Salazare v. St. Vincent Hospital

631 P.2d 315, 96 N.M. 409
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1980
Docket4433
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 631 P.2d 315 (Salazare v. St. Vincent Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salazare v. St. Vincent Hospital, 631 P.2d 315, 96 N.M. 409 (N.M. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinions

OPINION

WALTERS, Judge.

This matter is before us on an interlocutory appeal from the trial court’s quashing of plaintiff’s notice to take the deposition of a panel member of the Medical Review Commission.

Plaintiff filed a malpractice suit on behalf of herself and her stillborn fetus after presenting the matter to the Commission in accordance with the Medical Malpractice Act, §§ 41-5-1 to 41-5-28, N.M.S.A.1978. The reviewing panel found substantial evidence of malpractice.

It appears from the trial court’s order that at the time plaintiff deposed defendant Wolf (an emergency room nurse at St. Vincent’s Hospital when the alleged malpractice occurred), Wolf was unable to recall much of the evidence he gave at the hearing before the panel. Plaintiff thereupon sought to depose a member of the panel who recalled Wolf’s testimony. In ruling on St. Vincent’s and Wolf’s motion to quash the notice of deposition, the trial court observed that the witness’s testimony probably would provide “an admission [made by Wolf at the panel hearing] which may almost prima facie go to meet [plaintiff’s] burden of proof in the case.” Nevertheless, the motion to quash was granted. The operative portions of the trial court’s order read:

[The court] FINDS AND CONCLUDES as follows:
1. The legislative intent of the Medical Malpractice Act, Sections 41-5-1 et seq. (NMSA 1978) was to create a privilege for members of the Medical Review Commission that would generally exempt them from discovery procedures during the pendency of a lawsuit.
2. This legislatively enacted privilege, referred to in paragraph one (1) above, is constitutionally valid.
3. Plaintiff has properly noticed opposing counsel and properly subpoenaed William Haire, all for the taking of Mr. Haire’s deposition. Mr. Haire was a member of the Medical Review Commission that heard Plaintiff’s claims against Defendants, and he heard the testimony of ERIC WOLF, one of the defendants.
4. Plaintiff’s counsel represented to the Court that Defendant WOLF can no longer recall some of the events to which he testified at the Medical Review Commission Hearing. Plaintiff’s counsel also represented that Mr. Haire can recall Mr. WOLF’S testimony with respect to such areas, that, Mr. WOLF’S testimony would be an admission that would tend to establish liability with respect to negligence, and that Mr. Haire is willing to be deposed subject to Subpoena.
5. Good cause does not exist for the taking of Mr. Haire’s deposition.
The court further FINDS- that this Order involves controlling questions of law as to which there are substantial grounds for difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal from such Order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.

We are asked principally to determine the correctness of the trial court’s interpretation of the Act as it applies to the facts of this case.

We first dispose of another issue raised by appellees. The suggestion that the interlocutory appeal should be dismissed (1) because the order was unappealable and, (2) alternatively, because the issue with which this appeal is concerned — that is, whether the Malpractice Act prevents the taking of testimony from panel members — arises from an assumption that the parties had appeared before the Medical Review Commission; that since the appealed ruling was invoked only upon motions and argument requesting that the notice of deposition be quashed, there is no evidence in the record to verify that the discovery issue was concerned with a proceeding before the statutory Medical Review Commission. To quote from appellees’ brief: “Accordingly, as this interlocutory appeal purports to be based upon a privilege or lack thereof contained or not contained in the Medical Malpractice Act, there is no evidentiary basis upon which to base an interlocutory appeal involving the Act.”

We' note first that the pleadings and the record of the trial court’s ruling from the bench, conclusively disclose that both sides acknowledged the underlying proceedings before the Commission as the basis for plaintiff’s subpoenaing the witness for deposition and for the defendants’ resistance to the proposed discovery. A later order of the trial court recites that it accepted as true plaintiff’s representations regarding the case history preceding the notice for Haire’s deposition. The fact of that acceptance is a sufficient record to determine the propriety of the ruling as it was influenced by the Malpractice Act.

Secondly, if the denial of discovery were not occasioned by the trial court’s conclusion of a privilege conferred by the Act, then the grounds recited in defendants’ motion to quash were false, and defendants were without justification to oppose the taking of the witness’s deposition. See Rule 26, N.M.R.Civ.P.1978. Defendants cannot have it both ways. Either they relied on certain provisions of the Malpractice Act to obtain the court’s ruling, or they offered no sufficient grounds to support their motion to quash.

The argument of non-appealability of the order is equally facetious. The order complied with the requirements of § 39-3-4 A, N.M.S.A.1978; this court granted the interlocutory appeal on January 2, 1980. The acceptance of the appeal by this court, when there has been compliance with § 39-3-4 A, is not subject to challenge. Additionally, the discovery question here “is of extraordinary significance [and] there is extreme need for reversal of the district court mandate before the case goes to judgment” if the ruling was erroneous. American Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 380 F.2d 277, 282 (2d Cir. 1967). The elements of a controlling question of law and a likely advancement of the ultimate termination of litigation exist and are inherent in the question here presented. The trial court so ruled, and so did this court in granting the interlocutory appeal. We adhere to our earlier ruling.

I.

The provisions of the Medical Malpractice Act upon which appellees rely are the following:

41-5-20. Panel deliberations and decision.
A. The deliberations of the panel shall be and remain confidential. . . .
* * * * * *
D. The report of the medical review panel shall not be admissible as evidence in ally action subsequently brought in a court of law....

Section 41-5-21 authorizes the director of the Commission to adopt and publish rules of procedure. In 1971, the New Mexico Medical Society and the Board of Bar Commissioners jointly approved a revision of Rules of Procedure of the Medico-Legal Malpractice Panel, a screening panel voluntarily formed by the two professions which pre-existed the statutory commission.

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Salazare v. St. Vincent Hospital
631 P.2d 315 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
631 P.2d 315, 96 N.M. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salazare-v-st-vincent-hospital-nmctapp-1980.