Mavis BUCK, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Duane ST. CLAIR, M.D., and Does I through V, fictitiously named, Defendants-Respondents.
No. 15074.
Supreme Court of Idaho.
May 8, 1985.
702 P.2d 781
DONALDSON, C.J., HUNTLEY, J., and McFADDEN, J., Pro Tem., concur.
BAKES, Justice, concurring in the result in part:
I concur in the result of much of the majority opinion, but would remand this matter forthwith to the trial court to enter a final decree setting out precisely the extent and duration of the easement which the trial court has created by its judgment. To date there is only an amorphous order which cannot become a final judgment until the trial court fixes precisely the nature and extent of the easement granted.
While it may have been appropriate for the trial court to attempt to give the parties time to work it out, no purported final judgment should have been entered until either the parties had settled the nature and extent of the easement or, having failed to do so, the trial court had done so.
James Lynch, of Imhoff & Lynch, Boise, for defendants-respondents.
BISTLINE, Justice.
The issue presented on appeal is whether the trial court correctly excluded pursuant to
The plaintiff called as a witness Dr. Anton Broms, a nationally board-certified obstetrician-gynecologist from Portland, Oregon, to testify regarding the standard of care and the defendant‘s negligence. The defendant objected to this witness on the basis of
possess professional knowledge and expertise coupled with actual knowledge of the applicable said community standard to which his or her expert opinion testimony is addressed; provided, this section shall not be construed to prohibit or otherwise preclude a competent expert witness who resides elsewhere from adequately familiarizing himself with the standards and practices of (a particular) such area and thereafter giving opinion testimony in such a trial.
The trial court concluded that the Portland physician lacked actual knowledge of the Boise standard because he had not practiced in Boise, had not admitted patients to any Boise hospitals, and had not evaluated any area medical facilities, and was not familiar with any local medical literature. A directed verdict in favor of the defendant was granted.
The ruling by the trial court suggests that the local standard of care for board-certified obstetrician-gynecologists differs from the national standard. We believe that for board-certified specialists, the local standard of care is equivalent to the national standard of care. Our reasons for this decision are simple: board-certified medical specialists are highly-trained individuals who become certified after completing a rigorous training program. Medical schools are accredited by a national team of physicians and administrators. The residency training programs are approved by a single board of specialists, and a physician is certified as a specialist only after passing a nationally administered exam consisting of both oral and written components. The board-certified specialists practicing within the state are the product of nationally designed education programs. The standard of care familiar to any board-certified physician in this state is a national standard of care. We see no reason to believe there is a local standard of care which deviates from the national standard of care for board-certified physicians. Our ruling today is limited to board-certified doctors practicing in the same area of specialty. Hence, a board-certified physician can testify only against another board-certified physician practicing in the same area of medicine: surgeons against surgeons; obstetrician-gynecologists against obstetrician-gynecologists, anesthesiologists against anesthesiologists, and so forth. Our holding is to be construed so as to allow a board-certified physician to testify regarding the standard of care only in cases involving other doctors who are also board-certified in the same specialty. The trial court‘s conclusion that the Portland obstetrician-gynecologist lacked actual knowledge of the local standard of care is incorrect.
Our holding today is limited to those physicians who hold themselves out as board-certified specialists. In so doing, we are cognizant of the intent and purpose of the passage of
Such individual providers of health care shall be judged in such cases in comparison with similarly trained and qualified providers of the same class in the same community, taking into account his or her training, experience, and fields of medical specialization, if any.
We believe the legislature enacted the above language in recognition of the very problem we are addressing today: judging health care providers in comparison to other providers with the same background and training. This section specifically lists fields of medical specialization as a factor to be considered in the proof of community standard. By enacting this section we believe the legislature, in its wisdom, recognized that the standard of care for nationally board-certified specialists was the same throughout our nation and that one board-certified specialist could testify regarding the standard of care against another na-
We are also mindful of the other elements set forth in
Moreover, the legislature was concerned with the disparity between urban and rural areas in terms of availability of medical facilities, education programs, and other specialists when it passed
Subsection (c) of
It should be noted that the holding of this case regarding the local standard of care being the same as the national standard of care is limited to nationally board-certified specialists. The protections outlined in
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Costs to appellant. No attorney‘s fees on appeal.
HUNTLEY, J., and McFADDEN, J. (pro tem), concur.
DONALDSON, Chief Justice, dissenting.
I dissent. The majority‘s analysis of
Second, the majority‘s actual holding is in direct contravention of the legislative intent evidenced by the enactment of
“In any case, claim or action for damages due to injury to or death of any person, brought against any physician and surgeon or other provider of health care ... plaintiff must, as an essential part of his or her case in chief, affirmatively prove by direct expert testimony and by a preponderance of all the competent evidence, that such defendant then and there negligently failed to meet the applicable standard of health care practice of the community in which such care allegedly was or should have been provided, as such standard existed at the time and place of the alleged negligence of such physician and surgeon, hospital or other such health care provider and as such standard then and there existed with respect to the class of health care provider that such defendant then and there belonged to and in which capacity he, she or it was functioning. Such individual providers of health care shall be judged in such cases in comparison with similarly trained and qualified providers of the same class in the same community, taking into account his or her training, experience, and fields of medical specialization, if any....”
I.C. § 6-1012 (1979) (emphasis added).
In Le Pelley v. Grefenson, 101 Idaho 422, 614 P.2d 962 (1980), McFadden, J., writing for a unanimous Court (including Bistline, J.), considered the statutes at issue in the present case, validated the local community standard of care as being constitutional, and held that there was no retroactive application because the legislature had codified already existing case law, and under prior case law the local community had been the area wherein a practitioner standard of care had always been determined. Hale v. Heninger, 87 Idaho 414, 420, 393 P.2d 718, 721. (1964). In Le Pelley, 101 Idaho at 427, 614 P.2d at 967, McFadden, J., citing Willis v. Western Hospital Association, 67 Idaho 435, 182 P.2d 950 (1947), stated that, to prove malpractice, evidence was required “that the care and attention given to deceased was not such as would have been given by other physicians in good standing in that neighborhood.” McFadden, J. also quoted from Davis v. Potter, 51 Idaho 81, 2 P.2d 318 (1931): “He is bound to bestow such reasonable and ordinary care, skill, and diligence as physicians and surgeons in the same neighborhood, in the same general line of practice, ordinarily have and exercise in like cases.” Id. at 427, 2 P.2d at 967.
In Maxwell v. Women‘s Clinic, P.A., 102 Idaho 53, 625 P.2d 407 (1981), I stated for the majority that:
“in order to preclude summary judgment in medical malpractice cases, plaintiffs must show that expert testimony has been offered by either the plaintiff or defendant which when viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiffs indicates that the defendant has negligently failed to meet the applicable standard of health care practice of the community,” citing Le Pelley. Id. at 56, 625 P.2d at 410. (Emphasis in original.)
The Court went on to hold that the alleged admission of the defendant doctor did not satisfy the standards set forth in
“As for the requirements for direct expert testimony set out in
I.C. § 6-1013 , these do no more than set forth the foundation for expert testimony. To testify for a plaintiff as an expert one must have an opinion to a reasonable medical certainty and one must have the required expertise and knowledge of the community standard. Again, this does no more than codify existing case law.” 102 Idaho at 57, 625 P.2d at 411.
Today‘s majority (which includes Bistline and McFadden, JJ.) chooses to ignore these
The problem with the majority‘s reasoning is that it focuses solely on a physician‘s training to the exclusion of another extremely relevant factor, namely: the availability of medical resources. It is the availability of medical resources—access to modern hospitals and laboratories, opportunities for continuing medical education and training, etc.—that enables a physician to maintain a particular standard of practice. A physician who practices in a rural Idaho community does not have the same opportunities and resources for keeping abreast with medical advances as does a physician practicing in a large, metropolitan area. For this reason, the legislature has chosen to measure a physician‘s actions against those of similarly trained professionals in the community in which he or she resides. I cannot join in the majority‘s decision to abrogate what I perceive to be the legislature‘s express intent in enacting
Finally, the majority‘s distortion of the express language of
SHEPARD, J., concurs.
