Opinion
Factual and Procedural Background
Garnet Bellamy filed a complaint in Kings County Municipal Court on August 23, 1993, against Central Valley General Hospital, also known as Sacred Heart Hospital, and various Doe defendants. The action was described as one for personal injury and medical malpractice; it alleged two causes of action, one for general negligence and another for premises liability. Bellamy alleged that on May 22, 1992, she was injured at the hospital “when she fell off a rolling X-ray table onto her head. Plaintiff was left unattended and said X-ray table was not secured.” In the general negligence cause Bellamy further alleged that the table rolled, and that as medical professionals the defendants had a duty either to secure the table or not leave her unattended. The complaint also alleged compliance with all applicable claims statutes.
The hospital demurred to the complaint on the sole ground that the action was barred by the one-year statute of limitations for personal injury actions.
The municipal court sustained the hospital’s demurrer without leave to amend. Bellamy appealed to the superior court from the subsequent judgment dismissing the action. The appellate department of the superior court affirmed the municipal court decision without a written opinion, later denied rehearing and declined Bellamy’s request for certification to this court. Bellamy then filed a timely petition for writ of mandate, etc., in this court seeking relief.
Recognizing that further review of the appellate department determination is available only by petition for extraordinary relief, and the classification of similar, hospital-based negligence is the subject of some conflict in the courts of appeal, we exercised our discretion and issued an order to show cause why the relief sought by Bellamy should not be granted. (Cf.
Randone
v.
Appellate Department
(1971)
Discussion
Case Law Distinguishing “Ordinary ” and “Professional” Negligence
The lower court likely relied on the First Appellate District, Division One opinion in
Gopaul
v.
Herrick Memorial Hosp.
(1974)
For purposes of appellate review, the hospital conceded the fall was proximately caused by the negligence of its technician and that it was liable unless the suit was time-barred. The hospital argued since the complaint was not filed within one year, as required for actions to recover damages for personal injury, it was barred. Gopaul maintained the negligence action was based on professional negligence and therefore, under applicable decisional law, the statute of limitations did not begin to run until she either discovered, or should have discovered, the tortious injury. (
While recognizing that “the dividing line between ‘ordinary negligence’ and ‘professional malpractice’ may at times be difficult to place” (
The
Gopaul
test for professional negligence was cited with approval in
Wasmann
v.
Seidenberg
(1988)
In 1979, faced with a factual situation similar to
Gopaul
but subject to construction under the recently amended section 340.5, another Court of Appeal (Fourth District, Division Two) reached the opposite conclusion and reversed a summary judgment in favor of the health cafe provider. In
Murillo
v.
Good Samaritan Hospital
(1979)
On appeal, the
Murillo
court first determined the hospital was a “health care provider” within the meaning of section 340.5.
(Murillo
v.
Good Samaritan Hospital, supra,
Murillo
agreed with the premise in
Gopaul
that “not every act of negligence by a professional is an act of professional negligence, even where the victim is a client[.]”
(Murillo
v.
Good Samaritan Hospital, supra, 99
Cal.App.3d at p. 56.) Hypothetical examples of ordinary, negligence suggested in
Gopaul
(
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals followed
Murillo
in
Taylor
v.
U.S.
(9th Cir. 1987)
Finally, the California Supreme Court criticized the analysis in
Gopaul
in
Flowers
v.
Torrance Memorial Hospital Medical Center
(1994)
“[A]s a general proposition one ‘is required to exercise the care that a person of ordinary prudence would exercise under the circumstances.’ [Citations.] .... ‘Persons dealing with dangerous instrumentalities involving great risk of harm must exercise a greater amount of care than persons acting in less responsible capacities, but the former are no more negligent than the latter for failing to exercise the required care. . . .’”
(Flowers
v.
Torrance Memorial Hospital Medical Center, supra,
The
Flowers
court added the following to its critique of the lower court opinion: “An additional analytical flaw, derived from the rationale of
Gopaul
v.
Herrick Memorial Hosp., supra,
underlies the decision below. In drawing
While the
Flowers
court declined to resolve the conflict between
Murillo
and
Gopaul
on the question whether a patient’s fall from a hospital bed or gurney implicates professional or ordinary negligence in a statutory context “[b]ecause the question [was] not squarely presented,” it did state “to the extent either decision may be inconsistent with the analysis herein, it is disapproved.”
(Flowers
v.
Torrance Memorial Hospital Medical Center, supra,
Cases from other jurisdictions involving statutes similar to MICRA are not wholly consistent in articulating the dividing line between ordinary and professional negligence for tort claims based on failure to supervise or protect the safety of a patient in a hospital or other health care facility. (See generally, Annot., What Patient Claims Against Doctor, Hospital, or Similar Health Care Provider Are Not Subject to Statutes Specifically Governing Actions and Damages for Medical Malpractice (1991)
The Complaint Here Sufficiently Alleged Professional Negligence
When reviewing a ruling on demurrer, the court gives the complaint a reasonable interpretation and treats the demurrer as admitting all material facts properly pleaded. “The court does not, however, assume the truth of contentions, deductions or conclusions of law.”
(Aubry
v.
Tri-City Hospital Dist.
(1992)
Bellamy’s complaint does not expressly allege that she was on the X-ray table for the rendering of some professional service, but a reasonable interpretation of her allegations supports that inference. People do not commonly mount X-ray tables in hospitals except for a radiological examination or therapy. The hospital does not contend otherwise. Thus, we will assume that Bellamy was injured either in preparation for, during, or after an X-ray exam or treatment.
Section 340.5 defines professional negligence as “a negligent action or omission ... in the rendering of professional services.” Under the
The hospital strongly urges us to reject the Murillo test. It argues the test is overbroad and “would make any act inside a hospital which causes any harm to a patient or to any person inside a hospital an act of ‘professional negligence.’ ” The hospital criticizes the Murillo court’s dictum that a negligently maintained, unsafe condition of a hospital’s premises which causes injury to a patient falls within professional negligence. According to the hospital, this rationale “obliterates” the word “professional” from the statutory definition, making any negligence by an agent or employee of a health care facility professional negligence.
We do not need to agree with the Murillo dictum to apply that court’s actual holding in this case. Murillo's facts showed that a patient hospitalized for treatment of shingles on her lower back was placed on a hospital bed and given sedatives and tranquilizers. The alleged negligence was failure of the hospital staff to raise bedrails designed to prevent the patient’s falling while she was asleep. On these facts we agree with the court’s holding that the case fell within the statutory definition of professional negligence. That holding does not necessarily lead to the further conclusion that any negligent act or omission by a hospital causing a patient injury is professional negligence.
The rationale advanced by the hospital is that expressed in
Gopaul,
that is, if the need for restraint is “obvious to all,” the failure to restrain is ordinary negligence.
(Gopaul
v.
Herrick Memorial Hosp., supra,
The hospital also argues that in adopting MICRA the Legislature intended the term “professional negligence” to have the same meaning given it in antecedent case law (including Gopaul), which the hospital claims was restricted to “a breach of the duty to provide professional skill, procedure and diligence.” We disagree.
Gopaul
relied on a dictionary definition of “malpractice” as being “ ‘any professional misconduct or any unreasonable lack of skill in the performance of professional or fiduciary duties.’ ”
(Gopaul
v.
Herrick Memorial Hosp., supra,
The hospital also seeks to distinguish this case from
Murillo
on the ground that there the plaintiff was asleep after being given sedatives and tranquilizers, but no similar allegations are made here. We agree that a particular patient’s condition, including age, state of alertness, and the nature of any injuries or disease is a relevant circumstance which should be considered in assessing the patient’s need for supervision and protective measures. But that circumstance bears on the question of whether there was
any
negligence, that is, whether the amount of care given was reasonable. (See
Flowers
v.
Torrance Memorial Hospital Medical Center, supra,
We find support on this point in two out-of-state cases. In
Stanley
v.
Lebetkin
(1986)
In
Olsen
v.
Richards
(1989)
Bellamy’s complaint sufficiently alleges facts amounting to professional negligence, bringing it within section 364 and the other MICRA provisions. The lower courts erred in finding her action barred.
Disposition
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue to respondent appellate department of the superior court directing it to vacate its order of January 19,1996, affirming the judgment of dismissal in Hanford Municipal Court action No. CIV 15085, and to enter a new order reversing said judgment.
Petitioner shall recover her costs in this proceeding.
Martin, Acting P. J., and Wiseman, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise indicated.
In pertinent part, section 364 provides: “(a) No action based upon the health care provider’s professional negligence may be commenced unless the defendant has been given at least 90 days’ prior notice of the intention to commence the action. [U ... fill (d) If the notice is served within 90 days of the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations, the time for the commencement of the action shall be extended 90 days from the service of the notice.”
Bellamy’s counsel submitted a declaration showing that the notice was served on the hospital on May 24,1993. Because May 22,1993, fell on a Saturday, the one-year limitations period was extended to the following Monday, May 24. (§ 12a.) The 90th day after May 24, 1993, was Sunday, August 22. The complaint was filed the following day. Although the hospital claims the pre-suit notice was not timely served, it offers no argument supporting that claim.
MICRA contains numerous provisions effecting substantial changes in negligence actions against health care providers.
The same definition appears in various other sections, including section 364, subdivision (f)(2).
The hospital refers us to
American Bank & Trust Co.
v.
Community Hospital
(1984)
