Peper v. St. Mary's Hospital & Medical Center

207 P.3d 881, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2008 WL 5173628
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 2008
Docket07CA2491
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 207 P.3d 881 (Peper v. St. Mary's Hospital & Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peper v. St. Mary's Hospital & Medical Center, 207 P.3d 881, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2008 WL 5173628 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge CONNELLY.

This appeal raises issues under the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986 (HCQIA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 11101-11152. Plaintiff, Eric Anthony Peper, M.D. (Dr. Peper), sued defendants, St. Mary's Hospital and Medical Center (St. Mary's) and three of its officers, for revoking his hospital privileges. Another division of this court previously issued an unpublished opinion reversing summary judgment for defendants. On remand, the district court again granted summary judgment. Again we reverse. Defendants are not entitled to HCQIA immunity because Dr. Peper was denied notice and a hearing ("statutory due process") prior to the revocation, and he never waived his right to statutory due process.

I. Background

Dr. Peper is a cardiothoracic surgeon. St. Mary's is a hospital in Grand Junction, Colorado. The individual defendants who signed the letter revoking Dr. Peper's privileges are *884 Frances Raley, M.D., as Chairman of St. Mary's Credentials Committee; John C. Bee-son, M.D., as St. Mary's Vice President of Medical Affairs; and Robert Ladenburger, as St. Mary's President/CEO.

In spring 2002, Dr. Peper applied for and was granted medical staff privileges at St. Mary's. The hospital's letter stated the "appointment is to the Provisional Active Staff and to the Surgery Department for 2002." Then, in a December 2002 letter, St. Mary's congratulated Dr. Peper on his "reappointment" to the medical staff through December 2004. The letter stated this reappointment was to the "Prov Active Medical Staff" and was subject to the terms of the initial appointment and to hospital and medical staff bylaws.

In December 2002, without informing Dr. Peper, St. Mary's decided to review nineteen of his cardiothoracic cases (out of eighty-four procedures Dr. Peper had performed at St. Mary's). Dr. Peper alleges this decision was made after he told the hospital's president he planned to establish a competing medical practice.

St. Mary's submitted "charts" of the nineteen cases to an external reviewer. After reviewing those charts, the reviewer de-seribed an apparent "pattern of prolonged cross clamp and cardiopulmonary bypass times, and an excessive amount of blood usages," suggesting "there may be a problem with surgical technique and/or judgment." The reviewer's report also noted several cases of "misadventure," including "patients who were questionable candidates for mitral valve repair who underwent excessively long procedures" and "three patients who died." It stated, "Many of the complications noted were ones that any good cardiothoracic surgeon will encounter at one time or another," but there would be "cause for concern" in a data pool consisting of only one hundred total procedures at the hospital.

The external reviewer requested films on five of the patients for further review. St. Mary's did not provide this additional information to the reviewer.

On February 13, 2008, without prior notice, St. Mary's revoked Dr. Peper's privileges and staff membership "effective immediately." The letter notified Dr. Peper of the already-concluded review process and stated the external reviewer's "in-depth analysis demonstrated a pattern of consistently excessive cross-clamp times as well as several cases of care falling below generally accepted standards of practice." It added that St. Mary's credentials committee had "carefully reviewed these reports, discussed the findings, and found them to have merit."

The February 18 letter stated the signatories' "review of the Bylaws indicate [sic] that provisional privileges, when revoked, are not afforded a hearing or appeal [sic]." It informed Dr. Peper that the revocation would be reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank and the Colorado Board of Medical Examiners.

In August 2004, Dr. Peper brought a federal lawsuit and filed an administrative appeal to the state Committee on Anticompeti-tive Conduct (CAC). Both were dismissed. The court dismissed Dr. Peper's federal constitutional challenge after concluding St. Mary's was not a state actor, and it dismissed pendent state claims without prejudice. The CAC dismissed Dr. Peper's administrative challenge as untimely. Dr. Peper did not appeal either dismissal.

In September 2004, Dr. Peper filed this state lawsuit. His complaint, as amended, seeks monetary damages based on eight claims sounding in contract and tort. The district court dismissed the complaint, concluding defendants were entitled to immunity from damages. A division of this court reversed. Peper v. St. Mary's Hospital and Medical Center, 2006 WL 2024109 (Colo.App. No. 05CA1099, July 20, 2006) (not published pursuant to C.A.R. 35(F) ) (Peper I ).

Peper I construed the dismissal as a summary judgment because both sides had attached materials outside the pleadings. The majority concluded three of the four HCQIA immunity prerequisites were met: the first because defendants acted in the reasonable belief their action was in the furtherance of quality health care; the second because they acted after a reasonable effort to obtain the facts; and the fourth because they acted in the reasonable belief the action was warrant *885 ed by the known facts. Peper I, at 5-11, 16-17 (discussing 42 U.S.C. §§ 11112(a)(1), (2) & (4) ); but see id. at 22-29 (Roy, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (disagreeing that second requirement was met).

Peper I reversed based on the third requirement for immunity, involving adequate notice and hearing procedures. See 42 U.S.C. § 11112(a)(8). Defendants relied on a HCQIA provision deeming this requirement to be met where the statutory procedures were "waived voluntarily by the physician," id. § 11112(b). The waiver, according to defendants, occurred when Dr. Peper applied for provisional status and agreed to be bound by medical staff bylaws that did not give rise to hearing and appeal rights for provisional staff.

The division unanimously held this third requirement had not been satisfied based on the then-existing record. It noted "a dearth of authority interpreting waiver under the HCQIA," and referenced "the general principle that waivers of statutory rights are disfavored." Peper I, at 12, 15 (citation omitted). It ultimately concluded "the record [was] not sufficiently developed to ascertain [Dr. Pep-er's] hearing rights" under the bylaws. Id. at 12. It cited an "apparent conflict" between the medical staff and the hospital bylaws regarding whether provisional staff members had hearing rights, and wrote that any bylaw ambiguity "would have to be resolved against the hospital, as the drafter." Id. at 14-15.

Peper I held "the requirements of § 11112(a)(8) were not adequately established to permit summary judgment on the basis of HCQIA immunity at this stage of the proceedings" and reversed as to this third factor but otherwise affirmed. Peper I at 15. It "remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion, which may include a renewed summary judgment motion by defendants upon further. record development concerning the possible bylaw conflict." Id. at 20.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P.3d 881, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2008 WL 5173628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peper-v-st-marys-hospital-medical-center-coloctapp-2008.