OPINION
Can a telephone call between two doctors create a patient-physician relationship between one of the doctors and a person whom the doctor does not know, has not spoken with, and has not treated? The trial court rendered final summary judg *219 ment in favor of the defendant, David A. Solee, D.O., in this medical malpractice case.
We affirm.
Richard Fought, appellant, was involved in a vehicular accident while riding his motorcycle on March 24, 1984. The other person involved in the accident fled the scene. A Houston Fire Department paramedic team took Fought to Eastway General Hospital (Eastway) for emergency treatment. Dr. Gregory Hall was the emergency room physician who first saw Fought. Hall diagnosed Fought as having suffered a fracture of the left distal femur and compound fractures of the left mid-tibia and fibula. After stabilizing Fought’s condition, Hall determined that he would need to consult with an orthopedic specialist concerning further treatment.
Solee was the orthopedic specialist on call on the day of Fought’s accident. Hall called Solee twice at his home to discuss Fought’s condition. On both occasions, Solee, was asked, but, declined to come to the hospital and examine Fought. Fought was later transferred to York Plaza Hospital, and then to the Veterans Administration Hospital. After several operations, his left leg was amputated below the knee due to infection.
Fought sued Eastway, Hall, and Solee, alleging that the delay in treatment to his injuries caused his leg to be amputated. Both Eastway and Hall have settled with Fought. Fought asserts as his sole point of error that there exists a fact issue concerning whether Solee had a duty to render services to Fought, and whether that duty was breached.
Because this is a summary judgment appeal, the standard of review is whether Solee established that no issue of material fact existed, thereby entitling him to a judgment as a matter of law.
Williams v. Glash,
Hall’s deposition affirms that Solee declined to see Fought. Hall stated he believed one of Solce’s concerns was that Fought had no proof of medical insurance. Solee contends that he refused to establish a patient-physician relationship with Fought because, after hearing of the type of injuries Fought had suffered, he determined Fought would be better served by a hospital with a trauma unit.
We are left with but one issue. Can an individual prosecute a cause of action against a physician for medical malpractice where a patient-physician relationship had not been established.
There are four elements that must be proven to prevail on a medical malpractice cause of action: 1) a duty by the physician to act according to certain standards; 2) a breach of the applicable standard of care; 3) an injury; and 4) a causal connection between the breach of care and the injury.
White v. Wah,
In this case, the summary judgment does not state the specific ground on which it was granted. Typically, therefore, we would look to each of the independent arguments alleged in the motion and determine whether they are sufficient to support the order.
Tilotta v. Goodall,
*220
Under our common law, a physician can be held liable for his negligence only where a physician-patient relationship exists.
Johnson v. Sibley,
The. sine qua non of appellant’s cause of action against Dr. Weis is the existence of a duty on the part of Dr. Weis to do those things that an ordinarily prudent physician would do, or refrain from doing that which an ordinarily prudent physician would not do, in the proper care and treatment of his patient. The existence of the duty must flow from the relationship of patient-physician. The relationship of physician and patient is contractual and wholly voluntary, created by agreement, expressed or implied....
Since it is unquestionably the law that the relationship of physician and patient is dependent upon contract, either express or implied, a physician is not to be held liable for arbitrarily refusing to respond to a call of a person even urgently in need of medical or surgical assistance provided that the relation of physician and patient does not exist at the time the call is made or at the time the person presents himself for treatment
Childs,
It is undisputed that no prior physician-patient relationship existed between Solee and Fought. Moreover, we hold, the fact that Solee volunteered to be “on call” does not in itself impose any duty. Solee was under no contractual obligation with Eastway to be “on call,” nor was he required to be “on call” to maintain staff privileges. Therefore, no cause of action for medical malpractice can exist under our common law.
Fought contends, notwithstanding the common law rule, Solce’s refusal to treat him constituted negligence per se. This assertion is based on his allegation that Solee violated Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art 4438a. 1 Article 4438a provided, at the time of the events in question:
No officer, employee or member of the hospital medical staff of a general hospital shall deny emergency services available at the hospital to a person diagnosed by a licensed physician as requiring emergency services because the person Is unable to establish his ability to pay for the services or because of race, religion, or national ancestry. In addition, the person needing the services may not be subjected to arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable discrimination based upon age, sex, physical condition or economic status.
In this Act, “emergency services” means services that are usually and customarily available at the respective hospital and that must be provided for immediately to sustain a person’s life, to prevent serious permanent disfigurement or loss or impairment of a bodily member or organ
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The article was enacted to prevent patient dumping by hospitals. It imposes criminal penalties for violation of its precepts, and was first enacted by the 1975 legislature. We are unaware of any instance where a court has bestowed upon a plaintiff a civil cause of action based on the alleged violation of this state’s patient dumping statute.
However, in support of his position, appellant has offered three opinions from two Texas appellate courts:
Valdez v. Lyman-Roberts Hospital, Inc.,
In
Valdez,
the appellate court was asked to review whether the trial court had correctly issued an instructed verdict that the negligence of two
hospitals
was not the proximate cause of a patient’s death.
Valdez,
In
Ortiz,
the defendant doctor stipulated to the plaintiff’s allegation of negligence.
Ortiz,
Moreover, the mere fact that the legislature adopts a criminal statute does not mean that an appellate court must accept it as a standard for civil liability.
Carter v. William Somerville and Son, Inc.,
That is not the case here. There is no question that the common-law standard imposed no civil duty on Solee to treat an individual with whom he had no prior physician-patient relationship.
Childs,
All statutes are presumed to be enacted by the Legislature with full knowledge of the existing condition of law and with reference to it. Statutes are to be construed in connection with, and in harmony with the existing law, and as a part of a general and uniform system of jurisprudence, that is, they are to be construed with reference to a whole system of law of which they form in part, includ- *222 mg reference to other statutes, rules of procedure, and decisions of the courts.
City of Ingleside v. Johnson,
Appellant’s point of error is overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Act of June 17, 1983, 68th Leg., R.S., ch. 388, § 1,1983 Tex.Gen.Laws 2137, repealed and codified by Act of June 14, 1989, 71st Leg., R.S., ch. 678, §§ 1, 13, 1989 Tex.Gen.Laws 2230, 2584, 3165. (Current version at Tex.Health & Safety Code Ann. § 311.022 (Vernon Pamph.1991)).
. Because Dr. Solee is the sole defendant remaining in this litigation, we need not, and do not, decide whether a party can assert a private cause of action against a hospital for the hospital’s violation of the patient dumping statute.
. We recognize that on occasion, our supreme court has created new concepts of duty based on violations of criminal statutes even though no duty previously existed under the common law.
See El Chico Corp. v. Poole,
