Opinion
Plаintiffs Marshall E. Redding, M.D., and John Mark Lawrence, M.D., filed a complaint against St. Francis Medical Center, a hospital and a not-for-profit corporation (hereinafter St. Francis), on July 7, 1988. Also named as defendants were Daughters of Charity, a not-for-profit corporation, Sridhara S.K. Iyengar, M.D., an individual, Sridhara S. K. Iyengar, M.D., Inc., a professional corporation, and Does.
The сomplaint, occasioned by a drastic change in St. Francis’ heart surgery program, set forth six causes of action: (1) breach of contract; (2) breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing; (3) negligence; (4) negligent interference with prospective economic advantage; (5) interference with present and prospective contractual rights and professional relationships; and (6) unfair competition. The complaint sought both monetary damages (compensatory and punitive) and injunctive relief.
On July 12, 1988, plaintiffs applied for a temporary restraining order; on that date the trial court issued such an order, pending a hearing on July 22, 1988. Following oral argument on July 22, 1988, the trial court made
Plaintiffs immediately appealed to this court, and elected to proceed pursuant to California Rules of Court, rule 5.1, on an appendix in lieu of a clerk’s transcript. A dismissal without prejudice was filed by plaintiffs as to defendant Daughters of Charity; demurrers filed on behalf of Sridhara S. K. Iyengar and his professional corporation were sustained without leave to amend in the trial court on November 8, 1988. On December 2, 1988, the demurrer filed on behalf of defendant St. Francis was also sustained by the trial court, with leave to amend within 20 days.
In November 1988, plaintiffs sought preferentiаl setting of their appeal in this court. Their motion was denied on November 18, 1988. The trial court order denying plaintiffs injunctive relief is expressly made appealable, pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1, subdivision (f), and we now consider it on the merits.
Standard of Review
It is well established that the decision to grant or deny a preliminary injunction rests within the sound discretion of the trial court, and mаy not be interfered with on appeal except for an abuse of that discretion.
(Continental Baking Co.
v.
Katz
(1968)
Two interrelated factors must be evaluated by the trial court in making its decision: “[t]he first is the likelihood that the plaintiff will prevail on the merits at trial. The second is the interim harm that the plaintiff is likely to sustain if the injunction were denied as compared to the harm that the defendant is likely to suffer if the preliminary injunction were issued.” (35 Cal.3d at pp. 69-70.)
Factual and Procedural Summary
Plaintiffs Marshall Redding, M.D., and John Mark Lawrence, M.D., are board certified in general surgery, thoracic surgery and cardiovascular surgery. Dr. Redding has been an active member of the staff of defendant hospital, St. Francis, since 1973, Dr. Lawrence since 1977. Until July 1988, the two plaintiff surgeons annually performed a majority of the cardiac
Defendant St. Francis is a not-for-profit general acute care hospital sponsored by the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent De Paul; it is licensed for 515 beds and is located in Lynwood, California. For at least two years prior to 1988, the executive committee of the medical staff of St. Franсis had been concerned about the quality of bypass surgery at the hospital because of an unacceptably high mortality rate, 8.4 percent, for patients undergoing these procedures. Dr. Redding was a member of the executive committee in 1986 when this problem was being discussed by the committee.
Problems identified in the bypass surgery program included, in addition to the mortality rate, failure of cardiac surgeons to conduct peer review, inability to schedule needed surgeries, and unavailability of cardiac surgeons for needed backup, for handling emergencies and for giving follow-up care. Defendant St. Francis’s medical executive committee determined that these identified problems resulted from the fact that a substаntial number of independent surgeons were performing bypass surgery at not only St. Francis but other hospitals spread over a wide geographical area; this circumstance meant that these practitioners were often elsewhere when needed at St. Francis, thus creating an increased risk to St. Francis patients.
Defendant St. Francis decided to drastically сhange its heart surgery program, from the “open-staffing” structure it had operated under for a number of years to a “closed” exclusive program. The new program was to be directed by a highly qualified surgeon under contract to St. Francis and working with a fairly constant team of supportive personnel, i.e., perfusionists and nurses, etc. It was felt that this team approаch would foster uniformity of high standards, teamwork, dedication and, most importantly, lower mortality rates. It was envisioned that the “closed” program would be an exclusive 24-hour a day arrangement, and would preclude use of hospital facilities by any bypass surgeons except the director of the program and surgeons working under the director. The contemplated change had wide support among the cardiologists who practiced at St. Francis.
The proposed change was openly discussed at St. Francis during early 1988. Both Drs. Redding and Lawrence refused to be the surgeons in charge of the new program because they did not wish to confine their practice to St. Francis alone, and did not want responsibility for quality control. Thеy also refused to provide interim coverage for the bypass pro
On June 10, 1988, defendant hospital notified all of the bypass surgeons on its staff, including plaintiffs, that after July 18, 1988, they would not be able to perform independent bypass surgery at St. Francis. Defendant hospital had selected Sridhara S.K. Iyengar, M.D., to head up the new program. This litigation by plaintiffs followed.
Preliminary Discussion
The relationship between physicians and hospitals has been the subject of considerable litigation in this state. In order to understand the contentions of the plaintiff physicians on appeal, we deem it necessary to discuss some of the decisional law which has evolved in recent years.
As long ago as
Willis
v.
Santa Ana etc. Hospital Assn.
(1962)
Because of the commоn law right set forth above possessed by physicians and other health professionals, it has long been held in California that “neither a private nor public hospital may unreasonably or arbitrarily exclude a physician otherwise qualified from membership on its staff. [Citations.]”
(Lewin
v.
St. Joseph Hospital of Orange
(1978)
The California courts have protected physicians from unreasonable and arbitrary exclusion from hospital staffs. It was explained in
Anton
v.
San Antonio Community Hosp.
(1977)
There is, however, a definite distinction in the case law between the intentional actions of a hospital directed specifically toward the exclusion of a particular physician or groups of physiciаns, and the actions of a hospital which may, as a practical matter, result in the exclusion of individual practitioners but were undertaken for less personally directed reasons. Cases in the first category have protected physicians; cases in the latter category have often balanced the equities in favor of the hospitals.
A number of Californiа decisions have involved the same conflict of interests evident in the case at bench arising from a hospital’s decision to maintain a “closed” staff rather than an “open” one, in particular medical specialties. In
Centeno
v.
Roseville Community Hospital
(1979)
In addition, lower federal courts considering the claim that exclusive contracting for emergency services was unlawful have held that it was not, following a decision of the United States Supreme Court,
Jefferson Parish Hospital Dist. No. 2
v.
Hyde
(1984)
Contentions on Appeal
On appeal, plaintiffs contend (not necessarily in the order stated here) that (1) the “property right” a physician has in staff membership is a vested right and cannot lawfully be taken away by a hospital’s decision to function with a “closed” rather than “open” staff system; (2) the decisional law upholding a hospital’s right to make an exclusive contract for medical services does not apply to the case at bench; (3) plaintiffs’ sixth cause of action, for unfair competition, entitled them to injunctive relief pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 17070; (4) the hospital did not have the necessary powers of eminent domain required to divest plaintiffs of their vested property rights in their staff privileges at St. Francis; (5) the declarations made on behalf of defendant St. Francis in opposing plaintiffs’ pursuit of a preliminary injunction establish that St. Francis’s decision to make an exclusive contract for heart bypass surgery was neither necessary nor appropriate nor medically sound.
We address these contentions seriatim.
Discussion
I.
Plaintiffs contend that over a period of years they devoted valuable professional time to developing a practice at St. Francis. Their practice thrived on professional associations with cardiologists and other health providers which produced a substantial number of referrals for heart bypass surgery. Plaintiffs claim that St. Francis could not in effect divest them of the results of their professional work by changing the hospital structure in a manner which would in effect destroy those results.
Plaintiffs rely heavily on the language
of Anton
v.
San Antonio Community Hosp., supra,
In our view, the term “property right” must be viewed within the context of the issues being considered by a particulаr court. Plaintiffs claim that
This was a case where the traditional balancing of conflicting interests, as described in
Willis
v.
Santa Ana etc. Hospital Assn., supra,
II.
Plaintiffs claim this is a case of first impression in California. They contend that the reported decisions upholding the right of a hospital to enter into exclusive contracts for medical services have not'involved a situation where medical practitioners had, over a period of years, built up a practice based on “open” staffing privileges—and had then assertedly suffered detriment from a hospital’s decision to change its internal structure. As we have pointed out, a physician does not have a vested interest in a hospital’s maintenance of a particular internal structure, just as lawyers have no vested interest in courts functioning in a particular way.
We do not agree that this is a case of first imрression. The precise factual situations in Centeno, Lewin and Blank, supra, may differ from the case at bench, but the ultimate issue in all these cases is the same, and the differences irrelevant. The rule of the previously decided cases applies here, and upholds the right of hospitals to make rational management decisions, even when exercise of that right might prove adverse to the interests of specific individual practitioners.
Plaintiffs contend that their claim of unfair competition, set forth in the sixth cause of action in their complaint, entitled them to have their request for injunctive relief adjudicated by less stringent standards.
Business and Professions Code section 17200 defines “unfair competition” as “. . . unlawful, unfair or fraudulent business practice and unfair, deceptive, untrue or misleading advertising and any act prohibited by Chapter 1 (commencing with § 17500) of Part 3 of Division 7 of the Business and Professions Code.”
Since a substantial number of California decisions have upheld the right of a hospital to enter into an exclusive contract for medical services, defendant hospital’s conduct was not unlawful. An “unfair” business practice ocсurs “. . . when it offends an established public policy or when the practice is immoral, unethical, oppressive, unscrupulous or substantially injurious to consumers.”
(People
v.
Casa Blanca Convalescent Homes, Inc.
(1984)
Therefore, plaintiffs were only entitled to the balancing process normally employed in determining the necessity for issuance of a preliminary injunction.
IV.
We need not decide the nature and scope of defendant St. Francis’s powers of eminеnt domain since we hold that defendant has not divested plaintiffs of property rights.
V.
Plaintiffs finally contend that the decision by defendant hospital was flawed for a number of reasons. The record shows, however, that a number of St. Francis physicians and administrators executed declarations for review by the trial court in which they described in detail the problems defendant hosрital had encountered in the bypass surgery program and the need for change. Those declarations are part of the record on appeal. They demonstrate that the trial court did not exercise its discretion in a vacuum
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Spencer, P. J., and Ortega, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 17, 1989.
