Victor Bernard Williams, M.D. v. Baptist Health D/B/A/ Baptist Health Medical Center

2019 Ark. App. 482
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 23, 2019
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2019 Ark. App. 482 (Victor Bernard Williams, M.D. v. Baptist Health D/B/A/ Baptist Health Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victor Bernard Williams, M.D. v. Baptist Health D/B/A/ Baptist Health Medical Center, 2019 Ark. App. 482 (Ark. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Cite as 2019 Ark. App. 482 Digitally signed by Elizabeth ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS Perry Date: 2022.08.04 12:16:37 DIVISION III -05'00' No. CV-17-924 Adobe Acrobat version: 2022.001.20169 Opinion Delivered: October 23, 2019

VICTOR BERNARD WILLIAMS, M.D. APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, SIXTH DIVISION V. [NO. 60CV-14-808]

BAPTIST HEALTH D/B/A HONORABLE TIMOTHY DAVIS BAPTIST MEDICAL CENTER ET AL. FOX, JUDGE

APPELLEES AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART

LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

The appellant, Dr. Victor Williams, is an African American surgeon who had a staff

appointment and clinical privileges at Baptist Health Medical Center (Baptist Health) in

Little Rock from 2003 until the hospital terminated their relationship on April 14, 2011.

The termination followed an internal peer-review process that found Dr. Williams provided

substandard care in four of his surgical cases. As required by state and federal law, Baptist

Health reported its adverse action to the Arkansas State Medical Board, which prepared to

take action regarding Dr. Williams’s medical license in 2014.

Dr. Williams subsequently sued Baptist Health, the hospital administrator, and several

doctors who served on the peer-review committees, the Arkansas State Medical Board

(Board), and Dr. John Hearnsberger, individually and as chairman of the Board. The complaint sought monetary damages and injunctive relief based on thirteen causes of action

alleging defamation, tortious interference with contracts, violations of the Arkansas

Constitution, and violations of the Arkansas Civil Rights Act, including discrimination

under Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-123-107 and retaliation under Arkansas Code

Annotated section 16-123-108. The complaint also alleged that Baptist Health failed to

follow its own bylaws when it terminated Dr. Williams’s staff membership and clinical

privileges.

The circuit court granted summary judgment on the claims against Dr. Hearnsberger.

The circuit court also granted summary judgment to Baptist Health and the individual

Baptist Health appellees on all but one claim alleging that the hospital failed to follow its

bylaws. The circuit court heard testimony on that claim over the course of a three-day

bench trial in February 2017, and it entered findings of fact and conclusions of law on April

21, 2017, that dismissed the claim with prejudice.

Dr. Williams now appeals, arguing that the circuit court erred in several respects. We

affirm the order granting summary judgment to Dr. Hearnsberger. We also affirm the

judgments in favor of the Baptist Health appellees on the six constitutional claims, the

defamation claim, the retaliation claim, and the claim alleging that Baptist Health failed to

follow its own bylaws during the peer-review process. We reverse the judgment in favor of

the Baptist Health appellees on the discrimination and tortious-interference claims,

however, because we agree that the circuit court abused its discretion when it denied Dr.

Williams’s motions to compel discovery of peer-review records regarding other physicians

at Baptist Health.

2 I. Facts and Procedural History

Dr. Williams obtained his license to practice medicine in Arkansas in 1999 and was

board-certified to practice general, cardiothoracic, and vascular surgery. He became a

member of the medical staff at Baptist Health in November 2003.

In January or February 2010, Dr. Guy Gardner, the chief medical officer at Baptist

Health, reviewed several of Dr. Williams’s surgery cases after receiving complaints from

unidentified persons. Dr. Gardner’s review caused him to be concerned about the standard

of care that Dr. Williams had rendered in a handful of his cases, and he reported his concerns

to Douglas Weeks, the administrator of the hospital, and to Dr. Tim Burson, the chief of

surgery.

On February 5, 2010, Mr. Weeks and Dr. Burson met with Dr. Williams in Mr.

Weeks’s office at Baptist Health. According to Mr. Weeks, the purpose of the meeting was

to inform Dr. Williams “of the seriousness of the information that Dr. Guy Gardner had

obtained” and to explain that the cases would be subject to internal peer review that “could

have serious implications” for his clinical privileges at the hospital. Mr. Weeks wanted Dr.

Williams to “understand all of his options,” including voluntary resignation of his staff

appointment, “which would enable him to not have to report [an involuntary loss of

privileges] to the National Practitioner Databank.”

Dr. Williams declined to voluntarily resign his appointment, and the hospital’s peer-

review process began. The Surgery Control Committee discussed the surgical cases that Dr.

Gardner identified at one of its regular meetings on March 11, 2010. Afterward, Dr. Burson,

as chairman of the Surgery Control Committee, wrote a letter to Dr. Williams explaining

3 that the committee had reviewed eleven of his cases and identified suspected deviations from

the standard of care in five of them. The letter identified the five cases under investigation

and advised Dr. Williams that the committee scheduled the cases for discussion with him

on April 5, 2010.

The Surgery Control Committee met with Dr. Williams on April 12. 1 The

committee members in attendance included appellees Dr. Scott Marotti, Dr. Robert

Moffett, Dr. Frederick Meadors, Dr. Robert Casali, and Dr. Burson. The committee gave

Dr. Williams the opportunity to answer questions and explain his treatment of each of the

patients. At the conclusion of the meeting, the committee found that Dr. Williams was

unable to address significant concerns about the quality of care in each case. The committee

noted, in particular, that Dr. Williams appeared unwilling to acknowledge or take

responsibility for the substandard care that he rendered in each instance.

Consequently, on April 16, Dr. Burson wrote a letter to the Professional Staff

Credentials Committee (Credentials Committee) to request that it investigate the five cases

under review and take appropriate corrective action. Dr. Susan Keathley, the chair of the

Credentials Committee, dispatched a letter to Dr. Williams later that day to notify him of

the Surgery Control Committee’s request and to inform him that the Credentials

Committee would meet on April 21, to review and discuss the cases at issue. Dr. Keathley

advised Dr. Williams to be prepared to address several concerns related to the five cases,

including preoperative judgment; medical decision-making; technical ability; ability to

1 Dr. Williams requested an additional ten days to review the patients’ charts in order to prepare for the hearing. The Surgery Control Committee, it appears, granted him seven extra days.

4 recognize postoperative complications; lack of timely follow-up; documentation; and

“unwillingness to acknowledge identified issues or take responsibility.” The letter also

informed Dr. Williams that these issues could result in suspension or termination of his staff

appointment and clinical privileges at Baptist Health Medical Center and all other Baptist

Health facilities.

The Credentials Committee met with Dr. Williams on April 21. The committee

members in attendance included appellees Dr. Susan Keathley and Dr. Everett Tucker.

Following the meeting, the Credentials Committee issued a report and recommendation

that found Dr.

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