Appellant’s contentions may be summarized as follows: (1) appellee hospital breached its contract with appellant by failing to comply with those provisions of its bylaws governing the revocation of active staff privileges; (2) the findings of appellee’s hearing committee were based upon hearsay evidence and were, therefore, not properly supported; (3) the annual reappointment of appellant to the hospital staff constituted a waiver of objections to prior misconduct; (4) appellee violated appellant’s procedural due process rights under the Federal Constitution; and (5) appellee violated appellant’s substantive due process rights under the Federal Constitution. We find appellant’s contentions to be without
On February 16, 1977, Joseph White, a patient who had been under the care of appellant, Dr. Ralph Miller, died at the Indiana Hospital, appellee in this case. The following day, Dr. M. C. Williams sent a report to Dr. Richard Freda, the president of the medical staff, in which he stated that the quality of care which appellant had rendered to Mr. White was “below that which should be acceptable in any hospital.” On February 22, 1977, Dr. Freda sent a letter to appellant inviting him to attend a meeting of the Executive Committee pursuant to the Indiana Hospital Staff Bylaws
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regarding the charges which had been made against him. On February 24, 1977, Dr. Williams sent another letter to the Executive Committee formally requesting that action be taken to suspend appellant’s staff privileges. This letter cited additional instances of inadequate care provided by appellant. On February 26, 1977, the Executive Committee held an informal meeting which appellant attended. Appellant refused to discuss the charges against him and left the meeting abruptly. On March 18, 1977, the Executive Committee sent written notice to appellant of its determination to recommend to the Board of Directors of the hospital that his active staff privileges be revoked. Appellant demanded a hearing and indicated his intention to exercise his rights to defend himself in accordance with the bylaws. Consequently, the Committee informed appellant of the hearing date and provided him with a list of charges against him and a list of proposed witnesses. The list of charges went beyond those included in the original complaint letter and request
The staff bylaws of a hospital constitute the terms of a legally binding contract between the hospital and the doctors on its staff.
Berberian v. Lancaster Osteopathic Hospital Association,
In the instant case, appellant contends that the hospital breached its contract with him by improperly commencing the proceedings against him, by providing him with
Appellant next contends that the findings against him were based solely upon hearsay evidence and were consequently not properly supported. “It is well established that hearsay evidence supportive of other evidence may be admitted in proceedings before
administrative
agencies.”
Board of Public Education of the School District of Pittsburgh v. Pyle,
Appellant next contends, without citation to authority, that the hospital has waived any objections to appellant’s prior misconduct by annually reappointing him to the medical staff. “A waiver in law is the act of
intentionally
relinquishing or abandoning some known right, claim or privilege.”
Brown v. Pittsburgh,
Merely reappointing appellant annually to the staff did not indicate an intention on the part of the hospital to ignore the cumulative effect of appellant’s prior misconduct. Appellant has neither alleged nor proven any reliance upon the assumption that the actions of the hospital constituted a waiver. It was therefore proper for the hospital committees to consider prior misconduct which may not have been so egregious in any one year as to warrant denial of reappointment, but the cumulative effect of which called for appellant’s dismissal from the staff.
Finally, appellant contends that he was denied his right to due process of law under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution. The Fourteenth Amendment “applies only to ‘state action’ and not to private conduct.”
Adler v. Montefiore Hospital Association of Western Pennsylvania,
Our Supreme Court has stated in dicta that there are two categories of quasi-public hospitals: (1) those which receive tax benefits, are funded mainly from public sources, and hold a monopoly in the area they serve, and (2) those which receive construction funds from the federal government under the Hill-Burton Act.
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Id.,
Appellant alleges that the hospital receives funds under the Hill-Burton Act, as well as from other public sources, and that “there is no denial that Indiana Hospital is the sole hospital in Indiana County and, therefore, holds a monopoly in the area.” Appellant’s Brief at 14. These bare allegations are insufficient to prove the requisite inextricable relationship between the hospital and the state. Appellant has not made an affirmative showing of the extent of the funds actually received by the hospital from the state and federal governments nor has he adduced sufficient evidence to prove that the hospital holds monopoly status in the region. Accordingly, appellant has not sustained his burden of showing that Indiana Hospital is a quasi-public agency. We cannot conclude on such a record that the action of the hospital in revoking appellant’s staff privileges constituted state action so as to call into play the protections of the Federal Constitution. Consequently, we decline to judge appellant’s claims of unfairness against the due process clause; rather we will assess these claims according to the standards set forth in the contract between the parties, i. e., the hospital bylaws.
Appellant raises several contentions regarding the fairness of the revocation proceedings: (1) that one of the hearing officers was prejudiced against him; (2) that the Executive Committee did not sufficiently investigate the charges against him; (3) that the Executive Committee
Contrary to appellant’s contentions, the hospital procedure afforded him comprehensive safeguards including: written notice, an opportunity to prepare and to be heard, a right to counsel, a right to present witnesses and to cross-examine, stenographic transcription of the proceedings, and an appeal of right to the Board of Directors. We therefore conclude that appellant was dismissed in a fair and impartial manner in accordance with the hospital bylaws and is not entitled to injunctive relief. 4
Decree affirmed.
Notes
. The relevant portion of the Bylaws provides:
Within 10 days following the receipt of a request for action the Executive Committee shall take action upon the request. The affected individual shall be permitted to make an appearance before the Executive Committee prior to its taking action on such a request. This appearance shall not constitute a hearing, shall be preliminary in nature, and none of the procedural rules provided in these bylaws with respect to hearings shall apply. A record of such appearance shall be made by the Executive Committee.
Indiana Hospital Staff Bylaws Article IV, part C, § 2(a).
. The extensive notes of testimony of that hearing cover 1493 pages.
. Hospital Survey & Construction Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 291 et seq. (Supp.1970).
. Appellant also contends that the findings of the hearing committee with respect to the death of Joseph White were against the weight of the evidence. While professing to recognize that “the outcome of any case cannot depend upon the mere numbers of witnesses called by one side or the other,” Appellant’s Brief at 42, appellant bases his argument upon the fact that few expert witnesses testified against him while many experts testified for him. The weight to be accorded the testimony of the experts was an issue for the finder of fact. We will not reverse that finding upon the mere allegation that more witnesses testified for appellant than against him.
