Dr. Horst Blume and his professional corporation sued Marian Health Center after it permanently revoked his staff privileges. Dr. Blume’s complaint raised a number of theories for relief, but the only one that survives is his claim that the hospital breached its contract with him when it terminated his privileges without giving him a hearing. The district court held as a matter of law that Marian had breached its contract, and, after a trial on the matter of damages, a jury returned a verdict in Dr. Blume’s favor. This appeal followed and we reverse.
We note that Dr. Blume died during the pendency of this case, and his estate was substituted as a party. Also, Marian Health Center was succeeded in interest by Mercy Medical Center. But these changes do not affect the issues on appeal and for the sake of simplicity we will refer to the plaintiffs-appellees collectively as “Dr. Blume” and to the defendant-appellee as “the hospital.”
The hospital asserts first that under Iowa law the bylaws in question did not constitute a contract between the hospital and Dr. Blume. But since both parties agreed in the trial court that the bylaws did create a contract between them, the hospital has conceded the point and thus has waived the right to raise it on appeal.
See Shanklin v. Fitzgerald,
Even if we were to conclude that the point of law was not waived but merely acquiesced in or forfeited in the trial court,
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we would not give relief because there is no plain error here. It is true that there are two Iowa cases that refuse, in the particular circumstances in those cases, to give hospital staff bylaws the effect of a contract between the hospital and its staff.
See Natale v. Sisters of Mercy of Council Bluffs,
The hospital raised numerous defenses to this action in the trial court, including an assertion that it was immune from suit under the hospital’s bylaws, under Iowa Code § 147.135(1), and under the Health Care Quality Improvement Act, see 42 U.S.C. § 11112(a). The district court rejected the hospital’s motion for summary judgment on these immunity defenses. After careful consideration, we conclude that it was error to hold that the hospital’s bylaws did not entitle the hospital to immunity from the present suit.
Dr. Blume maintains that the hospital has waived a defense based on the bylaws’ immunity clause because the district court did not rule on that defense below — despite the hospital’s motion for summary judgment on that basis — and it was the hospital’s responsibility to ensure that the court made a ruling. But the district court did in fact make a ruling: It rejected the hospital’s motion for summary judgment on immunity grounds, explicitly adverting to the hospital’s argument relying on the immunity provision in the bylaws. Even if the district court had not ruled on the hospital’s motion, the court twice entered orders foreclosing any proof at trial on the matter of immunity and effectively granted summary judgment against the hospital on the issue. The matter is therefore squarely before us.
Nor is there any merit in Dr. Blume’s contention that the issue of the effect of the immunity provision was not preserved because the hospital did not raise that issue in its post-trial motion for judgment as a matter of law,
see
Fed. R.Civ.P. 50, though it raised its other immunity defenses in that motion. But the “interpretation of a contract is a question of law for the court to decide,” and a party has no obligation to raise a legal issue post-trial in order to preserve it for appeal.
White Consol. Industries, Inc. v. McGill Mfg. Co.,
We therefore turn to the merits of the hospital’s argument. Dr. Blume’s claim was bottomed on the rather complex bylaws provisions governing a staff member’s right to a hearing, and the kind of hearing to which a staff member would be entitled, before the hospital could revoke a staff member’s privileges. But Section IX of the bylaws themselves provides that “[t]he practitioner extends absolute immunity to ... the hospital ... for any actions ... taken ... by this hospital ... relating [to] ... proceedings for suspension ... of clinical privileges or for ... revocation of appointment, or for any other disciplinary action.” The breadth of the immunity afforded is evident, and it is equally evident that the contract language covers the present claim because the claim is based on actions that the hospital took to suspend Dr. Blume’s clinical privileges. Indeed, Dr. Blume does not argue otherwise.
As Dr. Blume also recognizes, we have held that a very similar immunity provision contained in hospital bylaws was enforceable against a staff physician under North Dakota law.
See Everett v. St. Ansgar Hosp.,
There is nothing in Iowa law that would forbid the enforcement of this clause as written. Dr. Blume maintains, relying on
Islami,
We emphasize that the rights that Dr. Blume claims are only contractual. If the due process rights that he claimed arose from an Iowa statute, then he would have a good or at least colorable argument that they could not be waived or that the immunity clause was invalid. That is because in
Bruton v. Ames Community Sch. Dist.,
Some state courts have held that staff physicians have certain common-law due process rights whether or not those rights are set out in a contract with a hospital.
See, e.g., Applebaum v. Board of Directors,
At oral argument, Dr. Blume’s counsel asserted that to allow the immunity clause to trump the promises of due process in the bylaws would render his arrangement with the hospital nugatory. But the meaning of the clause is plain and we have no warrant to ignore it. The promises still create a moral obligation on the part of the hospital, moreover, and may create a scruple against their violation; Dr. Blume just does not have an action if the hospital violates them. It is a nice question whether the clause renders the promises illusory, but if it does it means that they cannot serve as consideration and thus that Dr. Blume would simply have no contract to sue on. See 3 Williston on Contracts § 7:7 (4th ed.).
For the reasons indicated, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for the entry of a judgment for the hospital.
