Street v. Washington Hospital Center

558 A.2d 690, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 92, 1989 WL 51195
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1989
Docket87-1009
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 558 A.2d 690 (Street v. Washington Hospital Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Street v. Washington Hospital Center, 558 A.2d 690, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 92, 1989 WL 51195 (D.C. 1989).

Opinion

FERREN, Associate Judge:

In this medical malpractice action, appellant claims the trial court erred (1) in denying his motion to stay appellee Washington Hospital Center’s (WHC’s) motion for summary judgment pending further discovery and (2) in granting WHC’s motion. 1 We affirm without addressing the first issue, for we conclude appellant has failed to show that either the facts of record or those he hopes to establish through discovery will be sufficient to raise a jury question concerning WHC’s liability under a theory of ostensible agency.

I.

The uncontradicted evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to appellant, reveals that in 1982, appellant Street referred his wife to Dr. Leslie E. Hedgepath, who had acted as Mr. Street’s physician for more than ten years. Dr. Hedgepath had been referred to Mr. Street as a doctor with hospital privileges. For several years, Mrs. Street visited Dr. Hedgepath regularly at his private medical office in the Physicians’ Building, owned by WHC and located next door to its hospital building, to monitor her diabetes. Dr. Hedgepath was a member of the independent medical staff of WHC and, based on such membership, had received privileges to admit and treat his patients at the hospital as their attending physician. Mrs. Street saw the doctor at his office on October 24, 1985, when she had an enlarged thyroid which the doctor diagnosed as a goiter, prescribing no treatment. During her next appointment, on December 13, 1985, Mrs. Street told Dr. Hedgepath that she was suffering from shoulder pain. Before her next scheduled appointment on January 10, 1986, Mrs. Street called the doctor complaining of severe pain; he prescribed a painkiller. On January 10, 1986, Dr. Hedgepath sent Mrs. *691 Street to the WHC hospital building for thyroid function blood tests. The results, which were negative, were forwarded to him. This was Mrs. Street's only contact with the hospital itself; she has never been admitted there as a patient. On January 15, Mrs. Street sought further treatment for the shoulder pain from a rheumatologist. He referred her to a third physician, who diagnosed thyroid cancer on January 23. On January 29, Mrs. Street’s thyroid was removed. Her physician discovered that the cancer had metastasized and was terminal. Mrs. Street died on November 24, 1986.

Appellant’s amended complaint alleged medical malpractice against Dr. Hedgepath for failure to diagnose his wife’s thyroid cancer. The complaint further alleged that the doctor had committed the malpractice while acting as the agent, servant, or employee of WHC. In its May 26, 1987, motion for summary judgment, WHC sought dismissal as a defendant, arguing that Dr. Hedgepath was not, nor at any time relevant to the lawsuit had ever been, an agent, servant, or employee of WHC. On June 8, appellant requested a stay of WHC’s motion for summary judgment, seeking further discovery to prove that while Dr. Hedgepath, as an independent contractor, was not an actual agent of WHC, there was a material issue of fact as to whether he had acted as an ostensible agent of WHC when providing medical services to Mrs. Street. Appended to appellant’s motion for a stay was plaintiff’s first set of interrogatories and first request for document production. These discovery requests sought information concerning WHC’s ownership and management of the Physicians’ Building, the history of Dr. Hedgepath’s employment relationship with the Hospital Center, and signs or material available to, or provided to, the public concerning WHC’s relationship to the doctors with offices in the Physicians’ Building. 2 On June 15, 1987, the trial court denied appellant’s cross-motion and ordered the filing of an opposition to WHC’s summary judgment motion. In this opposition, appellant maintained that the fact that Dr. Hed-gepath occupied an office at the Physicians’ Building located very near the hospital, and that WHC had done nothing to put Mrs. Street on notice that Dr. Hedgepath did not have the Hospital Center’s imprimatur, created a jury question on the ostensible agency issue. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of WHC on July 24, 1987. 3

II.

Summary judgment is properly granted when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Owens v. Tiber Island Condominium Ass’n, 373 A.2d 890, 894 (D.C.1977). In reviewing the trial court’s entry of summary judgment, we ordinarily must decide “whether the trial court properly concluded that appellant did not meet his burden of setting forth specific facts demonstrating a genuine issue for trial, *692 and, if appellant did not, whether the trial court correctly applied [the law] to the undisputed facts.” Hill v. District of Columbia, 345 A.2d 867, 869 (D.C.1975). Appellant claims that the undisputed facts existing at the time at which the summary judgment order was entered raised a material issue for trial, as did the facts that would have been disclosed in the answers to his first set of interrogatories and his first request for document production. 4 Considering both the facts of record, and the categories of information appellant sought to document through discovery— and assuming, solely for the sake of argument, that this court would permit the application of an ostensible agency theory to establish vicarious tort liability — -we cannot agree.

The principles of ostensible or apparent agency are set forth in the Restatement (Second) of Agency § 267 (1958):

One who represents that another is his [or her] servant or other agent and thereby causes a third person justifiably to rely upon the care or skill of such apparent agent is subject to liability to the third person for harm caused by the lack of care or skill of the one appearing to be a servant or other agent as if he [or she] were such.

Courts have held hospitals liable for the negligence of physicians working as independent contractors where those physicians have been furnished through the hospital’s own institutional processes. More specifically, cases permitting liability against hospitals under an ostensible agency theory concern emergency room physicians working as independent contractors, or specialists providing services to such physicians, who were supplied by the hospital to an emergency admittee rather than selected by the patient. See, e.g., Paintsville Hospital v. Rose, 683 S.W.2d 255, 256-58 (Ky. 1985) (providing list of cases); Pamperin v. Trinity Memorial Hospital, 144 Wis.2d 188, 192-93, 423 N.W.2d 848, 849-50 (1988); Jackson v. Power, 743 P.2d 1376, 1381-82 (Alaska 1987); Mehlman v. Powell, 281 Md. 269, 272-75, 378 A.2d 1121, 1123-24 (1977).

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Related

Hill v. Medlantic Health Care Group
933 A.2d 314 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2007)
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Street v. Hedgepath
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 A.2d 690, 1989 D.C. App. LEXIS 92, 1989 WL 51195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/street-v-washington-hospital-center-dc-1989.