Reutter v. Weber

179 P.3d 977, 2007 Colo. LEXIS 351, 2007 WL 1240199
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 30, 2007
Docket06SA79
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 179 P.3d 977 (Reutter v. Weber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reutter v. Weber, 179 P.3d 977, 2007 Colo. LEXIS 351, 2007 WL 1240199 (Colo. 2007).

Opinion

Justice EID

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiffs Duane and Patty Reutter have sued Drs. Kevin Weber and Matthew Sump-ter and Pueblo Cardiology Associates, P.C. (collectively, “Defendants”) for malpractice based on what they allege to have been negligent medical treatment given to Mr. Reutter in January 2002. In this original proceeding, the Reutters seek relief from a trial court order allowing Defendants to interview on an informal basis other medical providers who were involved in Mr. Rentier's treatment but who are not parties to this suit. Under the trial court’s ruling, these interviews would be permitted to take place outside the Reutters’ presence.

We now hold that the trial court was correct when it ruled that the Reutters were not entitled to attend the interviews in question. The physician-patient privilege is inapplicable to information relevant to the Reutters’ malpractice action because it is subject to a *979 statutory exception to the privilege. This exception covers information acquired by medical providers who, like the non-party providers in this case, acted “in consultation with” other medical providers who have been sued for malpractice. § 13-90-107(l)(d)(II), C.R.S. (2006). We disagree with the Reut-ters’ argument that, under our decision in Samms v. District Court, 908 P.2d 520 (Colo.1995), they are entitled to attend the interviews in order to protect medical information not relevant to their malpractice action — that is, residually privileged information. Samms did not create a blanket rule that a plaintiff is always entitled to attend an interview of a non-party medical provider. Instead, it held that the trial court should take appropriate measures to protect against the divulgement of residually privileged information, and that allowing the plaintiff to attend the interview is the preferred measure where there is a high risk that residually privileged information will be divulged. Here, by contrast, the medical providers were “in consultation with” each other in a unified course of treatment— a course of treatment that forms the basis of the malpractice action. In this sort of situation, the risk that residually privileged information will be divulged is relatively low. Where, as here, the non-party medical providers do not possess residually privileged information, the trial court does not abuse its discretion by refusing to require that the plaintiff be permitted to attend the interviews of those non-party medical providers. Accordingly, we discharge the rule to show cause.

I.

On January 14, 2002, Duane Reutter arrived at the emergency room of St. Mary Corwin Medical Center complaining of chest pain and difficulty breathing. He was initially examined by the attending physician, Defendant Weber, who recognized his cardiac symptoms and sought advice from Defendant Sumpter, a cardiologist. Sumpter immediately decided to perform an angiogram, which required intubation due to Mr. Reut-Weber attempted to intubate Mr. Reutter, but was unsuccessful. Weber then contacted Scott Mantel, an anesthesiologist, who performed the intubation. Another cardiologist, George Gibson, performed the angiogram. All of these events happened within a short period of time on January 14. ter’s shortness of breath.

Once the angiogram was completed, Sump-ter consulted with a critical care specialist, Greg Shapiro, for Mr. Reutter’s continuing treatment at St. Mary Corwin. Mr. Reutter was transferred to the hospital’s critical care unit, where he remained for the next three days. Mr. Reutter continued to have difficulty breathing and could not be removed from the ventilator while under Shapiro’s care. Nurses and respiratory therapists assisted in Mr. Reutter’s treatment. Four days after arriving at St. Mary Corwin, Mr. Reutter was transferred to the Veterans Administration Medical Center. Doctors there determined that Mr. Reutter suffered a brain injury resulting from oxygen deprivation.

The Reutters sued Defendants for medical malpractice stemming from Mr. Reutter’s hospitalization at St. Mary Corwin. 1 Defendants subsequently filed a motion requesting the trial court’s permission to conduct interviews with Shapiro and Mantel, as well as the non-registered nurses and respiratory therapists who treated Mr. Reutter at St. Mary Corwin (collectively, the “Medical Witnesses”). Defendants sought to hold these interviews without the Reutters or their attorneys in attendance. The Reutters opposed Defendants’ motion on grounds that the information acquired by the Medical Witnesses in the course of treating Mr. Reutter was privileged and in addition, under this court’s decision in Samms, they were entitled to attend all interviews of non-party medical providers.

The trial court granted Defendants’ motion on grounds that the physician-patient privilege was inapplicable to the Medical Witnesses because they were “in consultation *980 with” Defendants and therefore excluded from the physician-patient privilege under section 13 — 90—107(l)(d)(II), C.R.S. (2006). In a motion to reconsider, the Reutters claimed for the first time that they were entitled to attend the interviews because the Medical Witnesses may have acquired “residually privileged information” while treating Mr. Reutter, i.e., medical information about Mr. Reutter that was unrelated to the course of treatment at St. Mary Corwin forming the basis of the malpractice action. At a hearing on the Reutters’ motion to reconsider, the trial court asked the Reutters’ counsel about the possibility of residually privileged information. Counsel was unable to provide any factual basis for the claim that the Medical Witnesses may have obtained residually privileged information, and the trial court denied the Reutters’ motion to reconsider.

We issued a rule to show cause to determine whether the trial court was correct to grant Defendants’ motion to conduct interviews with the Medical Witnesses.

II.

Our holding in this ease takes two parts. First, we agree with the trial court that information relevant to this lawsuit acquired by the Medical Witnesses while treating Mr. Reutter is subject to the statutory exception to the physician-patient privilege set forth in section 13 — 90—107(l)(d)(II). Here, the Medical Witnesses were “in consultation with” Defendants when they participated in a unified course of treatment for Mr. Reutter at St. Mary Corwin, and therefore the information they acquired in the course of that treatment and relevant to this lawsuit is not covered by the physician-patient privilege. Second, Samms does not create a blanket rule that entitles a plaintiff to attend any interview with a non-party medical provider regardless of the circumstances. Rather, when a non-party medical provider is “in consultation with” a sued provider in a unified course of treatment — a course of treatment that forms the basis of the malpractice action — the risk of residual privilege is relatively low. Where, as here, the trial court determines that the non-party medical providers possess no residually privileged information, the trial court does not abuse its discretion by refusing to require that the plaintiff be permitted to attend the interviews. We therefore discharge the rule.

A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 P.3d 977, 2007 Colo. LEXIS 351, 2007 WL 1240199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reutter-v-weber-colo-2007.