Lead Opinion
OPINION
In 2012, the governing board of respondent Avera Marshall Regional Medical Center, a nonprofit hospital in Marshall, Minnesota, announced a plan to repeal the hospital’s medical staff bylaws and replace them with revised bylaws. Avera Marshall’s Medical Staff, its Chief of Staff, and Chief of Staff-elect eventually commenced an action seeking, as relevant here, a declaration that the Medical Staff has standing to sue Avera Marshall and that the medical staff bylaws are an enforceable contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff. The district court entered judgment for Avera Marshall and dismissed the case after concluding both that the Medical Staff lacked the capacity to sue Avera Marshall and that the medical staff bylaws do not constitute an enforceable contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff. The court of appeals, affirmed the district court. For the reasons discussed below, we reverse the court of appeals and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
Avera Marshall is owned and operated by Avera Health and is incorporated under the Minnesota Nonprofit Corporation Act, Minn. Stat. ch. 317A (2012). Under Avera Marshall’s articles of incorporation and corporate bylaws, Avera Marshall’s board of directors (the board) is vested with the general responsibility for management of Avera Marshall. The corporate bylaws require the board to “organize the physicians and appropriate other persons granted practice privileges in the hospital ... into a medical-dental staff under medical-dental staff bylaws approved by the [board].”
Appellants include two individual physicians and Avera Marshall’s Medical Staff. The medical staff is composed of practitioners, primarily physicians with admitting and clinical privileges to care for patients at the hospital. The Medical Staff is subject to medical staff bylaws originally enacted by the board in 1995. When this case commenced, appellant Dr. Steven Meister was the Chief of Staff of the Medical Staff and appellant Dr. Jane Willett was the Medical Staffs Chief of Staff-elect. Dr. Meister was the chair of the Medical Executive Committee (the MEC), a medical staff committee that acts on the Medical Staffs behalf, and Dr. Willett was a member of the MEC.
Before May 1, 2012, the medical staff bylaws provided that, in order to admit patients, a practitioner was required to be a member of the medical staff. To serve on the medical staff, a physician was required to agree to be bound by the medical
The bylaws also gave the Medical Staff authority, “[s]ubject to the authority and approval of [the board],” to “exercise such power as is reasonably necessary to discharge its responsibilities under these bylaws and under the corporate bylaws of the Medical Center.” The Medical Staff was also afforded “prerogatives,” such as attending and voting on matters presented at medical staff and committee meetings and holding medical staff office. The bylaws described these prerogatives as “general in nature” and possibly “subject to limitations by special conditions ..., by other sections of these Medical Staff Bylaws and by the Medical Staff Rules and Regulations, subject to approval by [the board].”
Under the bylaws, the Chief of Staff, the MEC, the board, or one-third of active medical staff members could propose amendments to or repeal of medical staff bylaws. The bylaws further provided for review of proposed amendments to the bylaws, either by the MEC itself or by special committee. Section 17.2 of the bylaws specifically provided that, “for the purposes of enacting a bylaws change, the change shall require an affirmative vote of ... two-thirds of the Members eligible to vote.” Bylaws changes recommended by the Medical Staff would not become effective until approved by the board. The bylaws were silent with respect to bylaws changes proposed by the board but not recommended for approval by the Medical Staff. However, the amendment and repeal process was “subject to approval by a majority vote of [the board]” and could not “supersede the general authority of [the board] as set forth in its corporate bylaws or applicable common law or statutes.”
In January 2012, the board notified the Medical Staff that the board had approved the repeal of the medical staff bylaws and that a set of revised medical staff bylaws had been approved. The notice solicited the Medical Staffs input but explained that the revised bylaws would take effect on April 1, 2012. At a medical staff meeting on January 24, 2012, Avera Marshall’s CEO and President announced that, while individual members of the Medical Staff could comment on the changes, the board would not accept comments from the Medical Staff as an organized body, and the proposed changes would not be submitted to the Medical Staff for a vote.
After review, the MEC concluded that the proposed revisions to the bylaws restricted the rights of the Medical Staff, the functioning of medical-staff committees, and the Medical Staffs ability to ensure the quality of patient care. On that basis, MEC recommended that the board reject the changes. Notwithstanding the board’s decision that the repeal and revision of the bylaws would not be submitted to the Medical Staff for a vote, on March 20, 2012, relying on section 17.2 of the former bylaws, the Medical Staff voted on the proposed changes and rejected both the repeal of the former bylaws and the enactment of the revised bylaws. Ultimately, the revised bylaws took effect on May 1, 2012.
Appellants filed a nine-count action against Avera Marshall, seeking a declaration that, as relevant here, the Medical
The parties then brought cross motions for summary judgment on the issue of whether the former bylaws constituted a contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff or were otherwise enforceable against Avera Marshall. The district court again granted summary judgment to Avera Marshall, this time determining that the former bylaws did not constitute an enforceable contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff or between Avera Marshall and any individual member of the Medical Staff. The district court further concluded that Avera Marshall had the authority to modify the bylaws without approval from the Medical Staff “if [Avera] substantially complies with the procedural prerequisites contained in the Medical Staff Bylaws.” According to the district court, the undisputed factual record showed Avera Marshall substantially complied with the procedural prerequisites in the former medical staff bylaws when it repealed them and enacted the revised medical staff bylaws.
The court of appeals affirmed the district court. It agreed with the district court that the Medical Staff does not have the capacity to sue under Minnesota law because, among other reasons, it is not its own “ultimate creator,” owns no property, and can “contract no indebtedness and pay no bills.” Med. Staff of Avera Marshall Reg’l Med. Ctr. v. Avera Marshall,
On appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we determine whether any genuine issues of material fact exist and whether the district court erred in its application of the law. Midwest Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wolters,
I.
This appeal presents two primary issues: (1) whether the Medical Staff has the legal capacity to sue; and (2) whether the medical staff bylaws constitute a contract be
The common law rule in Minnesota, established in St. Paul Typothetae v. St. Paul Bookbinders’ Union, is that, “in the absence of a statute otherwise providing,” unincorporated associations “have no legal entity distinct from that of their members” and therefore lack capacity to sue or be sued.
Minnesota Statutes § 540.151 provides: When two or more persons associate and act, whether for profit or not, under the common name, including associating and acting as a labor organization or employer organization, whether such common name comprises the names of such persons or not, they may sue in or be sued by such common name, and the summons may be served on an officer or a managing agent of the association. The judgment in such cases shall accrue to the joint or common benefit of and bind the joint or common property of the associates, the same as though all had been named as parties to the action.
Notwithstanding the enactment of section 540.151, we have since reaffirmed the common law rule. See Galob v. San-born,
Appellants acknowledge that at common law in Minnesota unincorporated associations did not have the capacity to sue, but argue that the Legislature abrogated that common law rule when it enacted Minn. Stat. § 540.151. Specifically, relying on American Civil Liberties Union of Minnesota v. Tarek ibn Ziyad Academy, the Medical Staff argues that Minn.Stat. § 540.151 unambiguously grants the capacity to sue to associations that satisfy its statutory criteria.
Avera Marshall argues that, because the Medical Staff is subject to the authority and approval of the board and possesses no rights that supersede the general authority of the board, the Medical Staff is a department or agent of Avera Marshall rather than a voluntary association existing separately from the hospital. Therefore, Avera Marshall contends that under the common law rule the Medical Staff has no legal capacity to sue. According to Avera Marshall, the common law rule re
We conclude that, under its plain language, Minn.Stat. § 540.151 grants to an unincorporated association the right to sue and be sued if it meets the statutory criteria. The statute states that people who associate under a common name “may sue in or be sued by such common name.” Id. Avera Marshall’s claim that seсtion 540.151 simply creates procedures by which an unincorporated association granted the capacity to sue in another statute may bring such 'a lawsuit is contrary to the plain statutory language.
Here, the Medical Staff is composed of two or more physicians who associate and act together for the purpose of ensuring proper patient care at the hospital under the common name “Medical Staff.” Therefore, because the Medical Staff satisfies the statutory criteria of section 540.151, we hold that it has the capacity to sue and be sued under Minnesota law.
II.
Having determined that the Medical Staff has the capacity to sue, we turn next to the Medical Staffs argument that thе medical staff bylaws create an enforceable contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff. As noted earlier, the district court concluded that the medical staff bylaws did not create an enforceable contract between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff or its individual members. The Medical Staff argues that the district court and the court of appeals erred because, in consideration for each physician’s appointment to Avera Marshall’s Medical Staff, the physician agreed to be bound by the full extent of the bylaws and the bylaws go beyond anything required by statute or rule. This promise to abide by the bylaws, appellants claim, was an integral part of the contract that existed between Avera Marshall and the Medical Staff. Appellants further argue that Avera Marshall was obligated to comply with the terms of the bylaws and that Avera Marshall breached the former bylaws’ amendment and repeal provision by unilaterally modifying the bylaws.
Avera Marshall contends that the former bylaws were not an enforceable contract because consideration is lacking and there was therefore no bargained-for exchange with any individual physicians or any group of physicians. Avera Marshall maintains that it adopted the medical staff bylaws because it had a preexisting legal
With respect to whether the former bylaws create a contract, the district court and court of appeals agreed with Avera Marshall, concluding that the former medical staff bylaws are not an enforceable contract because of a lack of consideration. Med. Staff of Avera Marshall,
In Campbell v. St. Mary’s Hospital, without any discussion or analysis about whether medical staff bylaws constitute an enforceable contract between a hospital and its medical staff, we implied that a hospital’s bylaws created contractual rights between a physician and the hospital.
A contract is formed when two or more parties exchange bargained-for promises, manifest mutual assent to the exchange, and support their promises with consideration. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 17 (1981). “Consideration requires that one party to a transaction voluntarily assume an obligation on the condition of an act or forbearance by the other party.” U.S. Sprint Commc’ns Co., Ltd. v. Comm’r of Revenue,
We begin our analysis of whether there was consideration by noting that the district court, the court of appeals, and Avera Marshall miss the point by focusing on the adoption of the medical staff bylaws as a preexisting legal obligation. First, nothing in the rules Avera Marshall relies on requires the medical staff bylaws to contain any specific provision. Those rules set out only the minimum requirements for adopting bylaws. “[Bjylaws which exceed the minimum standards required under state law satisfy the consideration requirement.” Craig W. Dallon, Understanding Judicial Review of Hospitals’ Physician Credentialing and Peer Review Decisions, 73 Temple L. Rev. 597, 647 (2000). Our review of the bylaws leads us to conclude that the bylaws at issue here exceed the minimum requirements set out in the administrative rules. While Minn. R. 4640.0800, subp. 2, requires the medical staff to formulate and adopt, with the approval of the hospital’s governing body, bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies “for the proper conduct of its work,” the rule leaves it to the medical staff and the hospital’s governing body to determine the specifics of the bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies. Thus, the mere fact that hospitals have a preexisting legal obligation to adopt medical staff bylaws does not provide much guidance as to whether the bylaws as adopted provide the basis for an enforceable contract between a hospital and its medical staff.
Second, we note that focusing solely on Avera Marshall’s preexisting duty to adоpt medical staff bylaws completely ignores the fact that, before a doctor can be granted privileges at the hospital, the doctor must agree to abide by the medical staff bylaws. While it is true that before agreeing to abide by the prospective bylaws members of the Medical Staff had no ability to change or otherwise alter the bylaws, it is also true that they could have chosen not to join the Medical Staff because of those bylaws. Conversely, this focus ignores the fact that Avera Marshall could choose to either grant or not grant privileges.
The record in this case indicates that Avera Marshall formed a contractual relationship with each member of the Medical Staff upon appointment.
The district court and court of appeals both concluded that the Medical Staff did not have the capacity to sue Avera Marshall and that the medical staff bylaws did not constitute an enforceable contract be
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Because this matter is before us after a grant of summary judgment, the facts must be construed in the light most favorable to appellants, the parties against whom summary judgment was granted. See J.E.B. v. Danks,
. The dissent ignores this statutory language when it states that it "is not clear ... the Legislature intended to give medical staffs the substantive right to sue when it enacted section 540.151." And, despite the fact that the meaning of section 540.151 is an issue of state law, the dissent gives deference to a federal court decision to support its claim that the statute may be procedural. See Minn. Ass’n of Nurse Anesthetists v. Allina Health Sys. Corp.,
. Minn. R. 4640.0700 provides in part:
The governing body or the person or persons designated as the governing authority in each institution shall be responsible for its management, control, and operation. It shall appoint a hospital administrator and the medical staff. It shall formulate the administrative policies for the hospital.
Minn. R. 4640.0700, subp. 2 (2013).
Minn. R. 4640.0800 provides in part:
The medical staff shall be responsible to the governing body of the hospital for the clinical and scientific work of the hospital. It shall be called upon to advise regarding professional problems and policies.
In any hospital used by two or more practitioners, the medical staff shall be an organized group which shall formulate and, with the approval of the governing body, adopt bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies for the proper conduct of its work. The medical staff shall: designate one of its members as chief of staff; hold regular meetings for which minutes and records of attendance shall be kept; and review and analyze at regular intervals the clinical experience in the hospital.
Minn. R. 4640.0800, subps. 1-2 (2013).
. The dissent claims the medical staff bylaws are not a contract because language in the bylaws indicates that Avera Marshall did not intend to be bound by them. At the same time, the dissent claims the bylaws lack consideration because Avera Marshall was legally required to have medical staff bylaws. It is unclear how, on the one hand, Avera Marshall can be obligated to have such bylaws, yet at the same time have no intention to follow them. When viewed in totality, the dissent's position appears to be that hospitals must have medical staff bylaws but that those legally required bylaws are meaningless as hospitals may disavow any intention to follow them.
Beyond this inconsistency, the dissent’s position is contrary to language in Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws that requires it to have and operate its medical staff under medical staff bylaws. Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws state that the board “shall оrganize the physicians ... into a medical-dental staff under medical-dental staff bylaws approved by” the board and that ”[t]here shall be bylaws ... for the medical-dental staff that set forth its organization and government.” Av-era Marshall's corporate bylaws also make specific reference to sections of the medical staff bylaws.
. Other courts have similarly held that medical staff bylaws may be an enforceable contract, or an enforceable part of a contract, between a hospital and members of its medical staff. See, e.g., Williams v. Univ. Med. Ctr. of S. Nev.,
. To be clear, consideration does not exist simply because the medical staff bylaws exist. Consideration exists because, with the appointment of each member to the Medical Staff, that member and Avera Marshall both voluntarily assumed an obligation on the condition of an act by the other party — that is, each member of the Medical Staff agreed to be bound by the medical staff bylaws and Avera Marshall agreed to let each member of the Medical Staff practice at its hospital. The dissent contends that these additional acts and promises cannot constitute consideration because "both sides were already under a preexisting legal duty to perform these functions.” The dissent, however, fails to explain how, before the appointment of each member to its medical staff, Avera Marshall was under a preexisting legal duty to allow that particular physician to practice at its hospital or why that physician was under a preexisting legal duty to follow Avera Marshall’s medical staff bylaws.
The dissent also claims "there is no evidence to support the conclusion that the medical staff bylaws are supported by consideration regarding each individual medical staff member” because no member of the medical staff can change the bylaws. The existence of consideration is not dependent on a party's ability to change the terms of a contract before agreeing to it. See U.S. Sprint Commc’ns Co.,
. Our decision today is analogous to and consistent with our decision in Pine River State Bank v. Mettille,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. At its heart, this case is about who has ultimate control of Avera Marshall Regional Medical Cеnter — Avera Marshall’s Medical Staff or Av-era Marshall’s board of directors. As a matter of contract law, and under the terms of Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws and the medical staff bylaws, the answer to that question is Avera Marshall’s board of directors. Consequently, I would affirm summary judgment in favor of respondents Avera Marshall, et al.
I.
I agree with the majority’s recitation of the facts, but think it important to first address why Avera Marshall’s board of directors unilaterally amended the medical staff bylaws, which gets to the heart of the dispute in this case. In 2009, Avera Health Systems assumed control of Weiner Memorial Medical Center, which had previously been owned and operated by the City of Marshall, and the hospital was incorporated as a nonprofit under the name Avera Marshall Regional Medical Center. Shortly thereafter, tension and conflict arose between members of the Medical Staff employed by Affiliated Community Medical Centers, P.A. (ACMC), who held privileges at Avera Marshall, and Avera Marshall’s governing body.
In response to the changes to the medical staff bylaws, the appellants
II.
I am skeptical that appellant Medical Staff has standing to sue under MinmStat. § 540.151 (2012),
A.
In order to state a claim for breach of contract under Minnesota law, a plaintiff must show (1) formation of a contract, (2) performance by plaintiff of any conditions precedent to his right to demand performance by the defendant, and (3) breach of the contract by defendant. Park Nicollet Clinic v. Hamann,
Under Minnesota law, as the majority acknowledges, the governing body of a hospital must appoint a medical staff. Minn. R. 4640.0700, subp. 2 (2013). The medical staff must formulate “bylaws, rules, regulations, and policies for the proper conduct of its work.” Minn. R. 4640.0800, subp. 2 (2013). But the medical staff does not have unilateral authority to adopt its own bylaws; instead, the medical staff bylaws are subject to “the approval of the [hospital’s] governing body.” Id. What these rules tell us is this: the Medicаl Staff was bound by law to formulate bylaws and Avera Marshall had a legal obligation to not only have a medical staff, but to also adopt bylaws “for the proper conduct of [the medical staffs] work.” Id. Consequently, the Medical Staffs and Av-era Marshall’s fulfillment of them legal obligations in formulating and adopting medical staff bylaws was simply the fulfillment of a preexisting legal duty, and thus neither party conferred on the other any more than what the law already required.
B.
Even if consideration somehow existed, the contract nonetheless is invalid because there was no mutual assent. In order to form a contract, there must be mutual assent among the parties to the contract to the contract’s essential terms. SCI Minn. Funeral Servs., Inc. v. Washburn-McReavy Funeral Corp.,
In considering whether medical staff bylaws constituted a contract, the Sixth Circuit (in an unpublished opinion) and other jurisdictions have relied on similar lan
C.
There is another problem with the appellants’ argument that the medical staff bylaws constitute a contract — namely, who are the parties to the contract? Is the purported contract between the Medical Staff as a whole and Avera Marshall?
This is not to say that medical staff bylaws can never constitute a contract between a medical staff and a hospital. A medical staff could bargain with a hospital’s governing body to secure language in the medical staff bylaws expressly declaring the medical staffs rights under the bylaws. If the medical staff bylaws are written to give the medical staff and its members the rights to sue and recover for breach of the medical staff bylaws, such an agreement arguably would be enforceable against the hospital. See Mason v. Cent. Suffolk Hosp.,
III.
Having determined that the medical staff bylaws do not constitute a contract between the medical staff or its members and Avera Marshall, I turn to the final issue in this appeal: whether Avera Marshall’s board of directors was authorized to unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws. The appellants, representing the interests of the medical staff, argue that Avera Marshall breached the medical staff bylaws by unilaterally changing the bylaws over the objection of the majority of medical staff members. Essentially, they argue that the medical staff bylaws outline a specific process for amending the bylaws, which includes obtaining an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the medical staff members eligible to vote, and that Avera Marshall breached this process by amending the medical staff bylaws without obtaining two-thirds approval.- See Medical Staff Bylaws § 17.2. I disagree. In my view, undеr the terms of Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws and the medical staff bylaws, the board of directors was authorized to unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws.
A.
I first turn to Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws for guidance as to the process required for amending the medical staff bylaws. Avera Marshall’s articles of incorporation vest management and control of the hospital in its board of directors. Articles of Incorporation, Art. V. Any powers supposedly granted to the medical staff under the medical staff bylaws “must originate from, and be authorized by, the Board pursuant to the Corporate Bylaws.” Mahan v. Avera St. Luke’s,
Their legal relationship is similar to that between statutes and a constitution. They are not separate and equal sovereigns. The former derives its power and authority from the latter. Hence, to determine whether the staff was granted the power that it now claims to possess, any judicial analysis must begin with an examination of the Corporate Bylaws.
To determine what rights the medical staff and its individual members have, therefore, it is necessary to analyze Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws. The corporate bylaws provide that “[t]he Board of Directors shall organize the physicians and appropriate other persons granted practice privileges in the hospital owned and operated by the Corporation into a medical-dental staff under medical-dental staff bylaws.” Avera Marshall Corporate Bylaws § 15.1(a). Under this provision, Avera Marshall’s board of directors was required not only to organize a medical staff, but also to adopt medical staff bylaws that would govern the medical staff. The corporate bylaws further provide that:
There shall be bylaws, rules and regulations, or amendments thereto, for the medical-dental staff that set forth its organization and government. Proposed bylaws, rules and regulations, or amendments thereto, may be recommended by the medical-dental staff or the Board of Directors.
Avera Marshall Corporate Bylaws § 15.3 (emphasis added).
A final provision of Avera Marshall’s corporate bylaws is relevant, and provides in pertinent part:
The Board of Directors shall exercise oversight of the business affairs of [Av-era Marshall] and shall have and exercise all of the powers which may be exercised or performed by [Avera Marshall] under the laws of the State of Minnesota, the Corporation’s Articles of Incorporation, and these Bylaws....
Avera Marshall Corporate Bylaws § 4.1. In interpreting a similar hospital bylaw, the South Dakota Supreme Court declared: “Therefore, the medical staff has no authority over any corporate decisions unless specifically grantеd that power in the Corporate Bylaws or under the laws of the State of South Dakota.” Mahan,
B.
Contrary to the appellants’ argument, the authority to unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws, as stated in the corporate bylaws, was also expressly retained by Avera Marshall in the medical staff bylaws. It is true that one provision of the medical staff bylaws provides that a change in those bylaws “shall require an affirmative vote of two-thirds of the Members eligible to vote.” Medical Staff Bylaws § 17.2. But when this provision is read in conjunction with the rest of the medical staff bylaws, the board of directors’ ultimate authority to manage the medical staff and hospital is clear. See Halla Nursery, Inc. v. City of Chanhas-sen,
To provide a means whereby issues concerning the Medical Staff and the Medical Center may be directly discussed by the Medical Staff with the Board of Directors and the Administration, with the understanding that the Medical Staff is subject to the ultimate authority of the Board of Directors.
Medical Staff Bylaws § 2.1(e) (emphasis added). This provision indicates a clear intent by Avera Marshall to retain control over the medical staff, and by association the medical staff bylaws, by stating that the medical staff is “subject to the ultimate authority” of Avera Marshall’s board of directors;
Avera Marshall also expressly retained control over the medical staff in the portion of the medical staff bylaws controlling the process for amending or repealing the medical staff bylaws. After the process for amending or repealing the medical staff bylaws is delineated in those bylaws, there is a savings clause that states: “Nothing contained herein shall supersede the general authority of the Medical Center Board of Directors as set forth in its corporate bylaws or applicable common law or statutes.” Medical Staff Bylaws § 17.1-8. As discussed previously, Avera Marshall’s board of directors was granted broad power under the corporate bylaws. See Avera Marshall Corporate Bylaws § 4.1 (“The Board of Directors shall exercise oversight of the business affairs of [Averа Marshall] and shall have and exercise all of the powers which may be exercised or performed by [Avera Marshall].”). Given the grant of broad power to the board of directors, and the expressed intent of Avera Marshall to retain that power under the terms of the medical staff bylaws, it is not reasonable to interpret the medical staff bylaws as precluding the board from unilaterally amending those bylaws.
Finally, the appellants argue that the standards promulgated by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals (Joint Commission) preclude a hospital from unilaterally amending medical staff bylaws, providing evidence that Avera Marshall could not unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws. The appellants are wrong. Hospitals licensed in Minnesota may choose either to be inspected by the Commissioner of Health or alternatively be accredited by “an approved accrediting organization.” Minn.Stat. § 144.55, subd. 4 (2012). One such approved accrediting organization is the Joint Commission, which has historically “played a defining role in developing, implementing and enforcing minimum standards of conduct by which hospitals and their stakeholders function.” Brian M. Peters & Robin Locke Nagele, Promoting Quality Care & Patient Safety: The Case for Abandoning the Joint Commission’s “Self-Governing” Medical Staff Paradigm, 14 Mich. St. U. J. Med. & L. 313, 319 (2010). Under Minne-' sota law, it is recommended, but not required, thаt a hospital adopt the Joint Commission standards. Minn. R. 4640.0700, subp. 1 (2013). Across the nation, 88 percent of hospitals are accredited by the Joint Commission. Peters, supra, at 321. Prior to 2012, Avera Marshall was accredited by the Joint Commission.
One of the Joint Commission’s standards provides that “[n]either the organized medical staff nor the governing body may unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws or rules and regulations.” JCAH Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals, 2010, Standard MS.01.01.03. If this provision applied to Avera Marshall, it is arguable that Avera Marshall violated the provision when it amended the medical staff bylaws without obtaining the approval of the medical staff.
■ IV.
I am concerned that today’s majority opinion will encourage conflict between medical staffs and a hospital’s board оf directors.
For the foregoing reasons, I would affirm the decision of the court of appeals, and so I respectfully dissent.
. These conflicts, from the perspective of Ay-era Marshall, included: ACMC physicians injected discussions of ongoing litigation between ACMC and Avera Marshall into Medical Executive Committee (MEC) meetings; ACMC physicians assumed a three-to-one majority control over the MEC comparеd to physicians employed directly by Avera Marshall and Avera Health Systems, in spite of an even split between ACMC and Avera Marshall physicians in the makeup of the medical staff; MEC chair Dr. Steven Meister excluded Mary Maertens, President and CEO of Avera Marshall, from MEC meetings, even though she was an ex officio MEC member; ACMC members of the MEC conducted MEC meetings at ACMC offices with an attorney hired to represent MEC who was not authorized by the board of directors to participate in the meetings; Dr. Meister filed a complaint against Avera Marshall with the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals, which was dismissed; and various other actions by ACMC physicians that Avera Marshall felt threatened the quality of patient care. Some of these assertions are admitted by the Medical Staff, others are disputed, and the Medical Staff asserts other conflicts exist that were created by Avera Marshall. The atmosphere between the parties can be fairly described as poisonous.
. When I refer to "the appellants,” I am referring to both the Medical Staff and the individual members of the Medical Staff.
. Specifically, the appellants raised the following three issues in their petition for review to this court: (1) whether a medical staff has legal capacity to sue under Minn.Stat. § 540.151 (2012); (2) whether medical staff bylaws cоnstitute a contract or are otherwise judicially enforceable; and (3) whether a hospital can unilaterally change medical staff bylaws when the medical staff bylaws state that changes to the bylaws must be approved by two-thirds of the medical staff. The majority does not explain why it fails to address the third issue raised by the appellants.
. Without a doubt, an entity such as the Medical Staff — which calls itself an "unincorporated association” — could not sue or be sued at common law. See Bloom v. Am. Express Co.,
.Regardless of the resolution of the Medical Staff’s capacity to sue, we still must address the contract issue in this case because Dr. Steven Meister and Dr. Jane Willet also filed suit in their individual capacities. These doctors clearly have capacity and standing to sue in their individual capacities.
. See also O'Byrne v. Santa Monica-UCLA Med. Ctr.,
. The majority contends that the medical staff bylaws are supported by consideration because the content of those bylaws exceeds the
. Another unresolved issue is whether the Medical Staff even has capacity to contract. Indeed, it is arguable that the Medical Staff is simply a constituent part of Avera Marshall aimed at advancing the hospital's policy of providing quality patient care, not a separate legál entity capable of entering into a contract. See 1 Rieger et ah, supra, § 2:16 ("If the healthcare entity bylaws and the medical staff bylaws state that the medical staff is a constituent part of the facility and not a separate entity capable of constituting a separate party to a contract, the medical staff bylaws should be viewed as a policy of the healthcare entity which governs the medical staff, and should not operate as a contract.”).
. The majority contends that concluding the medical staff bylaws constitute a contract is analogous to our decision in Pine River State Bank v. Mettille,
. In ascertaining the scope of the board of directors’ authority to amend the medical staff bylaws, the appellants incorrectly rely, for the most part, on the medical staff bylaws. The proper focus, however, is on the language of the corporate bylaws. The appellants’ only argument regarding the corporate bylaws is that it is inconsistent for the board to have the express right to "recommend” bylaws changes, and, simultaneously, the implied right to impose changes. But the appellants ignore the portion of the corporate bylaws that vests authority in the board to "exercise oversight of the business affairs of [Avera Marshall]" and to "exercise all of the powers which may be exercised or performed by [Av-era Marshall].” Avera Marshall Corporate Bylaws § 4.1. Those powers include, absent express language in the corporate bylaws saying otherwise, amending the medical staff bylaws.
. Importantly, Minnesota law also supports Avera Marshall's position that it can unilaterally amend the medical staff bylaws. Under Minnesota Rule 4640.0700, subpart 2, "[t]he governing body or the person or persons designated as the governing authority [of a hospital] shall be responsible for its management, control, and operation.” And because Avera Marshall is a nonprofit corporation, it is subject to Minn. Stat. § 317A.201 (2012), which provides that a nonprofit corporation "must be managed by or under the direction of a board of directors.” While these provisions do not conclusively state one way or the other whether a hospital such as Avera Marshall
. It is also arguable that Avera Marshall did comply with Standard MS.01.01.03 by seeking written feedback from medical staff members regarding the amendments proposed to the medical staff bylaws and making changes to the bylaws based on these written comments. In the end, however, it does not matter whether or hot Avera Marshall complied with Standard MS.01.01.03 because it was not bound by the standard.
. In its brief and at oral argument, counsel for Avera Marshall frequently referenced the
. It is particularly important for a hospital to have authority to amend medical staff bylaws in light of our decision in Larson v. Wasemiller,
. See also Tredrea v. Anesthesia & Analgesia, P.C.,
