Wellstar Health Systems, Inc. v. Pamela Elaine Kemp

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 12, 2013
DocketA13A1417
StatusPublished

This text of Wellstar Health Systems, Inc. v. Pamela Elaine Kemp (Wellstar Health Systems, Inc. v. Pamela Elaine Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wellstar Health Systems, Inc. v. Pamela Elaine Kemp, (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MCFADDEN and BOGGS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

November 12, 2013

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1417, A13A1418. WELLSTAR HEALTH SYSTEMS, INC. DO - 074 v. PAMELA ELAINE KEMP et al.; and HENRY D. GREEN, DO - 075 JR. et al. v. PAMELA ELAINE KEMP.

DOYLE , Presiding Judge.

Pamela Elaine Kemp, individually and on behalf of the estate of David Allen

Kemp, filed the instant wrongful death action alleging that WellStar Health System,

Inc. (“WellStar”), was liable for the death of her husband based on the negligence of

its employees. Because of alleged witness tampering, the trial court disqualified

WellStar’s trial counsel Henry D. Green, co-counsel David A. Sapp, and their law

firm, Green & Sapp, LLP (collectively “the Lawyers”), and struck WellStar’s answer.

Thereafter, the court entered default judgment against WellStar as to liability and held

a trial on damages. In Case No. A13A1417, WellStar appeals, arguing that the trial court erred by

(1) striking its answer as a result of the lawyers’ actions; (2) denying its motion to

recuse; (3) excluding the testimony of its experts during the damages phase; (4)

failing to grant a mistrial or to admonish Kemp’s trial counsel pursuant to OCGA §

9-10-185; and (5) refusing to charge the jury on the burden of proof. In Case No.

A13A1418, the Lawyers appeal, arguing that the trial court erred by (1) granting

Kemp’s motion to disqualify them; and (2) overruling the lawyers’ motion to quash

their depositions and production of their internal emails regarding Kemp. For the

reasons set forth below, we affirm in part and reverse in part as to Case No.

A13A1417 and we affirm as to Case No. A13A1418.

Viewed in favor of the verdict,1 the evidence shows that in May 2011, Kemp

filed a medical malpractice complaint alleging negligence claims related to the death

of her husband after admission to WellStar Douglas Hospital for a broken foot and

exacerbated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; attached thereto was the required

expert affidavit of Dr. William Stinnette.2 Upon receiving a copy of the complaint,

1 See Almond v. McCranie, 283 Ga. App. 887, 888 (643 SE2d 535) (2007). 2 Kemp later filed Stinnette’s first amended affidavit in response to WellStar’s motion to dismiss.

2 Green, who had handed the case over to Sapp and who did not make an entry of

appearance as counsel, contacted Stinnette’s employer, Northside Hospital, which is

not a WellStar facility, and spoke to Northside’s Vice President of Legal Services,

Susan Sommers, with whom Green had a lengthy professional relationship, regarding

Stinnette’s involvement in the case.

Based upon Green’s discussion with Sommers, the Lawyers believed that

Stinnette would not be testifying on behalf of Kemp; however, by March 2012, it

became apparent that Stinnette would indeed be testifying. After discussing

deposition dates for Stinnette with Kemp’s attorney, Green & Sapp associate Austin

Gillis emailed Green to alert him to the fact that Kemp was representing that Stinnette

“still” intended to testify on behalf of Kemp despite Green’s previous conversation

and apparent assurances from Sommers that Stinnette would not “be a factor.”

The parties initially scheduled Stinnette’s deposition for April 19, 2012, and

Kemp’s amended complaint along with Stinnette’s second amended affidavit was

filed on April 16, 2012. Gillis again emailed Green on April 13, asking him to contact

Sommers and alert her to the fact that Stinnette’s deposition was going to take place

“after all” and asked Green to let her know about the testimony.

3 Thereafter, on April 16, three days prior to Stinnette’s deposition, Green

telephoned Sommers to discuss Stinnette’s continued involvement in the case, and

Sommers understood from Green that he was unhappy about Stinnette’s involvement.

Sommers then told Stinnette that a WellStar representative had telephoned her very

upset that Stinnette would be testifying and did not want him to act as an expert in the

case; Sommers referred to Stinnette’s contract with Northside, and based on her

statements and the tone of her voice, Stinnette believed his employment to be in

jeopardy. Stinnette became upset after speaking with Sommers, and he requested that

Kemp’s trial counsel postpone his deposition because he was concerned his testimony

might impact his employment. Thereafter, at approximately 4:00 a.m., on the morning

of April 20, 2012, Stinnette, in a “distraught” telephone call to Kemp’s counsel,

explained that based on the conversations with Sommers and all that had transpired,

he could not continue as Kemp’s expert because he felt he might lose everything.

Meanwhile, on April 17, 2012, Kemp’s counsel contacted the trial court to

request a hearing on the lawyers’ actions toward Stinnette, contending to the court

that the actions constituted interference with a witness. In response to Kemp, on April

18, 2012, Sapp responded to the court and Kemp in a letter, the contents of which he

discussed with Green and Sommers prior to submitting it to the court, stating that

4 [o]nce it became apparent that Dr. Stinnette was going to be providing sworn testimony against WellStar rather than simply executing an OCGA § 9-11-9.1 affidavit, my partner[,] Henry Green[,] telephoned Susan Sommers, General Counsel for Northside Hospital. . . . Mr. Green understood that Ms. Sommers would most likely want to know that one of Northside Hospital’s employed physicians was planning on providing expert testimony against a local hospital, and that is the reason he called her. . . . Mr. Green’s call to Ms. Sommers was simply a professional courtesy. . . . [I]t is easy to see why a hospital’s general counsel might not want a hospital-employed physician to testify as a plaintiff’s expert against a local hospital in a medical malpractice case. . . . Any question as to whether a hospital-employed physician should offer expert testimony on behalf of a plaintiff in a medical malpractice action is between a hospital’s general counsel and the hospital’s employees.

Consequently, Kemp moved to disqualify the Lawyers for tampering with her

expert witness and moved to strike WellStar’s answer. Kemp also noticed Green,

Sapp, and Sommers for depositions and filed a motion to produce documents related

to discussions with Sommers related to Stinnette, and in response, the Lawyers filed

a motion to quash. After a hearing on the motion to quash, the trial court denied the

motion to quash, allowing Kemp to depose Sapp and Green on the limited subject of

the statements made in Sapp’s April 18 letter to the court, and ruling that the court

would make an in camera review of any documents prior to providing them to Kemp.

5 On July 5, 2012, after a hearing, the trial court entered a written order disqualifying

the Lawyers as WellStar’s counsel, finding that the Lawyers deliberately interfered

with an expert witness by contacting Sommers in order for her to pressure Stinnette

into withdrawing from the case.3

Thereafter, WellStar filed three affidavits from WellStar’s risk management

department, averring that although they had direct involvement with the case, they did

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