Valaree Doehne, V Empres Healthcare Mgmt, Llc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 11, 2015
Docket46467-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Valaree Doehne, V Empres Healthcare Mgmt, Llc (Valaree Doehne, V Empres Healthcare Mgmt, Llc) 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
Valaree Doehne, V Empres Healthcare Mgmt, Llc, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF' APPEALS DIVISION II

2015 AUG i 1 AM 9. 11

STATE OF WASHINGTON

BY 0,5ptlTy IN THE COURT OF APPEALS. OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

VALAREE DOEHNE, No. 46467 -5 -II

Respondent,

V.

EMPRES HEALTHCARE MANAGEMENT, UNPUBLISHED OPINION LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company d/ b/ a FRONTIER REHABILITATION and EXTENDED CARE CENTER; EMPRES WASHINGTON HEALTHCARE, LLC, a Washington Limited

Liability Company d/b/a FRONTIER REHABILITATION and EXTENDED CARE CENTER; and EVERGREEN WASHINGTON HEALTHCARE FRONTIER, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company d/b/ a FRONTIER REHABILITATION and EXTENDED CARE CENTER,

LEE, J. — Empres Healthcare Management LLC, EmpRes Washington Healthcare LLC,

and Evergreen Washington Healthcare Frontier LLC appeal an order compelling their disclosure

of the first paragraph of a document that they assert is protected by the attorney- client privilege.

They also argue that the final sentence of the paragraph is protected from discovery under the work

product doctrine. We agree that the paragraph as a whole is protected by the attorney- client No. 46467 -5 -II

privilege and that its final sentence is protected opinion work product, and we reverse the trial

court' s order compelling discovery of this material.

FACTS

Evergreen Washington Healthcare Frontier LLC operates the Frontier Rehabilitation and

Extended Care Center in Longview ( Frontier facility). EmpRes Healthcare Management LLC

EmpRes) is based in Vancouver and provides management services to .the Frontier facility.'

EmpRes has an in-house legal department in Vancouver and a risk management director (formerly

Dick Pflueger) who acts as a conduit between the legal department and insurers regarding liability

issues, including workers' compensation and third -party liability.

On the night of February 2, 2010, Valaree Doehne left the Frontier facility after visiting

I' her husband and tripped over a cement wheel stop in the parking lot. She went back into the

facility for treatment of her injuries but soon was taken by ambulance to the hospital.

In the days following Doehne' s accident, EmpRes' in-house legal department directed

Pflueger to conduct an investigation into the incident. At Pflueger' s request, Heather Clarno, an

administrative assistant to EmpRes' regional operations manager, performed an investigation and

prepared a one- page report of her findings. She provided this report to EmpRes' risk management

and legal departments.

In 2013, Doehne filed an amended complaint for damages against the Frontier facility and

the companies providing it with operating and management services. Doehne alleged in her

complaint that at the time of her fall, it was dark and the parking lot and sidewalk outside the

EmpRes was formerly known as EHC Management, LLC but we refer to it as EmpRes throughout this opinion for the sake of clarity.

2 No. 46467 -5 -II

Frontier facility were not well lit. She also alleged that the wheel stop was not well marked or

painted.

Doehne subsequently sought discovery of any written statement or report made to anyone

at the Frontier facility concerning the incident, including the production of "all memos, documents,

logs, notes or other written or electronic memorialization of reports." Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 12-

13. The defendants objected on the basis that Doehne' s request involved work product and

privileged material.

Doehne then moved to compel production of the requested material. The defendants

responded that the documents being withheld on claim of privilege related to Pflueger' s post -

incident investigation. Their attorney filed a declaration stating:

Mr. Pflueger maintained a paper file regarding this incident. This file includes two incident reports from individuals at the facility, which he believes he requested to present to the in-house legal department as part of its analysis of the incident. The paper file also includes analysis about plaintiff' s demand that defendants pay for her medical expenses, as well as other documents analyzing the possibility of settling plaintiff' s potential claims prior to her filing a lawsuit. In

addition, withheld email correspondence involving Mr. Pflueger includes in-house attorneys and/ or paralegals as a sender or recipient.

CP at 53 ( citations omitted).

During the hearing on Doehne' s motion to compel, the defendants explained that the two

incident reports in Pflueger' s file included Clarno' s report and one written by a nurse at the Frontier

facility who treated Doehne after her fall.' The defendants argued that Clamo' s report was

prepared in anticipation of litigation because Doehne had asked the Frontier facility to pay her

The defendants did not seek review ofthe trial court' s order requiring them to disclose the nurse' s report.

3 No. 46467 -5 -II

medical expenses after sustaining her injuries. The trial court requested an in -camera review of

Clarno' s report and invited the parties to submit additional authority or evidence regarding whether

the report was privileged.

The defendants filed a declaration from Clarno stating that she had not been present at the

Frontier facility at the time of Doehne' s injuries and had no personal knowledge of the incident.

Clarno added:

In the days following the incident, I performed an investigation and prepared a one -paged type report regarding my findings. I prepared this investigation and incident report consistent with how I generally performed these tasks for my employer on anticipated worker' s compensation claims. The report was prepared for and provided to the risk management and legal departments of the management company in Vancouver. My investigation and report were performed in anticipation of litigation by Ms. Doehne.

CP at 70.

Following in -camera review of the Clarno report, the trial court ruled that the second, third,

and fourth paragraphs were protected work product and not discoverable because they were

clearly made in anticipation of litigation." Verbatim Report of Proceedings ( VRP) at 41. The

trial court also ruled that the first paragraph was not protected work product and required its

production. The court entered an order compelling discovery that did not specifically address the

Clarno report.

The defendants moved for reconsideration, arguing that the trial court' s oral ruling failed

to address whether the Clarno report was an attorney- client privileged communication. After

arguing that the attorney- client privilege applied, the defendants asserted in the alternative that the

final sentence of the first paragraph in Clarno' s report should be protected from discovery as

opinion work product. In its order denying reconsideration, the trial court stated that the first

0 No. 46467 -5 -II

paragraph of Clarno' s report was " not protected by the attorney[ -]client privilege nor by the work

product doctrine and is therefore discoverable." CP at 103.

The defendants sought discretionary review and sent this court a redacted copy of Clarno' s

report for in -camera review. We granted the defendants' motion for discretionary review and now

consider whether the attorney- client privilege or the work product doctrine protects the Clarno

report from disclosure.

ANALYSIS

A.

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