Phipps v. Sasser

445 P.2d 624, 74 Wash. 2d 439, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 784
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1968
Docket39904, 39880
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 445 P.2d 624 (Phipps v. Sasser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phipps v. Sasser, 445 P.2d 624, 74 Wash. 2d 439, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 784 (Wash. 1968).

Opinions

Hill, J.

Two superior court decisions are before us for review, each on a writ of certiorari. We deal with them in this single opinion because each raises the same question: Whether, and if so, when and to what extent a personal-injury plaintiff may be held to have waived his statutory physician-patient privilege1 before actual trial, thereby en[441]*441titling defendant to pretrial discovery as to medical experts otherwise covered by that privilege?

Anthony Appolito, one party-plaintiff in Phipps, Administrator, and Anthony Appolito v. Sasser (hereinafter referred to as the Appolito case), was injured in a collision between a motor scooter and an automobile in Benton County. He is a musician and, in following his rather peripatetic profession, was treated by some six different doctors in a total of four cities between the incident of the collision and the time, roughly a year later, when he settled in Seattle. There, plaintiff placed himself under the continuing care of two physicians suggested by Seattle counsel. Defense counsel, viewing their deposition of Mr. Appolito as something less than satisfactorily enlightening, noted the taking of depositions of his Seattle physicians on the grounds that information only thus procurable was essential to intelligent exercise of their undisputed right to a defense physical examination of the plaintiff, under our then RPPP 35.2 Mr. Appolito moved to quash the subpoenas duces tecum, issued to the physicians, urging that the information sought was privileged. The Benton County Superior Court denied the motion, explicitly relying on the dissent in our recent decision of Bond v. Independent Order of Foresters, 69 Wn.2d 879, 421 P.2d 351 (1966). Mr. Appoli-to’s request for review by certiorari was granted.

Andrew Jackson Ashurst, the injured plaintiff in Ashurst v. Williams (hereinafter referred to as the Ashurst case), alleged injuries caused by a fall at the home of defendants (one of whom is plaintiff’s stepson) in King County. After commencement of the action to recover damages for injuries claimed to have resulted from the fall, Mr. Ashurst made timely answer to written interrogatories of the defendants; gave an oral deposition to defense counsel, with cross-examination by his own attorney; voluntarily sent defendants medical reports from three of his doctors, and voluntarily stipulated to defense capture of some 50 pages [442]*442of relevant hospital records. Defense medical examination of Mr. Ashurst under our then RPPP 35,3 was scheduled for, and was subsequently had, some 3 days after the trial court’s ruling which is now before us for review. The defendants had moved for authorization to depose the plaintiff’s physician on the grounds that plaintiff had waived his privilege by filing suit, or, in any event, by volunteering privileged information. It was urged, in opposition, that, as to the first ground, our recent case of Bond v. Independent Order of Foresters, supra, had settled Washington law to the contrary; and, as to the second, that the privileged information had been volunteered solely because of defense representations that an offer of compromise would result therefrom. The King County Superior Court denied the defense motions, relying on the majority opinion in Bond, supra.

We thus have for review a Benton County ruling to the effect that filing a personal-injury action constitutes a waiver of the physician-patient privilege; and a King County ruling that it does not constitute such a waiver (though other grounds for waiver are also urged in the King County case).

We have heretofore quoted the statutory privilege, and we now direct attention to CR 26,4 under which the defendants were seeking to take the deposition of the physicians of the injured plaintiff in each case. It expressly limits the scope of. examination to any matter, not privileged, which is relevant to subject matter involved in the pending action.

[443]*443In the Bond case, supra (a 5-to-4 decision), we held that the bringing of a personal-injury action does not, by itself, constitute a waiver of the physician-patient privilege afforded by our statute.

We also held in that case that the plaintiff’s testimony in a pretrial deposition, as to the nature and extent of his injuries, does not constitute a waiver of the physician-patient privilege where the testimony is in response to the defendant’s pretrial subpoena since, under such circumstances, the plaintiff is being examined as an adverse witness in compliance with the subpoena and rules of court governing discovery.

In adhering to our decision in the Bond case, supra, we are not unmindful of the objects and purposes of liberal discovery rules such as ours. The benefits, as enumerated in Moore’s Federal Practice, are:

1. It is of great assistance in ascertaining the truth and in checking and preventing perjury. . . .
2. It is an effective means of detecting and exposing false, fraudulent, and sham claims and defenses.
3. It makes available in a simple, convenient, and often inexpensive way facts which otherwise could not have been proved, except with great difficulty and sometimes not at all.
4. It educates the parties in advance of trial as to the real value of their claims and defenses, thereby encouraging settlements out of court.
5. It expedites the disposal of litigation, saves the time of the courts, and clears the docket of many cases by settlements and dismissals which otherwise would have to be tried.
6. It safeguards against surprise at the trial, prevents delays and narrows and simplifies the issues to be tried, thereby expediting the trial.
7. It facilitates both the preparation and the trial of cases. 4 Moore’s Fed. Prac., ¶ 26.02 [2], at 1034 (2d ed).

While we are in full accord with the purposes of these rules and desire to make them effective instrumentalities for making available all the relevant facts in any case, we [444]*444must recognize that the discovery rules themselves, by explicit language, make their procedures unavailing and thereby their benefits unavailable with reference to privileged matters.

The rule of privilege embodied in RCW 5.60.060(4) reflects the considered judgment of one branch of our tripartite-structured government, traditionally regarded as constitutionally separate, independent and equal. Such legislative judgments merit, even require, the exercise of judicial self-restraint of a very high order.5 It is our duty when confronted with a valid act such as this to give effect to the legislative intent embodied therein, refraining from substituting our judgment in the matter, whatever that may be, for that of the legislature.

It is to be noted that unlike the attorney-client and priest-penitent privilege, which have a common-law origin and are broad in their scope, the physician-patient privilege is of purely statutory origin; was not known at common law,6

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Bluebook (online)
445 P.2d 624, 74 Wash. 2d 439, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phipps-v-sasser-wash-1968.