Pastore v. Samson

900 A.2d 1067, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 111, 2006 WL 1652248
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 2006
Docket2005-110-MP
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 900 A.2d 1067 (Pastore v. Samson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pastore v. Samson, 900 A.2d 1067, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 111, 2006 WL 1652248 (R.I. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice WILLIAMS,

for the Court.

On this writ of certiorari, Kent County Memorial Hospital (hospital) requests that we review a decision of a motion justice granting the motion of the plaintiff, Margaret Pastore (plaintiff), administratrix of the estate of Fred V. Pastore (Pastore), whereby the hospital would be required to produce in the course of discovery in this medical malpractice civil suit some 750 pages of documents pertaining to one of its doctors. The hospital’s primary contention is that the production of these documents would offend the “peer-review” privilege afforded by G.L.1956 § 23-17-25 and G.L.1956 § 5-37.3-7. For the following reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

*1071 I

Facts and Travel

The genesis of this medical malpractice action was the death of Pastore on July 12, 1998. According to plaintiffs complaint, Charles Samson, M.D. (Dr. Samson) and Richard San Antonio, M.D. (Dr. San Antonio) provided negligent care to Pastore earlier that day at the hospital, and such treatment caused his death. As his mother and the administratrix of Pastore’s estate, plaintiff brought suit against defendants, Dr. Samson, Dr. San Antonio, and the hospital (collectively defendants) in the Superior Court. In addition to a variety of other negligence-based counts, plaintiff also alleged that the hospital negligently credentialed and granted hospital privileges to Dr. Samson.

The discovery phase stalled as plaintiff and the hospital engaged in a lengthy battle over certain hospital documents concerning Dr. Samson. This discovery m§-lée began when plaintiff served her third request for production on the hospital pursuant to Rule 34 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure. That request sought the following: (1) information related to the credentialing or privileges of Dr. Samson or Dr. San Antonio; (2) documents sent to Dr. Samson or Dr. San Antonio by any committee investigating or reviewing his request for, or renewal of, privileges; (3) all items setting forth any limitation upon the privileges or credentials of Dr. Samson or Dr. San Antonio. 1 *1072 After the hospital objected on the grounds of peer-review privilege and after plaintiff moved to strike those objections and compel the hospital to produce the documents, a motion justice conditionally sustained the hospital’s objection, giving it thirty days to compile a privilege log.

After the parties wrangled over how to protect the confidential nature of some of the documents, 2 the hospital produced certain documents, as well as a privilege log for those that were not produced. Roughly two and a half years later, plaintiff moved to compel a further response, arguing that the peer-review privilege did not protect the withheld documents; the hospital eventually responded by producing some additional documents, and then supplementing the privilege log. The plaintiff then filed a renewed motion to compel a further response, requesting that the motion justice conduct an in camera review to determine whether the documents referred to in the supplemental privilege log actually were protected by the peer-review privilege. The hospital objected, arguing that the documents were protected by both the peer-review privilege and the Confidentiality of Health Care Information Act, G.L.1956 chapter 37.3 of title 5.

Based on a request that a second motion justice made at a chambers conference, the hospital submitted a second supplemental privilege log itemizing some 750 pages of documents and now asserting four categories of privileges: peer-review, confidential health-care information, board of medical licensure and discipline, and attorney-client. 3 The motion justice then heard arguments from the parties concerning the privileges, as well as the hospital’s additional motion to sever the negligent credentialing claim from the remaining malpractice claims. After hearing those arguments, the motion justice denied. without prejudice the hospital’s motion to sever; she also granted plaintiffs motion to compel the production of the documents on the condition that she would review the documents in camera and sort them into four types: documents that clearly were privileged; documents that clearly were unprivileged; documents of a questionable nature that the hospital needed to clarify; and those that contained an individual’s confidential information.

After conducting that in camera review, the motion justice ordered the hospital to produce all 750 pages of the documents to plaintiff. The only limit on' the disclosure was that certain documents were to be redacted to omit patient information, such as names and Social Security numbers. Although she prefaced her ruling with the concern that a negligent credentialing claim was irreconcilable with the peer-re *1073 view privilege, she also reiterated that she did not consider information that was not “generated in the peer review process,” such as a patient complaint, to be protected by that privilege. The only document that the motion justice referred to expressly in her ruling was a transcript— numbered 492-543 in the hospital’s second supplemental privilege log — that she determined was not privileged because it only related to quality control “in the broadest sense of the term[ ].” Finally, the motion justice stayed the order for five days to allow for a petition to this Court for writ of certiorari.

A duty justice of this Court granted the hospital’s initial motion for stay pendente lite. We then granted defendants’ petition and continued the stay until further order of this Court.

II

Analysis

For simplicity, we will subdivide the arguments set forth by the hospital and Dr. Samson into arguments pertaining to the peer-review privilege and arguments pertaining to other privileges. 4

The central focus of the arguments set forth by both the hospital and Dr. Samson is on the peer-review privilege. The hospital posits three basic arguments with respect to that privilege. First, the hospital argues that our previous decisions concerning the peer-review privilege must be “revisited.” In a similar vein, the hospital also requests that we conclude, contrary to a previous decision, that the peer-review privilege statute is a remedial statute that should be construed liberally. Second, assuming arguendo that the motion justice’s legal interpretation of the peer-review privilege was correct, the hospital contends that the motion justice nevertheless erred in her application of the privilege when she ordered the production of all the documents because at least one of the documents was generated by a peer-review board and at least one other document was a transcript of a hearing of a peer-review board. Third, the hospital urges us to interpret the peer-review privilege statute to require a plaintiff to obtain information from its original source; Dr. Samson joins the hospital in this third argument.

Doctor Samson makes two additional arguments.

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Bluebook (online)
900 A.2d 1067, 2006 R.I. LEXIS 111, 2006 WL 1652248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pastore-v-samson-ri-2006.