Wash v. Emporia Hospital Corp.

92 Va. Cir. 1, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 220
CourtGreensville County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 2015
DocketCase No. CL12-31
StatusPublished

This text of 92 Va. Cir. 1 (Wash v. Emporia Hospital Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Greensville County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wash v. Emporia Hospital Corp., 92 Va. Cir. 1, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 220 (Va. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

By

Judge Nathan C. Lee

The issue before this Court is whether the Court should grant or deny Plaintiff’s motion to compel the production of Policies, Procedures, and Protocols in place at the time of Plaintiff’s fall.

Facts

Plaintiff, Henry M. Wash, Sr., has sued Emporia Hospital Corporation (“the Hospital”), for medical negligence related to a fall that led to.the death of Josephine M. Wash while she was a patient in the Hospital. Mr. Wash filed suit against the Hospital on February 23, 2012. During discovery in this litigation, Plaintiff’s counsel requested various hospital policies, procedures, and protocols believed to be in existence at the time of decedent’s death. Plaintiff’s counsel also requested an event detail summary (the “EDS Report”). Defendant withheld the EDS Report, claiming privilege under state and federal law. Defendant also withheld the hospital policies, procedures, and protocols (the “policies”), claiming a privilege under Virginia Code §§ 8.01-581.16 and 8.01-581.1.7. Defendant further argued [2]*2the policies are irrelevant and unlikely to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence. Plaintiff’s counsel then moved to compel their production.

On June 18, 2014, this Court denied Plaintiff’s motion to compel the production of the EDS Report. The Court withheld judgment on the motion to compel various policies, procedures, and protocols until the Supreme Court of Virginia ruled in Temple v. Mary Washington Hospital, 288 Va. 134 (2014). Having reviewed the Supreme Court of Virginia’s September 12, 2014, decision in that case, this Court is now prepared to rule on the motion to compel the policies, procedures, and protocols.

Discussion

A party may “obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged, that is relevant to the claim or defense of any party.” Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(1). Relevancy, for purposes of discovery, includes “any matter that bears on, or that reasonably could lead to other matter[s] that could bear on, any issue that is or may be in the case.” Chavez v. Daimler Chrysler Corp., 206 F.R.D. 615, 619 (S.D. Ind. 2002) (quoting Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders, 437 U.S. 340, 351, 57 L. Ed. 2d 253 (1978)). Thus, discovery is much broader than admissibility, and many documents that would be inadmissible at trial under the rules of evidence will be subject to disclosure during discovery. The question for the Court here, then, is which documents are privileged for the purposes of this litigation, and more specifically, whether the policies, procedures, and protocols must be disclosed. For the reasons discussed herein, the Court finds the policies, procedures, and protocols are not protected under Va. Code §§ 8.01-581.16 and 8.01-581.17, they are relevant, and they are likely to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.

Virginia Code § 8.01-581.17 states:

The analysis, findings, conclusions, recommendations, and the deliberative process of any medical staff committee, utilization review committee, or other committee, board, group, commission, or other entity specified in Va. Code § 8.01-581.16, as well as the proceedings, minutes, records, and reports, including the opinions and reports of experts, of such entities shall be privileged in their entirety under this section.

Virginia Code Ann. § 8.01-581.17(B).

The statute further states:

The proceedings, minutes, records, reports, analysis, findings, conclusions, recommendations, and the deliberative process, including opinions and reports of experts, of any medical staff committee, utilization review committee, or other committee, [3]*3board, group, commission, or other entity specified in § 8.01-581.16 shall not constitute medical records, are privileged in their entirety, and are not discoverable.

Virginia Code Ann. § 8.01-581.17(C).

There is a clear circuit split over how to interpret Virginia Code § 8.01-581.17 and whether policies, procedures, and protocols are discoverable. The parties agree that the policies at issue here were produced by a peer review committee as specified in Va. Code § 8.01-581.16. This Court then must decide whether these policies fall within the enumerated list in Virginia Code Ann. § 8.01-581.17, and more specifically whether these policies constitute “findings, conclusions, or recommendations” within the meaning of the statute. Defendant argues that the 2011 amendments to the statute expanded the scope of the privilege and repudiated prior rulings justifying discovery of the policies. Plaintiff relies upon case law to argue for a more narrow construction of the statute’s language that would protect only the peer review portion of the committees’ activities and not the policies here.

This Court previously withheld ruling on this issue in anticipation of the Supreme Court of Virginia’s ruling in Temple v. Mary Washington Hospital, which dealt directly with the discoverability of policies, procedures, and protocols in a medical malpractice case. The trial court in Temple denied the motion to compel those documents. The Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed the trial court’s decision, but did not reach the merits of the discovery rulings on appeal.

In the only other relevant circuit court decision after the 2011 amendments, the Fairfax County Circuit Court held that the hospital policies at issue were discoverable. Flinchum v. INOVA Health System, 84 Va. Cir. 530; 2012 Va. Cir. lexis 59 (2012). In Flinchum, the court looked to the plain language of the statute and found that policies promulgated after the deliberation process is complete were not enumerated items protected by the statute. Id. at 535, 2012 Va. Cir. lexis 59, at *14. The court further found that permitting the discovery of the policies would not run counter to the policy rationale of the statute. The court reasoned that, once the peer review process was complete and the policies were sanitized of any protected information, the resulting policies no longer require protection from discoveiy. Id. at 534-35, 2012 Va. Cir. lexis 59, at *13.

The U.S. District Court has also found that policies are discoverable. Fleming v. Mountain States Health Alliance, 2012 U.S. Dist. lexis 72795 (W.D. Va. May 25, 2012). In Fleming, the court found that the “ultimate end results of [the peer review process], which might find their way into depersonalized manuals of procedure and which have been shorn of individual criticisms, do not merit the same concern for protection from public scrutiny.” Id. at *8-9. The court reasoned that the discovery of policies does not threaten open discussion and debate during the peer review [4]*4process and thus would not threaten the General Assembly’s ultimate goal of improving the quality of health care. Id. at *8.

Although Defendant put forth cogent arguments for protecting the hospital’s policies from discovery, this Court finds that the policies here do not constitute “findings, conclusions, or recommendations” within the meaning of Virginia Code § 8.01-581.17. This Court agrees with Flinchum

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Related

Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders
437 U.S. 340 (Supreme Court, 1978)
Flinchum v. ESTOVA Health System
84 Va. Cir. 530 (Fairfax County Circuit Court, 2012)
Chavez v. Daimlerchrysler Corp.
206 F.R.D. 615 (S.D. Indiana, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Va. Cir. 1, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wash-v-emporia-hospital-corp-vaccgreensville-2015.