Jоni Green, individually and on behalf of her minor child, appeals an adverse summary judgment which dismissed her claims against Leslie Walker, M.D., on the grounds that Dr. Walker owed Sidney Green, her now deceased husband, no duty of care in the conduct of an annual employment physical. Holding that the examining physiciаn-examinee relationship which existed gave rise to an obligation to perform the examination with due care and to appropriately report thereon, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
Background
Sidney Green was employed as an offshore cook by ARA/GSI Internatiоnal. As a condition of continued employment ARA/GSI required that its employees undergo an annual physical examination that included a thorough examination of the physical systems, a urine test, and x-rays of the chest and spine. ARA/GSI contracted with Dr. Walker to conduct these examinations in accordance with an outlined protocol. Green submitted to his annual employment physical with Dr. Walker on May 6, 1985. According to the report submitted to ARA/GSI, Dr. Walker found all test results normal and classified Green as “employable without restriction,” the best possible rating on the report. Approximatеly one year later Green was diagnosed with lung cancer, necessitating extensive diagnostic and surgical procedures.
Sidney and Joni Green, individually and on behalf of their minor daughter, filed suit against Dr. Walker, claiming that he had negligently failed to diagnose the beginnings of the cancer at the time of thе May 1985 physical examination, and had failed to disclose these findings timely, thus lessening Sidney Green’s chances of survival and reducing his life expectancy. Sidney Green has since died. Dr. Walker moved
Analysis
The traditional malpractice paradigm.
It is a long-established principle of law that liability for malpractice is dependent on the existence of a physician-patient relationship. Whereas malpractice liability lies primarily in tort,
see Kozan v. Comstock,
Emphasizing a distinction between treatment and a consultative physical examination conducted at the request and for the benefit of a third party, state courts addressing the issue generаlly have held that no physician-patient relationship exists between “(a) a prospective or actual insured and the physician who examines him for the insurance company; or (b) a prospective or actual employee and the doctor who examines him for the emрloyer.”
Hoover v. Williamson,
Erie obligations.
Focusing on our obligations as a federal court sitting in diversity,
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
Albeit persuasive, and of some guidance as we walk a dimly blazed trail, neither case is truly dispositive. In Ducote the Louisiana Supreme Court adopted the “dual capacity” doctrinе, holding that the Louisiana Worker's Compensation Law does not provide a company doctor with immunity from civil liability for medical malpractice. As Dr. Walker points out, however, Ducote involved a situation in which the plaintiff-employee had seen the company physician for treatment of his injured hand; whether the physician had rendered “treatment,” thereby creating a physician-patient relationship in the traditional sense, was not in dispute. Ducote, therefore, arguably may stand merely for the proposition that a company physician committing malpractice may not raise his co-employee status as a defense to a malpractice claim.
Alternatively,
Thomas v. Kenton
arguably is on all fours with the case at bar. Thomas’s employer had retained a physician to conduct annual or biennial physical examinations of its employees to assess
Adopting the reasoning of other jurisdictions that had considered “strikingly similar” situations, such as Hoover and Lotsp-eich, the Thomas court held that there was no physician-patient relationship between a prospective or actual employee and the doctor conducting an еxamination at the employer’s request. In the absence of such a relationship, the Thomas court concluded, there could be no liability for malpractice. Above all, the Thomas court was impressed that it was the employer, not the employee, who was the intended beneficiary of the dоctor’s contractual obligations:
The doctor was hired by the company for their benefit and any benefit that their employees receive from having a doctor there to conduct these examinations was only secondary in nature.
Thomas,
The directive of
Erie
in a diversity case limits but does not eliminate the federal decision-making process for
Erie
“does not command blind allegiance to [any] case on all fours with the case before the court.”
Shelp v. National Surety Corp.,
If anything, this flexibility is even greater when a federal court sits as an
Erie
court applying the Louisiana civil law. In such cases, “the
Erie
obligation is to the [Civil] Code, the ‘solemn еxpression of legislative will.’ ”
Shelp,
Duty of care — general obligation.
Unlike the fact-oriented questions of breach and causation, which we do not address today, determining the existence of an obligation or duty in particular situations is a question of law.
See Pitre v. Opelousas General Hosp.,
[they] conceived of fault as a breach of a preexisting obligation, for which the law orders reparation, when it causes damage to another, and they left it to thecourt to determine in each case the existencе of an anterior obligation which would make an act constitute fault.
Pitre,
Duty of care — physicians.
Like any person, a physician “is responsible for the damage he occasions not merely by his act, but by his negligence, his imprudence, or his want of skill.” La.Civ. Code art. 2316. As the Louisiana Supreme Court acknowledged in
Pitre,
however, the Louisiana Legislаture has expressly provided that a physician’s professional status carries with it additional legal obligations. A physician practicing as a general practitioner must possess the degree of knowledge or skill possessed and exercise the degree of care ordinarily exеrcised by physicians in active practice in a similar community under similar circumstances. La. R.S. 9:2794(A)(1).
Pitre,
The issue presented by the instant case is whether Louisiana jurisprudence supports an extension of the traditional physician-patient relationship to admit of a legal relationship between examining physician and examinee, thus imposing the physician’s duty of due care in that situation. The Louisiana Supreme Court’s recent enunciation of the principles underlying article 2315, as applied to physicians in Pitre, convinces us that the Civil Code permits the articulation of a duty of care thаt would protect physical examinees, if they are to be deemed other than “patients,” a position we do not here concede:
The persons at whose disposal society has placed the potent implements of technology owe a heavy moral obligation to use them carefully and to avoid foreseeable harm to present or future generations. In the field of medicine, as in that of manufacturing, the need for compensation of innocent victims of defective products and negligently delivered services is a powerful factor influencing tort law. Typically in these areas also the defendants’ capacity to bear and distribute the losses is far superior to that of consumers. Additionally these defendants are in a much better position than the victims to analyze the risks involved in the defendants’ activities and to either take prеcautions to avoid them or to insure against them. Consequently, a much stronger and more effective incentive to prevent the occurrence of future harm will be created by placing the burden of foreseeable losses on the defendants than upon the disorganized, uninformed victims.
Pitre,
From this linchpin the
Pitre
court held that when a physician knows or should know that there is an unreasonable risk that a child will be born with a foreseeable birth defect, he owes a duty, not only to that child’s parents,
but to the not as yet conceived child,
to exercise reasonable care to warn the potential parents and assist them to avoid concеption of the fore-seeably deformed child.
Pitre,
We live in an age in which the drive for an increasingly productive workforce has led employers increasingly to require that employees subject their bodies (and minds) to inspection in order to obtain or maintain employment.
See
Rothstein,
Employee Selection Bаsed on Susceptibility to Occupational Illness,
81 Mich.L.Rev. 1379 (1983) (common procedures include blood tests, urinalysis, pulmonary function tests, and x-rays).
2
In placing oneself in the
We therefore now hold that when an individual is required, as a condition of future or continued employment, to submit to a medical examination, that examination creates a relationship between the examining physician and the examinee, at least to the extent of the tests conducted. This relationship imposes upon the examining physician a duty to conduct the requested tests and diagnose the results thereof, exerсising the level of care consistent with the doctor’s professional training and expertise, and to take reasonable steps to make information available timely to the examinee of any findings that pose an imminent danger to the examinee’s physical or mental well-being. To impоse a duty upon the doctor who performs such tests to do so in accordance with the degree of care expected of his/her profession for the benefit of the employee-examinee, as well as the employer, is fully consistent with the very essence of Civil Code article 2315.
The decision of the district court is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
Notes
. Article 1 of the Louisiana Civil Code in its simple majesty declares: "Law is a solemn expression of legislative will.”
. In 1982 the Office of Technology Assessment conducted an anonymous survey of the "For
