Roberta Bruni Md, V. Uw School Of Medicine

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 8, 2022
Docket82427-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of Roberta Bruni Md, V. Uw School Of Medicine (Roberta Bruni Md, V. Uw School Of Medicine) 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
Roberta Bruni Md, V. Uw School Of Medicine, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON ROBERTA BRUNI, M.D., No. 82427-9-I Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, a Washington public educational institution,

Respondent.

COBURN, J. — This case involves a dispute over an offer of employment between

Dr. Roberta Bruni and the University of Washington School of Medicine (University)

containing multiple conditions precedent to her employment. One condition was for

Bruni to complete pre-employment materials “as indicated” in order to receive required

credentials and appointments before being approved to work as an employee of the

University. After several weeks of not receiving all of Bruni’s completed pre-

employment materials, the University rescinded its offer. Bruni contends that the

University improperly rescinded its offer because she completed some pre-employment

materials, the original due dates were waived, and she was not given a chance to

complete the remaining materials. Because Bruni did not fulfill the condition precedent,

and the University did not waive its requirement that the materials be completed timely,

we affirm.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material No. 82427-9-I/2

FACTS

In 2015, the University began its search process to hire a new faculty member

who would act as a clinical associate professor in the University of Washington School

of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, and Division of Neonatology. The position

included a faculty appointment at the University and responsibilities to treat patients at

various facilities, including the University of Washington Medical Center (UWMC),

Seattle Children’s Hospital (SCH), and St. Joseph Medical Center. The faculty member

also would fill the role of medical director of the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) at

St. Joseph Medical Center, which required high-level administrative and managerial

duties.

On February 11, 2016, Dr. Bruder Stapleton, Chair of the University’s

Department of Pediatrics, reached out to Bruni informing her she would be receiving a

written offer via email from the University regarding the position. Dr. Sandra Juul, the

Head of the Division of Neonatology, followed up with Bruni over the phone, which Juul

regularly did with candidates at this stage of hiring, to discuss the position and start date

of July 1. Bruni received an offer letter from Stapleton on February 22, and it stated the

following in relevant part:

We would propose your appointment to the faculty as a full-time Clinical Associate Professor effective July 1, 2016. Your appointment would require the concurrence of several review bodies, including the Department of Pediatrics Appointments and Promotions Committee, the voting faculty of the Department, the School of Medicine Dean and University bodies. This offer is contingent on these approvals. ...

This is a twelve-month appointment with salary paid over twelve months for eleven months of service. You should not expect to receive a salary increase during the first year of your appointment. Thereafter, you

2 No. 82427-9-I/3

would be eligible to participate in University faculty salary increases as they occur and within University guidelines. . .

Your appointment will be effective through the last day of the academic year, June 30, 2017. Your appointment will be reviewed for renewal, and in this first year of your appointment, you would be notified no later than March 31 of your renewal for the academic year, July 1, 2017, through June 30, 2018. In following years you will be notified of renewal or non-renewal of your appointment for the following academic year no later than December 31. ...

In order for you to begin work and see patients, you must have obtained the following: 1) your license to practice medicine in the State of Washington, 2) a medical staff appointment at Seattle Children’s Hospital, the University of Washington Medical Center and St. Josephs [sic] Medical Center Franciscan, 3) a faculty appointment, and 4) membership in the physicians practice plan.

If you accept this offer, you will be provided with credentialing forms that must be completed and returned as indicated. . . . ...

If you agree with the conditions of this letter, please indicate by signing your concurrence below and returning it to me by March 15, 2016. ...

The purpose of obtaining the requisite medical credentials and faculty

appointment is so a University employee is properly vetted in order to care for patients.

This process requires potential employees to compile and properly submit all materials

as indicated to apply for their medical staff privileges. Individual hospitals give medical

staff privileges (credentials) to practitioners when the hospital’s individual vetting system

is complete. The University’s offer required medical staff privileges at the three

separate hospitals referenced in the offer letter.

The completed materials go through several rounds of review—a vote by the

department faculty, approval by the School of Medicine Dean, approval of the Provost,

and approval by the Board of Regents. If candidates fail to submit their complete

3 No. 82427-9-I/4

package of pre-employment materials, the reviewing bodies are unable to commence

their reviewing process.

By March 1, Juul reached out to Bruni, because she had not yet heard from Bruni

regarding the offer. Bruni responded the same day apologizing and saying she had no

questions, and she sent her signed offer letter that same day. On March 9, Marissa

Atienza, a University program administrator in the department of pediatrics, provided

Bruni with a letter via email that listed the materials she needed to submit to apply for a

faculty appointment, including instructions for submitting those materials. In her email,

Atienza explained,

I will be processing your UW 1 academic faculty appointment paperwork with the help of Marie Pasquale from Faculty Affairs. Attached you will find all the forms necessary for this process. The first attachment is a letter from me outlining all the forms due April 1st. Please mail all original forms to Marie Pasquale at Seattle Children?s [sic] Hospital, 4800 Sand Point Way NE, CSB-100 Seattle, WA 98105. It would be greatly appreciated if you could acknowledge receipt of this email. I have also noted materials you will be receiving from other individuals. It is important to keep all information received separate and return to the appropriate person. . . .

In her attached letter, Atienza wrote, “Attached are forms for your faculty appointment in

the Department of Pediatrics. Please fill out and return to Marie Pasquale by April 1,

2016.” The email both attached multiple forms and provided links to where specific

forms could be downloaded. The list included an employment eligibility verification form

(I-9) that required Bruni to provide in-person verification by either arranging a

convenient time to do so with Pasquale in Seattle “in the very near future” or to have a

notary complete the form and for Bruni to also provide copies of her approved

identification. The list also included obtaining a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)

1 UW refers to the University of Washington. 4 No. 82427-9-I/5

license and three letters of recommendation from current or past institutions. Atienza

instructed Bruni that “[r]equests for letters should be addressed and sent . . . by April 1,

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