Walton v. MID-ATLANTIC SPINE SPECIALISTS

694 S.E.2d 545, 280 Va. 113, 2010 Va. LEXIS 63
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket091009
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 694 S.E.2d 545 (Walton v. MID-ATLANTIC SPINE SPECIALISTS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walton v. MID-ATLANTIC SPINE SPECIALISTS, 694 S.E.2d 545, 280 Va. 113, 2010 Va. LEXIS 63 (Va. 2010).

Opinion

694 S.E.2d 545 (2010)

Angela WALTON
v.
MID-ATLANTIC SPINE SPECIALISTS, P.C., et al.

Record No. 091009.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

June 10, 2010.

*547 Robert J. Haddad (Shuttleworth, Ruloff, Swain, Haddad & Morecock, on briefs), Virginia Beach, for appellant.

A. William Charters (Douglas E. Penner; Goodman, Allen & Filetti, on brief), Norfolk, for appellees.

Present: KOONTZ, KINSER, LEMONS, GOODWYN, MILLETTE, and MIMS, JJ., and RUSSELL, S.J.

OPINION BY Justice LEROY F. MILLETTE, JR.

In this medical malpractice case, we consider whether the defendant doctor waived the attorney-client privilege for a letter he wrote to his attorney regarding potential negligence in his examination of key x-rays when that letter was produced to the plaintiff during discovery. We hold the doctor's disclosure of the letter was inadvertent, but that the doctor waived his attorney-client privilege by failing to take sufficient precautions to prevent the inadvertent disclosure.

BACKGROUND

Angela Walton suffered a workplace injury to her wrist and began treatment with Jeffrey Moore, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon, and his practice group, Mid-Atlantic Spine Specialists, P.C. (Mid-Atlantic) (collectively, the doctors). Dr. Moore treated Walton's broken wrist from November 1998 to May 1999.

Walton filed a workers' compensation claim and later filed a motion for judgment against the doctors, seeking damages for medical malpractice associated with the examination, diagnosis, and treatment of her wrist injury.

On November 24, 1998, Dr. Moore took an x-ray of Walton's wrist. Dr. Moore took another x-ray of Walton's wrist on December 1, 1998. After Walton's December 1, 1998 appointment, Dr. Moore noted in her medical record that: "Radiographs were taken in plaster. The thumb looks unremarkable. Do not see any fracture here. The overall alignment looks good."

However, after reviewing the x-rays almost three years later Dr. Moore wrote a letter to his attorney on October 30, 2001 (the letter), in which he explained his thought process in the treatment he provided her. In reference to the December 1st x-ray, Dr. Moore wrote:

I made a comment that the overall alignment looks "good." I am not convinced I was actually looking at the x-ray from 12/01/98, and may have actually been looking at comparison film of 11/24/98, and mistakenly thought it was the recent follow-up x-ray on that day in the office. I simply cannot remember these events, but I do not consider her overall alignment as looking "good" on 12/01/98.

According to Dr. Moore, he kept his file copy of the letter in a white binder, while medical records were contained in a manila folder.

During discovery in the workers' compensation case, a subpoena duces tecum was issued to Mid-Atlantic. Mid-Atlantic hired Smart Copy Corporation (Smart Copy) to gather the subpoenaed documents. Smart Copy obtained a copy of the letter and produced it to the attorney for Walton's employer in the workers' compensation case. The record does not show how Smart Copy obtained a copy of the letter.

The letter was first produced to Walton's counsel in the medical malpractice case in November 2004.[1] Walton asserts that she notified the doctors that she was in possession of the letter in her June 2006 answers to interrogatories. Interrogatory 11 requested information about any statements by the doctors which Walton "consider[ed] to be an admission or otherwise probative of liability or negligence." Walton answered as follows:

*548 [Dr. Moore] has authored a letter which [Walton] considers to be an admission and/or probative of liability. The date of the letter is October 30, 2001 and was produced by [Dr. Moore] to the [Workers'] Compensation Commission. As such, [Walton] is unaware how many people have read the letter, but believe[s] the number is substantial. [Dr. Moore] authored the letter and as such is aware of its contents.

However, the doctors assert they did not learn that Walton was in possession of the letter until they were notified in October 2007 that Walton had the letter and intended to use it at trial.

In November 2007, the doctors filed a motion for a protective order "against the use and/or distribution of [the] letter," alleging that it is protected by the attorney-client privilege, and "contains retrospective critical analysis of the case by [Dr. Moore] and his attorney." The circuit court held several hearings on the doctors' motion. At the first hearing, the circuit court determined that

disclosure has to be voluntary or there is not a waiver. If it's involuntary disclosure, there is not a waiver. If it's ... inadvertent or by mistake, if we show this to be inadvertent, then there can be a waiver, then we have ... Lois Sportswear[, U.S.A., Inc. v. Levi Strauss & Co., 104 F.R.D. 103, 105 (S.D.N.Y.1985) ], those factors.

It was undisputed that Dr. Moore's attorney did not disclose the letter, and neither party argued that criminal behavior or bad faith was involved in the production of the letter. The circuit court took the motion under advisement to give the parties the opportunity to present evidence regarding how Smart Copy obtained the allegedly confidential document.

At the second hearing, the circuit court applied a five-factor test for inadvertent disclosure: (1) the reasonableness of precautions taken, (2) the number of the inadvertent disclosures, (3) the extent of disclosure, (4) the delay and measures taken to rectify the disclosure, and (5) the interests of justice. Based on this analysis, the circuit court made factual findings and held that the privilege had been waived. The trial judge concluded that

the only logical inference ... is that Smart [Copy] copied according to their procedures and the medical records were provided to them and this document had to be commingled with them. I can't believe that Smart [Copy] went into a separate place to take a binder that was not authorized and copied it.

After further argument by counsel, the circuit court again took the motion under advisement to allow the doctors to "bring ... some evidence to show how the [letter] allegedly got out of Dr. Moore's hands and into the hands of Smart [Copy]."

In February 2009, the doctors filed a motion in limine, asking the circuit court to prohibit Walton's counsel from "asking questions of Dr. Moore regarding any opinions regarding his current interpretation of events that occurred in 1998 and/or 1999." In its brief in support of the motion in limine, the doctors argued that Dr. Moore had not been designated as an expert witness, and Dr. Moore would only testify regarding his care and treatment of Walton and his contemporaneous interpretation of how Walton was progressing at the time of treatment.

At the third hearing on the doctors' motion for a protective order, counsel for Walton and for the doctors made representations to the circuit court concerning the testimony of relevant employees of Mid-Atlantic and Dr. Moore's front office staff, and Smart Copy, who were employed in 2004, concerning discovery procedures. However, the circuit court concluded that it was not possible to determine how the letter came to be produced.

The circuit court granted the doctors' motion, ruling that the letter was privileged, had been "involuntarily" disclosed, and there had been no waiver. The circuit court, in its ruling, stated: "And being involuntary by the fact that we don't know how [the letter] was disclosed, but we do know that Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 S.E.2d 545, 280 Va. 113, 2010 Va. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walton-v-mid-atlantic-spine-specialists-va-2010.