Opinion
Petitioner joined physicians, a professional medical corporation and a hospital in a complaint for medical malpractice. The court sustained a demurrer without leave to amend as to the third cause of action of the first amended complaint, which purported to allege a battery. We entertain the petition because the striking of this cause of action from plaintiff’s complaint would bar an allegedly substantial portion of plaintiff’s
Procedural Background
The defendants interposed a general demurrer as to the third cause of action on the ground that it did not constitute a valid action in battery and that it was barred by the statute of limitations. The trial court’s sustaining of the demurrer was stated to be upon the basis of inability to state a cause of action for battery, and in any event it appears that petitioner did or could have avoided the statute of limitations by pleading late discovery. We therefore direct our attention only to the issue of the pleading of battery. In this review we are governed by the familiar principle that in testing a complaint by demurrer the trial court is bound to assume the provability of the allegations of the complaint and may not consider facts or allegations dehors the pleading. (5 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Pleading, § 895, pp. 334-337.)
The event giving rise to the malpractice claim was the birth of a child and the medical care attendant thereupon. Joined as plaintiffs are the mother in her own right and the mother as guardian ad litem for the child. The negligence causes of action set forth claims for both mother and child. The battery claim (as well as the cause of action for “fraud”), however, appears to allege an action only on behalf of the mother. Since only the battery count is in issue in this petition, we therefore deal only with the claims of the mother, referring to her as “plaintiff.”
Plaintiff alleges she commenced labor on September 12, 1987, at 7:15 a.m., that she went to the hospital at 10:53 a.m., and that her delivery by caesarian section occurred at 12:22 a.m. on September 13, the following day. Before going to the hospital plaintiff called one of her physicians (all of whom are alleged to be agents of the others) to advise of her commencement of labor. She was instructed by her physicians to go to the hospital and to accept the administration of the drug Pitocin. In her negligence cause of action plaintiff states that the physicians “failed to disclose material risks of the procedure,” which included augmentation of labor contractions, the resulting necessity of pain medication and anesthesia, relinquishment of control over the patient’s body during labor and confinement to bed, and
These allegations are incorporated in the cause of action for battery. In addition, it is alleged that when the physician instructed plaintiff to accept the administration of Pitocin “he knowingly and intentionally misrepresented to her that Pitocin was necessary to prevent infection.” Had plaintiff known the true nature and purpose of the drug, she alleges, she would not have consented to its use; therefore, her consent was fraudulently obtained and is not effective as a defense against what it is alleged turned out to be a damaging battery. Although perhaps not obvious from the strict terminology of the complaint, briefing and argument at both the trial court and appellate court level make clear that all parties as well as the trial court assumed (reasonably we believe) the pleading to acknowledge that (1) Pitocin is a drug which is acceptable for use in connection with childbirth under certain circumstances, but that (2) its purpose is not to prevent infection but to induce labor.
The trial court, in ruling from the bench on the demurrer, considered these allegations likely to amount to a claim in fraud, but discounted their effectiveness in terms of battery. The court stated: “I think the key is whether or not the procedure was therapeutic in a medical sense. The fact that the therapy may be different than you understood it to be does not take it out of the range of being therapeutic. . . . [H]ere you were being administered a medication. It just turns out it’s your opinion that the medication . . . was not for the purpose you were told it was for, but still the medication administered, even in your own statements here, [was] for a therapeutic basis, even though it may not have been for what you wanted the medicine to be administered for.”
Discussion
It would appear that the trial court’s decision was based upon
Rains
v.
Superior Court
(1984)
“This court is persuaded by the authorities discussed herein that the therapeutic versus nontherapeutic purpose of touching by a psychiatrist goes to the ‘essential character of the act itself and thus vitiates consent obtained by fraud as to that character, [fl] [T]he sole question is whether the plaintiffs can possibly allege facts stating a cause for battery against their psychiatrists. To prevail on such a theory plaintiffs must prove at trial that defendants’ true purpose in employing violent physical contact upon plaintiffs was to achieve the secret personal purposes alleged rather than the announced purpose of curing the mental disorders of the plaintiffs.” (Id. at p. 941.)
In its use of the phrase “essential character of the act,” the
Rains
court was referring to a distinction made in legal texts as to the varying kinds of misrepresentations which can give rise to mistaken consent. To vitiate consent the mistake “ ‘must extend to the essential character of the act itself, which is to say that which makes it harmful or offensive, [citation] rather than to some collateral matter which merely operates as an inducement. . . .’”
(Rains
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The illuminating example given in the texts is that of the seduction of the voice pupil by the choirmaster upon the representation that it would improve her voice; as compared to the seduction of a woman by the false promise of marriage. In the first instance the physical contact is a battery because the “essential character” of the act has been misrepresented—it is not an exercise for voice improvement but for the personal gratification of the seducer. In the second case both parties know the “essential character” of the act, and the inducement which gains the consent relates to a collateral matter: marriage. In Rains, the patients knew what was to be done to them, but the “essential character” of the act was not what they were told (therapy) but an independent and personal objective of the physicians (control of the patient).
Plaintiff’s situation does not equate to that of the
Rains
plaintiffs. She was, like them, induced to accept treatment upon false representations.
Following the rationale of Rains, therefore, we are motivated to conclude that the plaintiff cannot sustain a cause of action for battery by virtue of the stated allegations. She was induced to accept a drug by deception, but the deception did not have to do with the mutual purpose of patient and physician, which was treatment. They both knew the “essential character” of the treatment, and the deception by the physician as to the specific medical objective was a collateral matter not vitiating consent.
Does this conclusion constitute condonation of deception by physicians? Does it deprive plaintiff of her just remedy? It does neither. Plaintiff has stated a good cause of action for negligence, and probably for deceit. Our decision simply recognizes these remedies as preferable, under all the circumstances, to a packaging of her action in terms of battery.
We are guided in this conclusion by the other major California authority in this general area, which is
Cobbs
v.
Grant
(1972)
The Cobbs court concluded that a patient whose consent had been exceeded by a well-meaning physician attempting therapeutic treatment should be relegated to a negligence cause of action. Our conclusion is that a patient whose consent has been obtained by a well-meaning deception as to the precise medical effect of the treatment should also be relegated to a negligence action. 2
Without claiming any accurate knowledge of the field (and certainly without any factual briefing from the parties) we nevertheless presume that there are many cases in which drugs are prescribed by physicians which are not completely appropriate in the particular circumstance. It is common knowledge that physicians often do not adequately explain treatment to patients, and it is perhaps even more common that regardless of the
Therefore, having accepted this petition for extraordinary review upon the preliminary impression that precluding the battery count might unreasonably gut plaintiff’s case, we conclude that the trial court was after all correct in its ruling. We therefore deny the petition.
Kremer, P. J., and Huffman, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied November 1, 1989, and petitioner’s application for review by the Supreme Court was denied January 17, 1990.
Notes
In oral argument, for the first time insofar as the record reveals, plaintiif suggested that the purpose of her deception might have been the selfish objective of the physicians to speed her labor so as to avoid attendance at the hospital on the weekend (we judicially notice that September 12 and 13, 1987, were a Saturday and a Sunday). Had this allegation been made in plaintiff’s amended complaint the ruling below might well have been different, because we conceive this would have been a deception indeed going to the “essential character” of the act to which consent was given. We decline to consider this suggestion, however, not only because it was proposed at the appellate hearing without any prior notice to court or opposing counsel and without any documentary support, but because the contention was not presented to the trial court. “The appellate court is ordinarily confined in its review to the proceedings which took place in the court below and are brought up for review in a properly prepared record on appeal.” (9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (3d ed. 1985) Appeal § 250, p. 256.)
It is necessary in this discussion that we deal with
Berkey
v.
Anderson
(1969)
