William J. Emmett, Administrator of the Estate of Joseph N. Emmett v. Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital

396 F.2d 931, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 50, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5006
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1967
Docket20707
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 396 F.2d 931 (William J. Emmett, Administrator of the Estate of Joseph N. Emmett v. Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William J. Emmett, Administrator of the Estate of Joseph N. Emmett v. Eastern Dispensary and Casualty Hospital, 396 F.2d 931, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 50, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5006 (D.C. Cir. 1967).

Opinion

SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

Joseph N. Emmett, while a patient in the appellee hospital, died intestate on July 23, 1964. In this litigation, inaugurated April 15, 1966, our appellant, the decedent’s son and administrator, charges that the hospital and its co-appellee, the decedent’s attending physician, were negligent in the care and treatment of the decedent, thereby caus *933 ing his death. 1 As dealt with m the proceedings under review, appellant’s suit is for damages under both the Survival 2 and Wrongful Death 3 Acts.

By our local law, actions for negligent personal injury may be brought within three years, 4 but those for wrongful death must be commenced within one year following death. 5 With appellant’s case in the latter aspect thus jeopardized, he alleged that appellees bore, a confidential relationship to the decedent and his family but nonetheless on numerous occasions “willfully and wrongfully withheld” the decedent’s medical records from appellant’s examination “for the purpose of preventing” him “from obtaining any information regarding the circumstances of” the death. Continuing, appellant stated that he was unable to get into court within the one-year period because of appellees’ conduct in “concealing the facts so as to prevent the plaintiff from obtaining knowledge thereof and so as to prevent the plaintiff’s decedent’s family from obtaining knowledge of the wrongful acts of the defendants.”

Appellees, prior to answering, moved for dismissal, and alternatively for summary judgment, on the ground, inter alia, that the death claim was fatally untimely. On that much of the case the District Court awarded summary judgment in appellees’ favor, 6 and this appeal followed. 7 With appellant’s *934 allegations tendering factual issues which if material necessitated a trial, 8 our task is to decide whether the circumstances charged could operate to toll the limitation period the Wrongful Death Act specifies. Concluding in the affirmative, we reverse and remand the case for further proceedings.

I

We first consider appellees’ twin contentions that appellant was not entitled to inspect the decedent’s medical records and that they were not obliged to make them available to him. Both the challenge to appellant’s right and the asserted absence of duty rest upon the theory that the physician-patient privilege required appellees to preserve the confidentiality of the records against all save the decedent’s “legal representative.” 9 Appellant had not been appointed his father’s administrator when his several demands for examination were made, and appellees say that the preexisting parental relationship was not enough.

Even if we were persuaded that the privilege obtains in the situation at bar, we would find this argument unacceptable. Certainly a duly qualified personal representative, when there is one, is the decedent’s “legal representative” for purposes of gathering information with a view to prosecuting a wrongful death claim, 10 but this does not mean that the information may with impunity be withheld from the decedent’s immediate family. The quoted term, we have said, “refers to the persons who are entitled to enforce the particular substantive right of the patient which is involved in a particular case.” 11 Thus we have held that an intestate grantor’s heirs seeking to annul a conveyance of realty on the ground of mental incapacity could, as against the grantee, waive the ancestor’s privilege. 12 And while a suit for wrongful death must be brought by the decedent’s personal representative, 13 ****it is *935 solely for the benefit of “the spouse and the next of kin of the deceased person.” 14 In our view, a son and only child has so vital an identification with any cause of action potentially arising upon his father’s negligently caused demise as would enable him to waive the privilege as to pertinent medical data when there is no personal representative to act in his behalf.

We think, too, that the statute defining the physician-patient privilege is inapposite here. In terms it operates only “[i]n the courts of the District of Columbia,” 15 and this lawsuit had not taken shape when appellant asked that the records be made accessible. To his endeavor neither the letter nor the spirit of the statute had application. 16

The responsibilities of physicians and hospitals to protect their patients’ medical facts from extrajudicial exposure spring from the confidential nature of the relationship. We find in the fiducial qualities of that relationship the physician’s duty to reveal to the patient that which in his best interests it is important that he should know. 17 And we would consider anomalous in this age any rule that would immunize from a similar obligation a hospital which is the repository of such knowledge. 18

This duty of disclosure, we hold, extends after the patient’s death to his next of kin. 19 To be sure, medical pro- *936 fessionals can and should vigilantly safeguard the patient’s secrets from unauthorized scrutiny. 20 They may, prudently and conscientiously, take such precautions, including suitable identification, as may be necessary to enable determination of the propriety of a requested revelation, and we would consider qualifiedly privileged any divulgenee reasonably made to one apparently entitled to it. 21 But we could not justify a refusal to yield the information to a qualified recipient, whether or not it stems from the dictates of self-protection.

II

While it is well settled that fraudulent concealment of the existence of a cause of action tolls the running of a conventional statute of limitation, 22 its effect upon the type of time proscription contained in the Wrongful Death Act is not so clear. We have had occasion to note, although as to this legislation not yet to follow,

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Bluebook (online)
396 F.2d 931, 130 U.S. App. D.C. 50, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 5006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-j-emmett-administrator-of-the-estate-of-joseph-n-emmett-v-cadc-1967.