Jack J. GREENBERG, M.D., et al., Appellants,
v.
MOUNT SINAI MEDICAL CENTER OF GREATER MIAMI, INC., etc., et al., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*254 Zack, Hanzman, Ponce, Tucker & Gillespie and Mark D. Greenberg, Charles R. Lipcon, Cooper & Wolfe and Sharon Wolfe and Barbara A. Silverman, Miami, for appellants.
Podhurst, Orseck, Josefsberg, Eaton, Meadow, Olin & Perwin and Joel W. Perwin, Kenny, Nachwalter, Seymour, Arnold, Critchlow & Spector and Scott E. Perwin, Miami, for appellees.
Before NESBITT, FERGUSON and GODERICH, JJ.
NESBITT, Judge.
This is an appeal from the dismissal with prejudice of plaintiffs' third amended complaint. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Plaintiffs, Drs. Greenberg and Yahr, are cardiac surgeons. Dr. Jack J. Greenberg was chairman of the department of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery at the defendant hospital, Mount Sinai Medical Center (Mt. Sinai), in Miami, for twenty-three years, and Dr. William Z. Yahr has been associated with Dr. Greenberg for the past eighteen years. When Dr. Greenberg resigned as chairman of the department, both he and Dr. Yahr continued to maintain staff privileges at Mt. Sinai. Thereafter, Mt. Sinai appointed defendant Dr. Donald Williams as chairman of the department.
According to plaintiffs, after Dr. Williams' appointment, they began experiencing difficulty in obtaining operating room time and hospital personnel to assist them in the operating room, particularly perfusionists who maintain a patient's circulation by mechanical means during open heart surgery. They also claimed that defendants had influenced patients to see Dr. Williams instead of plaintiffs, had offered inducements to referring *255 physicians to send patients to Dr. Williams instead of plaintiffs, and refused to honor the recommendations of referring physicians who sent patients to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also accused defendants of telling patients that plaintiffs no longer practiced cardiac surgery at Mt. Sinai, and of setting up various obstacles for plaintiffs to perform even emergency procedures.
Plaintiffs filed a complaint against Mt. Sinai and Dr. Williams. Ultimately, the complaint consisted of counts for tortious interference with advantageous business relationships, civil conspiracy for tortious interference with advantageous business relationships, restraint of trade, breach of contract, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, and negligence. The counts for breach of contract and breach of implied covenant of good faith were limited to Mt. Sinai. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, and after three amendments, the trial court dismissed the third amended complaint with prejudice.
As a threshold matter, we address Mt. Sinai's argument that all of plaintiffs' common-law tort claims are barred by the economic loss rule. The economic loss rule prohibits the purchaser of a product or service from recovering in tort for economic losses when there has been no personal injury or damage to property other than the product itself. Casa Clara Condominium Ass'n v. Charley Toppino and Sons, Inc.,
Next, we address plaintiffs' claim for tortious interference with advantageous business relationships. Elements comprising this tort are: 1) the existence of a business relationship under which the claimant has rights; 2) the defendant's knowledge of the relationship; 3) an intentional and unjustified interference with the relationship; 4) by a third party; and 5) damages to the claimant caused by the interference. Tamiami Trail Tours, Inc. v. Cotton,
Defendants argue that the trial court granted the motion to dismiss because the allegations, on their face, gave rise to the defense of a privilege of competition. Plaintiffs alleged that they had established and maintained advantageous business relationships with both referring physicians and patients they had previously operated on, that defendants knew of these relationships, that *256 defendants had intentionally and unjustifiedly interfered with the relationships, and that they had suffered damages as a result. We hold plaintiffs' allegations sufficient to meet the requirements necessary to state a cause of action for intentional interference. Scheller v. American Medical Int'l, Inc.,
We next address plaintiffs' count for civil conspiracy for tortious interference with advantageous business relationships, which includes allegations for conspiracy through abuse of economic power. An action for conspiracy to interfere with one's profession requires a combination of two or more persons or entities, having a common purpose, seeking to accomplish the underlying tort of interference. Buckner v. Lower Florida Keys Hosp. Dist.,
We find that plaintiffs properly alleged a conspiracy to interfere with business relationships. We determined above that plaintiffs properly alleged the underlying tort of interference. Further, plaintiffs alleged that Mt. Sinai, Dr. Williams and other named and unnamed coconspirators had independent personal stakes in achieving the object of the conspiracy. Moreover, it was alleged that Dr. Williams and the other named and unnamed coconspirators were employees of Mt. Sinai for some purposes but not employees for other purposes. The complaint failed to allege, however, the tort of conspiracy through abuse of economic power. Such a tort is actionable where a plaintiff can show some peculiar power of coercion possessed by the conspirators by virtue of their combination, which could not be possessed by an individual. Churruca v. Miami Jai-Alai, Inc.,
Plaintiffs' complaint also included a claim that defendants conspired to restrain trade in violation of sections 542.18 and 542.22, Florida Statutes (1991), and related statutes. Section 542.18 provides that "[e]very contract, combination, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce in this state is unlawful." The section is patterned after section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act, and has as its purpose "to complement the body of federal law prohibiting restraints of trade or commerce in order to foster effective competition." § 542.16, Fla. Stat. (1991); Hackett,
The complaint, in sum, alleges that Mt. Sinai conspired with the head of cardiology, and a perfusionist, among others, to exclude Drs. Greenberg and Yahr from practicing at Mt. Sinai and to sway patients to Dr. Williams. Defendants challenged the count on two grounds: 1) it failed to allege a multiplicity of economic actors; and 2) it alleged neither a per se violation of section 542.18 nor the anti-competitive effects of defendants' conduct on the market.
Because the multiplicity of actors argument has been sufficiently rejected in our discussion relating to the conspiracy count, we now consider defendants' second point, the plaintiffs' failure to allege either a per se *257 violation or anti-competitive effects of defendants' actions on the market. We agree with defendants' analysis and thus conclude the restraint of trade count was properly dismissed below.
"Antitrust laws are for the protection of competition, not primarily for the protection of individual competitors." St. Petersburg Yacht Charters,
One court has expressed this requirement as follows:
The legislators who passed the Sherman Act did not make ordinary business torts federal torts for which treble damages could be recovered... . Their concern ... was with practices that by making markets less competitive hurt the people buying from or selling to the firms in those markets. To injure .. . one or two competitors in a market will not, if there are many competitors in that market, have much effect on consumers or anyone else besides the competitors in question.
Sutlift, Inc. v. Donavan Cos.,
A careful reading of the instant complaint demonstrates no allegations of injury to the market. This failure to allege specific injury to the cardiovascular-surgery market, as opposed to Dr. Greenberg's practice, is fatal to this cause of action. See Havoco of Am., Ltd. v. Shell Oil Co.,
Finally, the trial court erred in dismissing plaintiffs' claims against Mt. Sinai for breach of contract and breach of implied covenant of good faith. Hospital bylaws, when approved and adopted by the governing board, become a binding and enforceable contract between the hospital and the physicians comprising the medical staff. Lawler,
A plaintiff will not be required to pursue and exhaust administrative remedies where they are not adequate. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Mobile Am. Corp.,
For the foregoing reasons, the order dismissing the plaintiffs' third amended complaint is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
NOTES
Notes
[1] A per se violation is one which requires no proof of anti-competitive effect and is limited to practices which are presumed to affect the market such as price-fixing, group boycotts, and customer allocations. St. Petersburg Yacht Charters, Inc. v. Morgan Yacht, Inc.,
