Perry v. Rado

155 Wash. App. 626
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 22, 2010
DocketNo. 27792-5-III
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 155 Wash. App. 626 (Perry v. Rado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perry v. Rado, 155 Wash. App. 626 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Brown, J.

¶1 John C. Perry, MD, practices medicine through his professional service corporation, Teddy Bear [632]*632Obstetrics & Gynecology PS (collectively Dr. Perry). Dr. Perry was a member of the medical staff at Kadlec Medical Center (KMC) (now Kadlec Regional Medical Center) until the fall of 2006, when his staff membership and clinical privileges were terminated. Then, alleging multiple claims surrounded his termination, Dr. Perry sued KMC; KMC staff; Thomas A. Rado, MD, and Mary R. Harvey, MD, husband and wife; Frederick Bowers, MD, and Terri Bowers, husband and wife; Associated Physicians for Women PLLC (APW); Neil W. Rawlins, MD, and Christine Rawlins, husband and wife; and Amy R. Occhino, MD, and Giju Nair, MD, husband and wife (collectively KMC). Drs. Rado, Bowers, Rawlins, and Occhino are physicians who participated in the peer review activities that led to the termination of Dr. Perry’s medical staff membership and clinical privileges. Drs. Rawlins and Occhino were also members of APW, an OB/GYN (obstetrics/gynecology) practice that competed with Dr. Perry. APW was later acquired by KMC.

¶2 Dr. Perry appeals the dismissal of all his claims either under CR 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted or in summary judgment under CR 56. Dr. Perry contends (1) his common law, declaratory relief, and reinstatement claims were not barred by Washington’s health care peer review act, chapter 7.71 RCW, and should not have been dismissed under CR 12(b)(6); (2) his peer review claim was not barred under the Health Care Quality Improvement Act of 1986 (HCQIA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 11101-11152, and should not have been dismissed in summary judgment; (3) KMC staff are a separate entity subject to litigation; and (4) the trial court erred in awarding KMC its attorney fees and costs. We reject Dr. Perry’s contentions and affirm.

FACTS

¶3 Dr. Perry’s medical staff membership and clinical privileges were suspended by KMC’s Medical Executive Committee (MEC) on January 6, 2006. Prior to the suspension, Dr. Perry entered into a performance agreement with [633]*633the MEC to save his privileges after he failed to abide by certain corrective actions taken by KMC’s Medical Staff Quality Committee following a February 2005 gynecologic surgery in which he severely perforated the patient’s bowel.

¶4 One performance-agreement condition was that Dr. Perry could exercise his gynecologic-surgical privileges only if a board-certified physician monitor was present and assisted if certain procedures were undertaken, including laparoscopic lysis of adhesions (the removal of adhesions between abdominal organs through small incisions in the abdomen). The performance agreement specified that any breach would result in his immediate suspension, pending termination, from the medical staff.

¶5 After he entered into the performance agreement, Dr. Perry’s associate requested Dr. Perry to assist him with a laparoscopic lysis of adhesions procedure. During the procedure, the patient’s bowel was injured. Dr. Perry participated in the bowel repair. Dr. Perry did not call a monitor into the operating room (and by the express terms of the performance agreement, Dr. Perry’s associate could not serve as Dr. Perry’s monitor). Moreover, at the time of this surgery, Dr. Perry lacked clinical privileges at KMC to perform a bowel repair.

¶6 Pending a full investigation, the MEC asked Dr. Perry not to exercise his gynecologic-surgical privileges until the full MEC could meet in early January to discuss whether a permanent suspension should be put in place. He agreed. Ultimately, the MEC suspended his privileges. Dr. Perry appealed to a Fair Hearing Panel (Panel).

¶7 The Panel concluded the MEC acted in good faith but decided evidence was insufficient to conclude Dr. Perry violated his performance agreement when he participated in the surgery with his associate. The Panel concluded Dr. Perry had not received adequate notice that bowel repair had been removed from his privileges. The Panel, nevertheless, found that “[t]he MEC’s concerns regarding Dr. Perry’s judgment and performance were legitimate,” that “[b]ased on the facts before it, the MEC had reason to believe that its [634]*634failure to take action and suspend Dr. Perry’s privileges would place other patients at risk of imminent harm,” and that Dr. Perry’s conduct required even more monitoring and assessment than what was already required by the performance agreement. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 2494.

¶8 The MEC appealed the Panel’s decision to KMC’s Appeal Board, which consists of three members of KMC’s board of directors. The Appeal Board concluded, “[W]e do not find support for the Fair Hearing Panel’s finding that Dr. Perry acted within the Performance Agreement.” CP at 369. The Appeal Board reversed the Panel’s decision and recommended that the KMC Board of Directors “continue the suspension of Dr. Perry’s privileges.” CP at 369. The KMC Board of Directors reviewed the Appeal Board’s recommendation and voted to permanently suspend his privileges as of September 26, 2006.

¶9 Following the termination of his privileges, Dr. Perry first sought relief in federal district court. Several of his claims were dismissed, leaving solely his state law claims. Dr. Perry refiled his state law claims in superior court, alleging (1) violation of Washington’s health care peer review act, chapter 7.71 RCW; (2) denial of due process and breaches of good faith and fair dealing; (3) breach of contract and fraud; (4) breaches of fiduciary duties; and (5) tortious interference; and requesting (6) reinstatement of medical staff membership and clinical privileges; and (7) declaratory relief.

f 10 The superior court dismissed Dr. Perry’s declaratory relief, due process, denial of good faith, fair dealing, and fiduciary breach claims under CR 12(b)(6) because common law claims were not among the exclusive remedies for hospital peer review cause of actions listed in RCW 7.71.030. Dr. Perry’s tortious interference claim was not dismissed at that time, but was permitted to remain only to the extent it involved interference by KMC outside of KMC’s peer review proceedings. Dr. Perry’s reinstatement claim was also dismissed as pleaded in his complaint, but he was permitted to amend his complaint to include a claim [635]*635for injunctive relief as specified under RCW 7.71.030. Dr. Perry failed to amend his complaint and the court ultimately found he waived his right to assert the reinstatement claim. The trial court dismissed KMC’s medical staff as a defendant after concluding the medical staff was not a separate legal entity capable of being sued.

¶11 KMC then sought summary judgment on Dr. Perry’s peer review act and tortious interference claims. As to the peer review claims, the court found KMC was immune from liability under HCQIA. As to Dr. Perry’s tortious interference claim, the court found Dr. Perry did not provide any credible evidence of interference by KMC outside its peer review processes and thus his claim was barred under the exclusive remedy provision of RCW 7.71.030.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Wash. App. 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-rado-washctapp-2010.