Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 2020
DocketE071693
StatusPublished

This text of Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc. (Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 5/8/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

SUZANNE M. YANG et al.,

Plaintiffs and Respondents, E071693

v. (Super.Ct.No. PSC1803755)

TENET HEALTHCARE INC. et al., OPINION

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. David M. Chapman,

Judge. Reversed.

Davis Wright Tremaine, John R. Tate, Terri D. Keville, Karen A. Henry, and

Kyle P. Klein for Defendants and Appellants.

Paul M. Hittelman for Plaintiffs and Respondents.

A licensed physician sued other medical entities and individuals for defamation

based on statements made about her qualifications, competence, and medical ethics. In

this anti-SLAPP appeal, we apply our Supreme Court’s recent opinion in FilmOn.com

Inc. v. DoubleVerify, Inc. (2019) 7 Cal.5th 133 (FilmOn), and conclude that the

defendants’ conduct arose from protected activity because their allegedly defamatory

statements were made in connection with an issue of public interest. We further conclude

1 that the physician has not demonstrated a probability of prevailing on the merits. We

therefore reverse the trial court, which denied the anti-SLAPP motion.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In June 2018, plaintiffs and respondents Suzanne M. Yang and Doc Yang Medical

Corporation sued defendants and appellants Tenet Healthcare Inc. doing business as John

F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital (the hospital), its medical staff, and individual doctors 1 (collectively, defendants), alleging defamation and nine other causes of action.

Defendants filed a special motion to strike (see Code Civ. Proc., § 425.16; all

undesignated references are to the Code of Civil Procedure), also known as an anti- 2 SLAPP motion, targeting only the defamation cause of action. Because this appeal is

limited to the anti-SLAPP motion, we discuss below only the facts pertaining to the

defamation cause of action.

According to the complaint, Yang is a doctor with a general surgery practice in

Indio. She alleges that since March 2016, defendants have conspired to drive her practice

out of business in various ways, including by making defamatory statements. Doctors

who referred cases to Yang, she alleges, were told they should not do so, and she accuses

defendants of falsely stating to “healthcare providers,” “medical practices,” her

“patients,” and “members of the general public” that she did not have privileges for

1 When we refer to Yang, we refer to either her individually or her and her medical corporation, as the context requires. 2 “SLAPP is an acronym for ‘strategic lawsuit against public participation.’” (Jarrow Formulas, Inc. v. LaMarche (2003) 31 Cal.4th 728, 732, fn. 1.)

2 certain procedures. Defendants also allegedly told these people that Yang “rendered care

below applicable standards of practice,” that “[h]er behavior and medical ethics were

below applicable standards,” that she was not “qualified or competent to practice her

specialties,” that she is “dangerous to [her] patients and to employees and members” of

the hospital’s medical staff, and that she was “‘under investigation.’”

Defendants’ anti-SLAPP motion contended that the statements were protected

activity because they were made in connection with the hospital’s peer review process

(see § 425.16, subd. (e)(2); Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital District

(2006) 39 Cal.4th 192 (Kibler)) and because they were made in furtherance of the

exercise of the right of free speech in connection with a public issue or an issue of public

interest (see § 425.16, subd. (e)(4)). Defendants also contended that Yang cannot

demonstrate a probability of prevailing because she consented to the peer review process

that the statements were purportedly in connection with, and because the statements were

privileged.

In opposing the motion, Yang submitted declarations from herself and others. In

her declaration, Yang stated the following:

“4. In April and early May of 2016, I was approached at [the hospital] in Indio by

several doctors, surgeons and anesthesiologists . . . ; by several OR [i.e., operating room]

nurses, OR techs, and OR circulators; by Nurses from [intensive care unit], [emergency

room], and employees of the [hospital] cafeteria, all offering their condolences, saying

they heard I was under formal investigation.

3 “5. When I asked them what they heard, some said insurance fraud; all said doing

Plastic Surgery without permission.

“6. Neither in or about March-April 2016, when I first learned of defendants’

false statements that I was ‘under investigation[,’] nor at any time before or thereafter did

I receive notice of any time or form from [the hospital or] its Medical Staff . . . that there

was then, or at any time, an investigation concerning me . . . .”

Other affidavits submitted with Yang’s opposition focused on events in the same

period of time. Araceli Olmos, one of Yang’s employees, stated that “[s]ince March of

2016, I have had numerous conversations with [hospital] administrators . . . by each of

whom I was told Dr. Yang was under investigation for fraud, for doing more surgery than

she received consent for; for illegally changing her consent forms, [and] for performing

surgeries she was not privileged to perform.” Olmos stated that on

March 14, 2016, she went to a doctor’s office to hand out business cards and brochures.

The office mangers told Olmos that its office staff had received a “directive from [the

hospital] that they should no longer refer patients to Dr. Yang for surgery due to the fact

she was suspended and under investigation for fraud.” She then went to five other

doctor’s offices, who all told her the same things. Olmos also stated that “[s]ince March

2016, various administrators from [the hospital] . . . have each cancelled one or more of

Dr. Yang’s scheduled surgeries . . . . Each would then call me claiming that [the

hospital’s medical staff director] had told them Dr. Yang wasn’t privileged to perform the

scheduled surgery/procedures [and] was potentially incompetent to perform the surgery,

4 or was performing Plastic Surgeries and that she was intentionally trying to deceive the

insurance providers and the hospital.”

Stephanie Townsend, a nurse practitioner who has worked with Yang, described

two April 2016 incidents: “On April 17, 2016, Dr. [Emily K.] Rekue asked me if Dr.

Yang was under investigation or if she was suspended for doing something wrong. I said

‘no, why?’ Dr. Rekue said that she had been told by [the hospital] administration not to

do any more surgeries with Dr. Yang and, especially, not have her name included on any

charts or records with Dr. Yang because Dr. Yang is being investigated and being

associated with Dr. Yang could hurt Dr. Rekue’s practice and she could even be

investigated.” Townsend also stated: “In April of 2016, following a surgery performed

by Dr. Yang, I was called into an impromptu meeting with Donna Siefert, (Operating

Room, Director) and Sandra Martin, (Director, Quality Dept.) in which Sandra Martin

asked me if I’ve ever witnessed Dr. Yang performing an abdominoplasty under the guise

of a hernia repair, or if I’ve ever witnessed Dr. Yang doing anything improper, illegal,

unethical, or fraudulent, all the while implying that Dr. Yang is under investigation.

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Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yang-v-tenet-healthcare-inc-calctapp-2020.