Opinion
This is а marital dissolution action brought by real party in interest David Y. Manela (father) against petitioner Mira R. Manela (mother). One of the principal issues in the case is whether father should be granted joint custody over the couple’s four-year-old son, Jacob. In connection with that issue, father and mother became embroiled in a discovery dispute that is the subject of our opinion.
Mother contends that father has a “seizure” disorder that affects his ability to care for Jacob. Father denies mother’s allegations and contends that he merely has a “tic” that is controlled by medication. Mother subpoenaed the medical records of two of father’s physicians, Dr. Hart C. Cohen and Dr. Andrea H. Morrison, claiming that the records will support her allegations regarding father’s seizures. The trial court, however, granted father’s motion to quash the subpoenas on the ground that the documents were protected by the physician-patient privilege. Mother filed a рetition for a writ of mandate requiring the trial court to vacate its order quashing the subpoenas.
BACKGROUND
1. Father’s Alleged Medical Condition
Mother claims that father suffers from regular “seizures” which last from 45 seconds to two and one-half minutes. The seizures usually occur when father awakens from sleep. 1 Although father does not lose consciousness whеn the seizures occur, mother claims the seizures cause father’s head, neck, shoulders, and one arm to seize and that the seizures are “extremely loud and very frightening.” Mother further claims that the seizures cause father to temporarily lose his ability to speak and often cause him to vomit. Father denies that he has a seizure disorder. Instead, father contends, he has a “tic” which is controlled by medication.
2. Father’s Divorce Petition and Application for an OSC Regarding Custody and Visitation
On June 17, 2008, father filed a petition for dissolution of marriage. In his petition, father requested that custody of Jacob be awarded “consistent with the best interest of the minor child.” In her response to father’s petition, mother requested that the court award custody of Jacob to her alone.
On August 7, 2008, father filed an ex parte application for an order to show cause (OSC) regarding child custody and child visitation. In that application, father requested that he and mother be given joint physical custody. Father’s application did
not
directly raise the issue of his alleged seizure disorder. Father, however, did state that mother’s counsel advised him that if he sought custody of Jacob, mother would disclose certain information regarding father and his parents that would damage father’s reputation in the Orthodox Jewish community and his professional reputation as a cardiologist. On August 7,
On the same day, August 7, 2008, the court issued a “nonprejudicial” order regarding father’s visitation rights. The court “temporarily” prohibited father from driving Jacob until it obtained more information regarding father’s alleged seizure disorder. The court also scheduled a hearing on the OSC and a briefing schedule for the parties.
On August 12, 2008, mother filed another declaration which discussed father’s alleged seizure disorder, as well as documents purportedly showing that father reсeived prescriptions for Tegretol, which mother claimed is prescribed for seizures. Mother requested that father be allowed to visit Jacob three days a week, but not be allowed overnight visits and not be allowed to drive a vehicle with Jacob in it.
On August 13, 2008, father filed declarations in support of the OSC, including the declaration of Dr. Benjamin Gross, a neurologist. Dr. Gross stated in his declaration that he had treated father for the past nine years for hypnagogic movements, also known аs a tic disorder. Dr. Gross further stated that father’s condition has been controlled by Tegretol and that there was no neurological reason to restrict father’s ability to drive an automobile or to prevent father from caring for Jacob.
On August 15, 2008, the court issued an order granting father and mother joint legal custody over Jacob. The court granted mother primary physical custody over Jacob and father secondary physical custody, specifying the days and nights on which Jacob would be with father. The court did not place any limitations on father’s right to drive Jacob.
At the August 15, 2008, hearing, the court stated that the evidence was “quite clear that [father] does not suffer from seizures as the term is generally recognized to me . . . .” The court further stated that father’s tics only occurred “when he’s ready to go to bed. Presumably he’s not about to go to sleep before he’s put the child to bed. And even under anybody’s characterization, the most it [the alleged seizure] lasts is about two and a half minutes, generally quite less. I don’t see that it in any way impairs his [father’s] ability to be involved, to have the child overnight . . . .” The court also found that there was no evidence that father’s alleged disorder “impairs his ability to drive a car.”
3. Father’s Motion to Quash Subpoenas
On August 14, 2008, mother issued subpoenas to Dr. Cohen and Dr. Morrison. The subpoenas demanded that Dr. Cohen and Dr. Morrison produce “[a]ll medical records pertaining to David Manela.”
In response to father’s motion, mother alleged that the medical records she sought would support her allegations regarding father’s alleged seizure disorder. Mother claimed that Dr. Morrison treated father for seizures when father was 11 years old and for several years thereafter. Mother alsо alleged that on August 29, 2007, Dr. Cohen examined father regarding his neurological condition and that she was present during the exam. Mother further alleged that at that exam, father stated to Dr. Cohen in her presence a detailed account of father’s seizures. The trial court granted father’s motion to quash the subpoenas.
4. Mother’s Petition for Writ of Mandate
Mother filed a petition for writ of mandate requesting, inter alia, that we order the trial court to vacate its order granting father’s motion to quash the subpoenas to Dr. Cohen and Dr. Morrison, and enter a new order denying that motion. On May 12, 2009, we issued an OSC regarding why the relief requested in the petition should or should not be granted. Both mother and father filed additional briefs supporting their respective positions.
CONTENTIONS
Mother claims that father waived the physician-patient privilege by filing the declaration of Dr. Gross and by speaking about his medical condition to Dr. Cohen in the presence of mother. This waiver, mother argues, extends to father’s privilege relating to Dr. Morrison. Mother also contends that the patient-litigant exception to the physician-patient privilege applies because father “tendered” the issue of his alleged seizure condition.
Father contends that the physician-patient privilege protects all of the documents mother seeks. Alternatively, father argues that the documents are protected by his right to privacy under the United States and California Constitutions.
DISCUSSION
1. Standard of Review
“The standard of review for discovery orders is abuse of discretion. [Citation.] Abuse of discretion is a deferential standard of review.”
(Avant! Corp. v. Superior Court
(2000)
“We begin with the premise that there can be no discovery of materials which are privileged.”
(Palay
v.
Superior Court
(1993)
3. Father Waived the Physician-patient Privilege with Respect to Dr. Cohen, but Did Not Waive the Privilege with Respect to Dr. Morrison
a. Dr. Cohen
Section 912, subdivision (a) provides, in part: “Except as otherwise provided in this section, the right of any person to claim a privilege provided by Section . . . 994 (physician-patient privilege) ... is waived with respect to a communication protected by the privilege if any holder of the privilege, without coercion, has disclosed a significant part of the communication or has consented to disclosure made by anyone.”
Section 992 provides: “As used in this article, ‘confidential communication between patient and physician’ means information, including information obtained by an examinаtion of the patient, transmitted between a patient and his physician in the course of that relationship and in confidence by a means which, so far as the patient is aware, discloses the information to no third persons other than those who are present to further the interest of the patient in the consultation or those to whom disclosure is reasonably necessary for the transmission of the information or the accomplishment of the purpose for which the physician is consulted, and includes a diagnosis made and the advice given by the physician in the course of that relationship.” (Italics added.)
Here, father does not dispute that mother was present during his August 29, 2007, intake exam by Dr. Cohen, and that father consented to disclosure of at least a significant part of the communication between father and Dr. Cohen
Section 912, subdivision (c) provides that “[a] disclosure that is itself privileged is not а waiver of any privilege.” Father argues that his disclosure to mother was itself privileged under the marital-communications privilege (§ 980), 4 and thus mother’s presence at Dr. Cohen’s exam did not constitute a waiver of the physician-patient privilege. The marital-communications privilege, however, cannot be invoked in “[a] proceeding brought by or on behalf of one spouse against the other spouse.” (§ 984, subd. (a).) This is such a proceeding. Father’s statements to Dr. Cohen in mother’s prеsence therefore were not protected by the marital-communications privilege or the physician-patient privilege in this action.
b. Dr Morrison
Mother argues that father’s waiver of the physician-patient privilege with respect to Dr. Cohen’s and Dr. Gross’s medical records also caused a waiver of the privilege with respect to Dr. Morrison’s medical records.
5
However, we may not extend the waiver of privileges, including the physician-patient privilege, beyond the express limits of section 912.
(Simmons v. Ghaderi
(2008)
Further, the scope of a waiver should be determined with reference to the purpose of the privilege.
(Jones
v.
Superior Court
(1981)
In this case, father’s interest in precluding his “humiliation” of disclosing his alleged medical condition to mother is belied by his voluntary disclosure to mother of his communications with Dr. Cohen and his filing of Dr. Gross’s declaration. But the disclosure of father’s communications with Dr. Cohen and Dr. Gross did not relate back to father’s communications with Dr. Morrison many years earlier when father was a teenager. When father spoke to Dr. Morrison, father reasonably believed he could fully and freely discuss his medical condition. If we allow father’s litigation adversary access to Dr. Morrison’s records, father’s interest in disclosing all necessary information to his treating physician will be undermined. We therefore hold that father’s waiver of the physician-patient privilege with respect to Dr. Cohen and Dr. Gross did not also constitute a waiver of that privilege with respect to Dr. Morrison.
4. Father Did Not Tender the Issue of His Alleged Seizure Disorder
One exception to the physician-patient privilege is the patient-litigant exception. Section 996 provides: “There is no privilege under this article as to a communication relevant to an issue concerning the condition of the patient if such issue has been tendered by: [][] (a) The patient . . . .” Mother claims that father tendered the issue of his seizure/tic disorder, and therefore father’s communications with his physicians rеgarding that medical condition are not privileged. We disagree.
There are two grounds for the patient-litigant exception. “First, the courts have noted that the patient, in raising the issue of a specific ailment or condition in litigation, in effect dispenses with the confidentiality of that ailment and may no longer justifiably seek protection from the humiliation of
The patient-litigant exception usually arises in an action for personal injuries. A plaintiff seeking to recover damages arising out of a particular injury cannot claim the physician-patient privilege with respect to that injury because plaintiff’s action tenders the issue.
(Province v. Center for Women’s Health & Family Birth
(1993)
A defendant, however, does not tender his or her medical condition by simply denying the plaintiff’s allegations regarding the same. For example, in
Carlton v. Superior Court
(1968)
In
Koshman
v.
Superior Court
(1980)
The present case is analogous to Carlton and Koshman. Like the defendant in Carlton and the mother in Koshman, father did not raise the issue of his tic/seizure disorder in his pleadings or his application for custody of Jacob. It was mother who first raised the issue in her response to father’s application. Mother was also the first party to file evidence in connection with the issue. Father, by contrast, merely denied mother’s allegations and submitted evidence in support of that denial.
5. Father’s Right to Privacy Does Not Prevent Mother from Obtaining Dr. Cohen’s Medical Records 7
Father claims that his medical records are protected by his right to privacy under the United States and California Constitutions. There is no question that medical records are highly sensitive materials that fall within the scope of the right to privacy. (See
Palay, supra,
Here, the state has a compelling interest, namely promoting the best interests of Jacob. Indeed, it is the policy of this state that Jacоb’s best interest, including his health, safety and welfare, be the “primary concern” of the court in making orders regarding legal custody over Jacob. (Fam. Code, § 3020, subd. (a); see also Fam. Code, § 3011, subd. (a).) While father’s alleged disorder does not per se disqualify him from obtaining custody of Jacob, even assuming all of mother’s allegations are true, father’s condition is certainly something the trial court can and should consider in determining what is in Jacob’s best interest.
(In re Marriage of Carney
(1979)
In
Carney,
our Supreme Court held that a trial court abusеd its discretion in taking custody of a child away from a quadriplegic father. The court, however, stated: “We do not mean, of course, that the health or physical condition of the parents may not be taken into account in determining whose
“In particular, if a person has a physical handicap it is impermissible for the court simply to rely on that condition as prima facie evidence of the person’s unfitness as a parent or of probable detriment to the child; rather, in all cases the court must view the handicapped person as an individual and the family as a whole. To achieve this, the court should inquire into the person’s actual and potential physical capabilities, learn how he or she had adapted to the disability and manages its problems, consider how the other members of the household have adjusted thereto, and take into account the special contributions the person may make to the family despite—or even because of—the handicap. Weighing these and all other relevant factors together, the court should then carefully determine whether the parent’s condition will in fact have a substantial and lasting adverse effect on the best interests of the child.” (Carney,
supra,
In order to engage in the analysis called for by Carney, it is vitally important that the court have as much information as possible regarding father’s alleged tic/seizure disorder and the extent to which, if at all, it will affect his ability to care for Jacob. While Carney stated that a parent’s health and physical condition were “ordinarily” of minor importance, it did not state that this factor was always of minor importance. In this case, father’s alleged disorder could be potentially significant. Mother stated in her declaration that Dr. Cohen opined that, in light of father’s alleged disorder, father should not drive Jacob alone and that Jacob should not be left alone with father. We find that under the circumstances of this case, the state’s interest in protecting the best interests of Jacob outweighs father’s privacy interest in Dr. Cohen’s medical records relating to father’s tic/seizure disorder.
“However, determination of the nature of the compelling state interest does not complete the constitutional equation. [Citation.] An impairment of the privacy interest ‘passes constitutional muster only if it is
necessary
to achieve the compelling interest.’ ”
(Palay, supra,
The subpoena at issue here sought more information than was necessary to protect Jacob’s best interests. Mother demanded that Dr. Cohen produce “all” medical records regarding father in his possession. In the record before us, mother has only shown good cause to obtain nonprivileged documents relating to father’s tic/seizure disorder.
Furthermore, in light of father’s allegations that mother seeks his medical records in order to damage father’s professional reputation and his reputation
DISPOSITION
The May 12, 2009, OSC is discharged. Mother’s petition is granted with respect to Dr. Cohеn, but denied with respect to Dr. Morrison. The parties shall bear their own costs on appeal.
Klein, P. J., and Aldrich, J., concurred.
Notes
In addition, mother stated in a declaration: “Several times, throughout our marriage, while driving during the day (not sleeping), David [father] has pulled over the car because he had an ‘aura’ of a seizure coming on or a speech arrest, generally when he was slightly sleepy.” Mother did not claim that father has actually had a seizure while driving.
All statutory references are to the Evidence Code unless otherwise indicated.
The trial court will need to determine the precise scope of the waiver because we do not have all of the facts before us. For example, we do not know whether Dr. Cohen’s documents contain facts gathered by Dr. Cohen outside the presence of mother.
Section 980 provides: “Subject to Section 912 and except as otherwise provided in this article, a spouse (or his guardian or conservator when he has a guardiаn or conservator), whether or not a party, has a privilege during the marital relationship and afterwards to refuse to disclose, and to prevent another from disclosing, a communication if he claims the privilege and the com[m]unication was made in confidence between him and the other spouse while they were husband and wife.”
Father’s counsel claims that he “tendered” Dr. Gross’s medical records to mother. We do not address the waiver of the physician-patient privilege with respect to Dr. Gross because that issue is not before us. For purposes of this appeal we assume without deciding that the privilege was waived with respect to Dr. Gross.
The
Koshman
court asked the Legislature to consider creating a best-interest-of-the-child exception to the physician-patient privilege.
(Koshman, supra,
We do not reach the issue of whether father’s right to privacy protects Dr. Morrison’s records because we hold that those records are protected by the physician-patient privilege.
