRH) (SIL) MERCY MEDICAL CENTER, CATHOLIC HEALTH SERVICES OF LONG ISLAND, DOCTOR SWARNA DEVARAJAN, and DOCTOR JOHN REILLY Defendants. ---------------------------------------------------------------X

APPEARANCES

IKE AGWUEGBO & CO. P.C. Attorney for Plaintiff 575 Lexington Avenue, 4th Floor New York, NY 10022 By: Ike Agwuegbo, Esq.

NIXON PEABODY LLP Attorneys for Defendants 50 Jericho Quadrangle, Suite 300 Jericho, NY 11753-2728 By: Tara Eyer Daub, Esq. Aaron F. Nadich, Esq.

HURLEY, Senior District Judge:

INTRODUCTION Presently before the Court is the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Steven I. Locke, dated May 11, 2021 (the “R&R”) [DE 304], recommending that the Court (i) deny Plaintiff Dr. Chinwe Offor’s motions to strike evidence in the captioned Defendants’1 summary judgment papers as inadmissible expert materials, (ii) deny Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, and (iii) grant Defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff filed objections pursuant to Federal

Rule of Civil Procedure 72 on May 18, 2021, to which Defendants responded on June 1, 2021. For the reasons stated below, Plaintiff’s objections are overruled and the R&R is adopted in full. Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike and Motion for Summary Judgment are both denied, and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is granted. BACKGROUND The Court adopts the R&R’s detailed Background Section, R&R at 2–14, over

Plaintiff’s objections, see infra Discussion Section II (overruling the objections raised at pages 15 through 27 in Plaintiff’s Objections to the Report and Recommendations (“Obj.”) [DE 305]). The Background section in this Order contains only the information necessary to understand the basis for Judge Locke’s recommendations and the objections thereto. A. Relevant Facts

MMC, a nonprofit hospital member of CHSLI, employed Plaintiff as a full-time neonatologist between 2000 and 2014. R&R at 2–3. As of 2012, there were only three full-time neonatologists at MMC: Plaintiff, Dr. Niti Rayjada, and the Chairwoman of

1 The captioned Defendants are: Mercy Medical Center (“MMC”), Catholic Health Services of Long Island (“CHSLI”), Doctor Swarna Devarajan (“Dr. Devarajan”) and Doctor John P. Reilly (“Dr. Reilly,” and together with MMC, CHSLI and Dr. Devarajan, “Defendants”). the Department of Pediatrics and the Director of Neonatology and Newborn Services Dr. Swarna Devarajan. Id. at 3. Dr. Rayjada was scheduled for a twelve-week maternity leave following the anticipated birth of her child in December 2012. Id.

In June 2012, Plaintiff voiced to Dr. Devarajan the possibility of taking vacation in late January 2013 – when Plaintiff’s twenty-nine-year-old daughter, who lived in Chicago, expected to give birth to her first child. Id. at 3–4. As stated in the R&R, Plaintiff “maintains her daughter suffered from serious health conditions during and after her pregnancy” but “did not inform [Dr.] Devarajan of any then- current or anticipated health issues, disabilities or medical needs her daughter had, or any possibility that her daughter would not be able to care for herself after labor.”

Id. at 4–5. Dr. Devarajan did not take any action with respect to Plaintiff’s comments; MMC’s policy since 2010 required neonatologists to request vacation time in writing. Id. at 3–5; see Defs. Local Rule 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 26–30 (“Defs. 56.1”) [DE 284-2]. In July 2012, Dr. Devarajan limited the remaining neonatology “physicians’ ability to take vacation between late 2012 and early 2013,” in light of Dr. Rayjada’s expected absence. R&R at 5–6.

In August 2012, Dr. Devarajan instituted an internal review of Plaintiff’s clinical management following concerns expressed by Dr. Richard Koppel, the Director of the Regional Perinatal Center at Cohen Children’s Medical Center. Id. An external review followed the internal review, with three practitioners at institutions unaffiliated with MMC and CHSLI reviewing Plaintiff’s medical care. Id. at 6. In September 2012, Plaintiff emailed Dr. Devarajan to request time off in February 2013. Id. Her email, in relevant part, reads: “I need vacation in February because my daughter is due to deliver her first baby and she will need me.” Ex. T

[DE 284-25] to Decl. of Justin A. Guilfoyle (“Guilfoyle Decl.”) [DE 284-1]; see R&R at 5. The request was not granted. R&R at 5. In November 2012, Plaintiff hired an attorney to help her get permission to take time off. Id. In December 2012, the neonatology department held meetings to address the concerns raised by those who reviewed Plaintiff’s clinical management. Id. at 5–7. Later that month, on the same day—December 27, 2012—Plaintiff (i) received permission to take leave in February 2013 and (ii) was placed on a three-

month Focused Practitioner Performance Evaluation (“FPPE”) to further assess her clinical “skills or knowledge” and to “determine what additional steps, if any, were appropriate.” Id. Three months, however, did not suffice to generate enough data to evaluate Plaintiff, and MMC kept the FPPE ongoing. Id. During the FPPE review, Defendants continued to hold several “meetings with [Plaintiff] and memorialized the

complaints and concerns raised [regarding Plaintiff], as well as meetings held, in written letters and notes to file.” Id. at 7–8. In June 2014, MMC held a Peer Review meeting at which it was “determined that [Plaintiff] failed to meet the appropriate standard of care.” Id. at 8–9. MMC and CHSLI terminated Plaintiff on August 21, 2014 and summarily suspended her clinical privileges “as a result of her standard of care issues, unprofessionalism, lack of respect, insubordination, failure to improve and failure to adhere to departmental policies, procedures and guidelines.” Id. at 9. B. Procedural History

Plaintiff commenced this action on April 20, 2015. R&R at 11. On March 10, 2016, then-presiding District Court Judge Arthur D. Spatt granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss, a decision which, on April 12, 2017, the Second Circuit affirmed except as to Plaintiff’s Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) retaliation claim and the supplemental state law claims over which the Court declined to exercise jurisdiction. R&R at 11–13. Judge Spatt dismissed the state law claims on October 28, 2017, [DE 65], leaving only the FMLA retaliation cause of action.

On June 25, 2016, Judge Spatt sanctioned Plaintiff’s counsel for his repeated failure to redact confidential information in his filings. [DE 47]. In October 2019, Judge Spatt warned Plaintiff’s counsel “to exercise significantly more discretion regarding discovery motion practice” as a result of Plaintiff’s numerous motions for sanctions and to strike – each premised upon Defendants’ alleged spoliation and fraud on the court. [DE 175]. Since the warning, the docket reflects Plaintiff filed

seven additional motions for sanctions, motions to strike, or motions to reconsider denials of same, including (i) a motion for sanctions filed not two months after Judge Spatt’s warning, [DE 180], and (ii) two motions for sanctions filed within five days of each other, see [DE 259] (dated Dec. 1, 2020); [DE 264] (dated Dec. 6, 2020). United States District Court Judge Sandra J. Feuerstein, who presided over the matter between June 2020 and April 2021, and Magistrate Judge Locke, who presided over the matter since its inception, each reminded Plaintiff’s counsel of his obligation to follow Court orders and rules in his motion practice. Order dated Jan. 6, 2021 (Feuerstein, J.); R&R at 20 (Locke, M.J.).

The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on October 28, 2020. [DEs 283, 284].

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