Rahul K. Nath, M.D. v. Texas Children's Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine

446 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1328, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 756, 2014 WL 4252269
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2014
Docket12-0620
StatusPublished
Cited by176 cases

This text of 446 S.W.3d 355 (Rahul K. Nath, M.D. v. Texas Children's Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rahul K. Nath, M.D. v. Texas Children's Hospital and Baylor College of Medicine, 446 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1328, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 756, 2014 WL 4252269 (Tex. 2014).

Opinions

Justice GUZMAN

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which Chief Justice HECHT, Justice JOHNSON, Justice WILLETT, and Justice DEVINE joined.

In a civil suit, few areas of trial court discretion implicate a party’s due process rights more directly than sanctions. This proceeding involves one of the highest reported monetary sanctions awards in Texas history stemming from baseless pleadings and one of the largest such awards in the United States.1 Further, the award was levied against a party rather than an attorney. The Civil Practice and Remedies Code and our Rules of Civil Procedure allow for pleadings sanctions against parties and attorneys when, among other things, a pleading was filed with an improper purpose or was unlikely to receive evidentiary support. We have held that due process concerns impose additional layers of protection on sanctions awards by requiring, among other things, that the awards be just and not excessive.

In this suit between a physician and other medical providers, the trial court imposed sanctions against the physician well in excess of one million dollars for filing groundless pleadings in bad faith and with an improper purpose. We conclude the physician plaintiffs pleadings asserted time-barred claims and addressed matters wholly irrelevant to the lawsuit in an attempt to leverage a more favorable settlement, and therefore are sanctionable. But in assessing the amount of sanctions, the trial court failed to consider whether, by litigating for over four years before seeking sanctions, the defendants bore some responsibility for the attorney’s fees they [359]*359incurred. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand to the trial court to reassess the amount of the sanctions award.

I. Background

Dr. Rahul K. Nath is a plastic surgeon who was employed by Baylor College of Medicine and affiliated with Texas Children’s Hospital (the Hospital). Nath reported to Dr. Saleh Shenaq, the Chief of Baylor College of Medicine’s Division of Plastic Surgery, who also was Nath’s partner at the Hospital’s Obstetrical Brachial Plexus Clinic. Baylor received fifteen percent of the clinic’s patient fees, and Nath and Shenaq evenly split the remainder of the fees.

Nath’s relationship with his colleagues turned acrimonious in 2008, when several doctors complained that Nath billed excessively, performed unnecessary procedures, and treated fellow colleagues in an unprofessional manner. A letter from his faculty supervisors states that, “there have been several complaints pertaining to your billing practices, ethics, and professional conduct,” and described his academic contributions as “minimal.” For these reasons, the letter announced that Nath’s faculty appointment would not be renewed, and his employment with Baylor was terminated effective June 30, 2004. Nath’s former office manager also claimed Nath had a history of making racially-provocative statements and seemed to harbor delusions of grandeur.

Shortly after receiving the letter, Nath retained an attorney and notified Baylor that its employees were making statements “potentially damaging to Dr. Nath’s reputation,” allegedly in an effort to get Nath’s patients to remain at the clinic. In 2006, Nath sued Shenaq, Baylor, and the Hospital. Nath and Shenaq settled two years later. Shenaq and another clinic doctor subsequently died and the clinic never reopened.

In his original pleading in 2006, Nath asserted claims for defamation and tor-tious interference with business relations against Baylor and the Hospital.2 Nath’s third amended petition added claims for negligent supervision and training predicated on the previously alleged facts. Nath’s fourth amended petition added allegations that Shenaq had been operating on patients despite impaired vision. Similarly, Nath’s fifth amended petition added that Shenaq had been operating on patients while afflicted with hepatitis. The fifth amended petition also included a declaratory judgment claim (that Nath could or should disclose to his patients that She-naq was in poor health). The Hospital counterclaimed for attorney’s fees pursuant to the declaratory judgment act, and in December 2009, moved for summary judgment on all of the claims in Nath’s fifth amended petition. Baylor moved for summary judgment in January 2010. In response, Nath moved to compel additional depositions, extend the deadline to respond to the motions, and continue the summary judgment hearing-all of which the trial court granted. In March 2010, Nath again moved to continue the summary judgment hearing, which the trial court denied. Nath retained new counsel, Daniel Shea, who appeared at the hearing and filed a motion to recuse the judge. Nath also moved to recuse the judge assigned to hear the motion to recuse. Ultimately, the motions to recuse were denied.

[360]*360Nath also filed a sixth amended petition in April 2010, in which he abandoned his defamation, tortious interference, negligence, and declaratory judgment claims and brought a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Hospital and Baylor moved for summary judgment on the new claim. Nath failed to respond to the motions and instead objected to the notice of hearing based on a technical defect. All parties appeared at a summary judgment hearing in June 2010, more than four years after the suit began, where the trial court dismissed Nath’s claims.3

Two months later, the Hospital nonsuit-ed its declaratory judgment counterclaim. The Hospital then moved to modify the judgment to assess attorney’s fees as sanctions against Nath. Nath retained new counsel and filed special exceptions to the motion for sanctions in September. After a hearing on the special exceptions and the Hospital’s sanctions motions, the trial court denied the special exceptions and granted the sanctions motion. The court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law indicating the sanctions were based on: (1) “Nath’s improper purposes in filing the pleadings in this case;” (2) “the bad faith that his actions manifest;” and (3) “the lack of any factual predicate for his claims, as previously established by the Court’s orders granting the motions for summary judgment.” The court explained that its finding of bad faith stemmed from Nath’s conduct in seeking information regarding Shenaq’s health, conduct for which the court had previously admonished Nath.4 Finally, the court concluded that Nath’s leveraging of this information in an attempt to obtain a settlement constituted an improper purpose.

The trial court further found that Nath took “a personal, participatory role in this litigation.” The court posited that Nath “is knowledgeable about the law and legal issues, having previously studied the law,” for several semesters in the early 1980s in Canada. According to the trial court, Nath insisted on delaying the summary judgment hearing so he could be present at two depositions. Nath also filed an affidavit in response to the motion for summary judgment indicating he authorized the facts and theories set forth in the petitions. The court further found that Nath met with one deponent shortly before his deposition to discuss his testimony. And the trial court observed that “Nath has used the court system to intimi[361]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
446 S.W.3d 355, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1328, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 756, 2014 WL 4252269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rahul-k-nath-md-v-texas-childrens-hospital-and-baylor-college-of-tex-2014.