Young v. Tri-City Healthcare District

210 Cal. App. 4th 35, 148 Cal. Rptr. 3d 119, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 2012
DocketNo. D059605
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 210 Cal. App. 4th 35 (Young v. Tri-City Healthcare District) 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
Young v. Tri-City Healthcare District, 210 Cal. App. 4th 35, 148 Cal. Rptr. 3d 119, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion

HUFFMAN, J.

Petitioner and appellant John Young, M.D., brought these proceedings for a writ of administrative mandate to challenge the decision of the board of directors of respondent Tri-City Healthcare District (the Board or the District) to terminate his medical staff privileges at its hospital. (Code Civ. [40]*40Proc., § 1094.5; all statutory references are to this code unless noted.) Young’s amended petition contains seven causes of action that challenge both the March 29, 2009 final decision of termination (the termination decision) and an earlier, “interlocked” December 18, 2008 summary suspension (the summary suspension). Regarding each, Young sought judicial review of the administrative record and an order entitling him to reinstatement and costs of suit.

Young’s appeal arises from the trial court’s ruling, ultimately issued after three hard-fought phases of reconsideration motion hearings and other procedural developments, to grant the District!1 s special motion to strike the fifth cause of action, which specifically challenged Young’s cause of action for relief from the summary suspension. (§ 425.16; the anti-SLAPP statute.) The District contended in its motion that any of its alleged misconduct arose solely from protected free speech and official activity within the meaning of the anti-SLAPP statute, i.e., the conduct of hospital peer review proceedings. (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(1), (2).) It also argued that Young had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies in connection with the summary suspension, by agreeing to mediate the disputes, but then failing to further pursue his administrative remedies on that particular subject, when mediation failed. Young replied to the District’s claims by asserting it would have been futile to further pursue any such administrative remedies, so that the requirement of exhaustion of remedies is inapplicable to this fifth cause of action. (See Westlake Community Hosp. v. Superior Court (1976) 17 Cal.3d 465, 475 [131 Cal.Rptr. 90, 551 P.2d 410].) The court reached several different results during the reconsideration proceedings, giving rise to Young’s appeal.

I

PROCEDURAL CONTEXT AND APPROACH TO ISSUES

In the order which Young appeals (the February 2011 order), the trial court essentially adhered to its initial grant of the District’s motion to strike the fifth cause of action (granted in June 2010). However, the current result was reached after a July 2010 issuance of an order of dismissal of the “entire action,” and the court’s August 4, 2010 minute order subsequently attempting to correct it by restricting the dismissal to the fifth cause of action. This February 2011 order followed two reconsideration hearings. In October 2010, Young prevailed on his motion to reconsider the initial grant of the District’s motion to strike, and the District filed a notice of appeal of that October order. (Young v. Tri-City Healthcare Dist. (D059092, filed Dec. 21, 2010, abandoned Mar. 2, 2011).) In the interim (Nov. 2010), the District filed its own motion to reconsider the same subject matter, giving rise to the subject order that Young appeals, and the District subsequently abandoned its own, earlier appeal.

[41]*41Our task is to examine this convoluted procedural record and determine which of these various rulings issued by the trial court has all the required jurisdictional and substantive support. Because of the parallel tracks being followed regarding this sequence of anti-SLAPP rulings (reconsideration and the District’s appeal), the terms of section 916, subdivision (a) are clearly invoked, that the perfecting of an appeal generally stays proceedings in the trial court “upon the judgment or order appealed from or upon the matters embraced therein or affected thereby . . . .” (See Varian Medical Systems, Inc. v. Delfino (2005) 35 Cal.4th 180, 198 [25 Cal.Rptr.3d 298, 106 P.3d 958] (Varían) [“[S]ection 916, as a matter of logic and policy, divests the trial court of jurisdiction over the subject matter on appeal—i.e., jurisdiction in its fundamental sense. [Citation.] The purpose of the automatic stay under section 916 is to preserve ‘the status quo until the appeal is decided’ [citation], by maintaining ‘the rights of the parties in the same condition they were before the order was made’ [citation]. Otherwise, the trial court could render the ‘appeal futile by altering the appealed judgment or order by conducting other proceedings that may affect it.’ [Citation.]”].)

Exceptions to the stays under section 916 that are created by appeals have been developed for collateral matters, such as statutory new trial motions or motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. (Neff v. Ernst (1957) 48 Cal.2d 628, 633-634 [311 P.2d 849]; Foggy v. Ralph F. Clark & Associates, Inc. (1987) 192 Cal.App.3d 1204, 1210-1211 [238 Cal.Rptr. 130] (Foggy).) The parties dispute whether this sequence of reconsideration motions is equivalent to such a “collateral” matter to the underlying ruling. It is not. We will address these issues by first identifying the legal effect of these reconsideration proceedings, as well as the trial court’s signing, but recalling as erroneous, a dismissal order for the entire petition. We can then determine the effect upon the trial court proceedings of the District’s separate appeal that it filed in the midst of its trial court litigation (but subsequently abandoned; Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.244(b)(1)).

We resolve Young’s appeal by concluding, initially, that the trial court had the power to correct its clerical error of apparently dismissing the entire action, when only the fifth cause of action had been brought before it in the anti-SLAPP motion proceedings, and only the fifth cause of action was the subject of that ruling. The trial court’s action was proper and left the action pending, as a whole.

More importantly, we conclude that the trial court lost subject matter jurisdiction over the second reconsideration motion, and it had no authority to issue the February 2011 order, because the filing and perfecting of the District’s own appeal caused the trial court to lose its authority to resolve the District’s own reconsideration motion, which was still pending when its own [42]*42appeal was filed. (§ 916, subd. (a).) This was not the type of collateral matter that the trial court could pursue after the appeal was filed. (Varian, supra, 35 Cal.4th at pp. 191-194.) (Pts. III-IV, post.) The practical effect of our decision is that the February 2011 order is vacated, leaving the October 2010 order denying the motion to strike in place, on the merits of the anti-SLAPP issues.

We could stop there, but in an abundance of caution, our review will next be directed toward the substance of the June and October 2010 orders. The parties each make substantive arguments about the merits of the ruling on the anti-SLAPP motion to strike the fifth cause of action. This requires us to consider whether Young’s petition for writ of administrative mandate to compel a hearing on his summary suspension “arose out of’ the District’s protected free speech conduct in the hospital peer review context. (See Navellier v. Sletten

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Rencher CA2/1
California Court of Appeal, 2026
Kuigoua v. Sacks CA2/2
California Court of Appeal, 2026
Mendoza v. Khan CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2025
Warner v. Thompson CA2/8
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Marriage of Carter CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Chang v. Fire Insurance Exchange CA2/7
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Jack v. Ring LLC
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Himnel USA v. City of Rancho Cucamonga CA4/2
California Court of Appeal, 2023
Callanan v. Grizzly Designs, LLC
California Court of Appeal, 2022
K.B. v. G.B. CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2022
Callanan v. Grizzly Designs CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2022
Kirby v. Toplean CA3
California Court of Appeal, 2022
3123 SMB v. Horn CA2/7
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Lowry v. Port San Luis Harbor Dist.
California Court of Appeal, 2020
Branom v. Diamond
California Court of Appeal, 2019

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 Cal. App. 4th 35, 148 Cal. Rptr. 3d 119, 2012 Cal. App. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-tri-city-healthcare-district-calctapp-2012.