Pope v. St. John

862 S.W.2d 657, 1993 WL 302663
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 10, 1993
Docket3-93-016-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 862 S.W.2d 657 (Pope v. St. John) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pope v. St. John, 862 S.W.2d 657, 1993 WL 302663 (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

*659 POWERS, Justice.

Marty Howard Pope and Sally Bates Pope appeal from a summary judgment that they take nothing by their suit against Holland St. John, a physician. We will reverse the trial-court judgment and remand the cause to the trial court.

THE CONTROVERSY

St. John, a board-certified internist, was “on call” at Central Texas Medical Center in San Marcos, Texas, when Mr. Pope came to the emergency room complaining of back pain and fever. The emergency-room physician, Virgilio Suarez, examined Pope and then consulted by telephone with St. John, who was at home. Suarez told St. John that he had received a patient for evaluation of fever and back pain with a history of recent back surgery and epidural injections. Because St. John’s area of specialization was not neurology or neurosurgery, and the Center was not able to handle cases involving those specialties, St. John recommended that Pope be referred to a hospital with the requisite neurosurgeon or to the physician who had performed the surgery. St. John had no further connection with Pope.

Pope withdrew from the Center against medical advice after a Round Rock, Texas, hospital refused to admit him. The following day, Pope was transported by ambulance to an Austin hospital. There a lumbar puncture revealed that he suffered from meningitis. About a month later, Pope was admitted to another Austin hospital for treatment of the meningitis and certain resulting, permanent disabilities. Mr. and Mrs. Pope sued St. John, among others, alleging that his negligence was a proximate cause of Pope’s suffering and disabilities.

St. John moved for summary judgment on the following grounds: (1) he never diagnosed, cared for, or treated Pope and thus no physician-patient relationship existed between them; (2) without such a relationship, St. John owed Pope no duty of care upon which he might found a claim of negligence. The trial court sustained the motion, rendered judgment accordingly, and severed Pope’s action against St. John from his actions against others. This appeal ensued.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

The Popes bring a single point of error, contending the trial court erred in granting the summary judgment. See Malooly Bros., Inc. v. Napier, 461 S.W.2d 119, 121 (Tex. 1970).

St. John declined to see, examine, or treat Pope and relies upon the following legal principle to reach his conclusion that he owed Pope no duty of care:

It is a well established principle of law that a physician is hable for malpractice or negligence only where there is a physi-eian/patient relationship as a result of a contract, express or implied, that the doctor wih treat the patient with proper professional skill, and there is a breach of professional duty to the plaintiff.

Salas v. Gamboa, 760 S.W.2d 838, 840 (Tex. App. — San Antonio 1988, no writ) (emphasis added). This means, according to St. John, that the scope of a physician’s duty is limited to those with whom he contracts, expressly or impliedly, regarding treatment; and since St. John declined to contract with Pope, the latter fell outside the scope of St. John’s duty. We disagree that St. John was entitled to summary judgment on this theory. As shown below, persons may come under a legal duty to others irrespective of a contract or other legal relation, and we find no reason or authority for exempting physicians, as a class, from these general rules of negligence law. And, as we shall see below, the summary-judgment record shows that St. John did more than simply decline contract relations with Pope.

I.

The law imposes upon all persons, physicians not excepted, a duty to act as a reasonably prudent person would act under the same or similar circumstances, considering any reasonably foreseeable risk or probability of injury to others. The duty is a general one:

Whether or not there is a pre-existing privity in legal relationship between the act and the person injured, if the circumstances are such that a person of ordinary *660 common sense would recognize that if he did not exercise reasonable care in his conduct with regard to those circumstances, his acts would place another person in danger, the duty to use ordinary care to avoid such danger arises.

Bennett v. Span Indus., Inc., 628 S.W.2d 470, 474 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 1982, writ refd n.r.e.) (emphasis added). Irrespective of any contract relationship between St. John and Pope, the law imposed upon St. John a duty to act with ordinary care toward Pope if the circumstances were such that a reasonably prudent person in St. John’s position would recognize that his acts, unless done with ordinary care, would place Pope in danger. This formulation of St. John’s duty should not be confused with the proof required to establish its included elements.

In an affidavit accompanying his motion for summary judgment, St. John stated that he was “familiar with the standards of care” applicable in the vicinity to “on call internists who are presented with patients suffering from neurosurgical problems.” 1 The standards are, he said, as follows: (1) on receiving a telephone call from the emergency-room physician, the internist should “obtain a thorough history from” that physician, regarding the patient; (2) determine from the patient history if the on-call internist has the specialty qualifications necessary to treat the patient properly; (3) determine if the hospital has adequate facilities to treat the patient’s problem and, if not, whether to transfer him to another hospital having adequate facilities; and (4) indicate to the emergency-room physician the need to transfer the patient and suggest a specific hospital with the required facilities. “This is exactly the action I took,” St. John declared in his affidavit, “notwithstanding there was no patient-physician relationship.” This comment implies a very narrow view of what constitutes a “patient-physician relationship”; the circumstances suggest at least an implied contract with someone that St. John would take the actions he believes he was obliged to take and did in fact take. See Dougherty v. Gifford, 826 S.W.2d 668, 674-75 (Tex.App.—Texarkana 1992, no writ).

In any event, St. John’s affidavit implicitly concedes that he owed Pope a duty to identify his ailment, from a thorough medical history, in order that St. John might determine if the ailment fell within his qualifications to treat and if it could be treated at the Center. In addition, the affidavit concedes that St. John actually undertook to perform those duties even in the absence of a contract imposing them. As discussed below, the Popes’ response to St.

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862 S.W.2d 657, 1993 WL 302663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-st-john-texapp-1993.