delivered the opinion of the court:
Wаrren Spencer, M.D. (plaintiff), brought suit against the Community Hospital of Evanston and its various directors (defendants) for injunctive relief (count I) and damages for libel (count II). Separate motions to dismiss were filed. The trial court dismissed the amended complaint for failure to state a cause of action. Plaintiff appeаls.
We will summarize and separately consider the allegations of both counts of the amended complaint. The pertinent facts alleged in the amended complaint and contained in appended exhibits are accepted as true when ruling upon a motion to dismiss. Soules v. General Motors Corp. (1980),
Count I.
Count I alleges since January 1974, plaintiff was chief of the medical staff of the hospital, an Illinois not-for-profit corporation. The hospital adopted and amended its bylaws from time to time. Count I alleged the bylaws were appended as Exhibit “A”. Actually, there is no such exhibit attached to the original or amended complaints. Plaintiff alleges defendants “wrongfully conspired” to suspend him and deny him staff privileges. At a meeting on September 9, 1974, defendants “unlawfully passed certain resolutions without regard to the bylaws” then in effect.
Plaintiff further alleges on September 19,1974, defendants convened a special meeting of the board of directоrs. They voted to rescind the action taken on September 9, in regard to the plaintiff. Defendants then “purported to amend the by-laws ° 6 e without proper notice ” ° The board received a “Report and Proposal of the Chairman of the Medical Joint Conference Committee and Executive Vice Prеsident” making charges against plaintiff and proposing his medical staff privileges be reduced, suspended, or terminated or his staff appointment be terminated. The charges made on September 19 were the same charges made on September 9. The board then notified plaintiff of this proposal and ordered a hearing on the charges if plaintiff demanded one. The minutes of this meeting were attached as an exhibit to plaintiff’s original complaint. They include a fragment of the new resolution thus adopted.
The amended complaint alleges eight respects in which plaintiff’s right to “elementary due process” was viоlated. These allegations include “malicious and/or arbitrary and capricious” actions against plaintiff; inconsisténcies in the bylaws; inadequate time to prepare a defense and “malicious and/or arbitrary rulings” by defendants. Plaintiff also alleges the hearings were concluded in accordance with ad hoc procedural rules “illegally and arbitrarily announced by the defendants.” The amended complaint prayed preliminary and permanent injunctive relief.
The allegations of plaintiff’s original complaint are well summarized in a previous opinion by this court. (Spencer v. Community Hospital (1975),
It further appears the defendants ruled plaintiff was removed from his post as chief of staff for one year and suspended from medical privileges at the hospital for three months which was to be followed by a probationary period of three months.
The accepted rule in Illinois is that staff decisions of private hospitals are generally not subject to judicial review. (Jain v. Northwest Community Hospital (1978),
Plaintiff alleges at the September 9 meeting defendants passed a resolution in contravention of the then existing bylaws. It is unnecessary to determine whether this action was actually a violation because it was rescinded by the directors at the September 19 meeting.
Plaintiff makеs several allegations which cannot be substantiated by the record before us. In a letter to the secretary of the board of directors, plaintiff referred to “flagrant abusefs] of the then existing Corporate Bylaws ° e This letter was attached as an exhibit to the original complaint. Plaintiff also states in the letter, “the amendment passed on September 19th is nonconforming in almost all respects.” In the amended complaint plaintiff alleges defendants purported to amend the bylaws without proper notice and took immediate action regarding the charges under the new amendment. However, we are unable to pass upon these contentions. Plaintiff has failed to furnish us with the bylaws in dispute. Plaintiff as appellant in this court has the duty to furnish a complete record on appeal. (H. Vincent Allen & Associates v. Weis (1978),
In addition, plaintiff contends defendants violated his right to due process in several respects. The record reflects plaintiff participated in hearings which continued for 22 consecutive nights. Defendants state in their brief, without contradiction by plaintiff, that in most of these hearings plaintiff was reprеsented by his present counsel. Plaintiff was furnished a copy of the charges and a copy of the new amendment to the bylaws. We have before us no factual allegations by plaintiff as to violation of his due process rights and no reference by plaintiff to any such violation at any stage of the hearings. Under thеse circumstances, we have no alternative but to affirm the trial court’s order of dismissal. Count I of the amended complaint fails to state a cause of action.
The record reflects defendants filed their answer to count I on August 23, 1977. They filed a motion to dismiss count I under section 45 of the Civil Practice Act on August 4, 1978, on the ground the case was moot. The order of dismissal was entered May 29, 1979. Plaintiff contends defendants waived their right to file a motion to dismiss when defendants filed their answer. Defendants respond plaintiff did not raise this issue in the trial court and is thus precluded from raising it for the first time on appeal.
We agree with defendants’ contentions. Thеre is nothing in the record which shows this point was raised in the trial court in any manner. The supreme court has strongly held “that questions not raised in the trial court will not be considered by this court on appeal.” Brown v. Lober (1979),
Defendants’ motion to dismiss count I raises only the ground of mootness. The order of dismissal was predicated upon failure of plaintiff’s amended complaint “to state a cause of action.” We affirm the dismissal of the amended complaint for the reason stated in this order. Although an appellant may not raise a contention for the first time on appeal, the appellee may urge any point reflected by the record in support of the judgment on appeal. (Shaw v. Lorenz (1969),
Count II.
Count II brings a claim for libel against the hospital, Harry Elam, M.D., chairman of the Medical Joint Conference Committee, and Leo Hickman, executive vice president. It adopts the allegations of count I. It also alleges on September 9, September 19, and “various other times” defendants “maliciously and wickedly” contrived to injure and destroy plaintiff’s reputation, to cause plaintiff to be regarded as a person unfit to perform the duties of his position and to prejudice and injure plaintiff with the hospital.
Plaintiff alleges defendants Elam and Hickman “falsely, maliciously, and wrongfully wrote and published a certain false, defamatory, malicious, and scandalous libel” concerning the plaintiff, being the report described in count I. Defendants “falsely” represented this report was the result of a legitimate survey of hospital records when “in truth and in fact” it was the work product of dеfendants in their efforts to harm and damage plaintiff.
Plaintiff alleges those matters expressed in the report were “false, defamatory, malicious, and scandalous.” By said writing defendants intended to and did charge plaintiff was incompetent and unfit to perform the duties of his position. Plaintiff charged the hospital gave dеfendants Elam and Hickman actual authority or negligently gave them apparent authority to do this. Plaintiff alleges the report was “received and read by the public in general and by officers and agents” of the hospital and “greatly injured” plaintiff.
The report in question states it was prepared at the request of the executive committee of the board of directors for information concerning the medical care rendered in the hospital by four primary admitting physicians, one of whom was the plaintiff.
The'report, signed by defendants Elam and Hickman, charged plaintiff with failure to see patients with sufficient frequency during hospitalization; failure to attend patients in accordance with certain applicable regulations; failure to do progress notes in a timely, adequate, and proper manner; failure to obtain appropriate and timely medical consultations; “failure properly to utilize or consider advice given by medical consultants and basis thereof”; failure to cooperate with the Utilization Review Committee and/or failure to complete records to justify continued hospitalization; improper or excessive prescription of narcotics; improper or excessive prescriptiоn of steroids and antibiotics; improper medical treatment of patients; and following improper surgical procedures. Medical chart numbers corresponding to the charges were listed. The report also stated:
“Our review revealed a number of cases in which the hospital records for the last twо years appear to reflect serious breaches of accepted medical practice on the part of Dr. Warren F. Spencer [plaintiff]. In our opinion, the quality of Dr. Spencer’s medical care reflected in these records poses a serious threat to the life and health оf hospital patients under his care and substantial risk of financial liability on the part of the hospital.”
Defendants assert count II was properly dismissed under the conditional privilege rule. We agree.
The elements of a conditionally privileged communication are set forth in Judge v. Rockford Memorial Hospital (1958),
Other cases to the same effect are Zeinfeld v. Hayes Freight Lines, Inc. (1968),
The issue of whеther a libelous communication is conditionally privileged is a question of law for the court. (Myers,
The hospital had a strong interest in ascertaining the quality of medical care rendered by its admitting physicians. Elam and Hickman each were required to assess this matter fully and frankly in discharge of their duty to comply with the board’s direction to investigate and report.
In regard to a proper occasion, the report states it was prepared pursuant to a request from the executive committee of the board of directors to review the medical cаre rendered by admitting physicians. Plaintiff’s amended complaint contains no allegation to negative this result.
The purpose of the report was to ascertain the quality of health care rendered. The report pertained to three admitting physicians other than plaintiff. The report did not go beyond the boundaries of its purpose. It cited many charts by their hospital number.
The only alleged publication by defendants was to the board of directors who had requested the report as part of their duty. Plaintiff alleges the report was “received and read by the public in general,” but there is no allegation defendants or аny of them published the report to the public.
A reviewing court will look at several sources in determining whether defendants acted in good faith: the face of the report, the occasion on which it was written, conduct of defendants in connection with the report, and the relationship between the publishers and recipients. {Myers,
Once it appears the communication is conditionally privileged, the burden is on plaintiff to prove actual or express malice which would abuse the privilege. {Myers,
Defendants’ motion to dismiss was filed on November 4, 1974. That motion was not called up for hearing until some time in 1978. Plaintiff contends defendants waived their motion to dismiss by failing to request a heаring within 90 days of filing. Plaintiff cites Rule 2.3 of the Rules of the Circuit Court of Cook County, which provides:
“If any such motion is not called for hearing within 90 days from the date it is filed, the court may enter an order overruling or denying the motion by reason of the delay.”
Plaintiff also urges the motion to dismiss was filed in 1974 in response to the original complaint and no nеw motion was filed against the amended complaint. Neither of these points was ever raised in the trial court by plaintiff. Thus, as above shown, they are waived on review and need not be considered.
Plaintiff’s reply brief filed June 9, 1980, includes an appendix consisting of 16 pages of assorted newspaper clippings. This сourt took with the case the motion of defendants to strike the reply brief. We reject plaintiff’s contention that we may take judicial notice of the contents of this appendix pursuant to Finish Line Express, Inc. v. City of Chicago (1978),
The order dismissing plaintiff’s amended complaint is affirmed.
Order affirmed.
O’CONNOR and CAMPBELL, JJ., concur.
