In thе Matter of STATE of Missouri ex rel. ST. JOHN‘S REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, Relator, v. The Honorable David C. DALLY, Respondent.
No. 24771.
Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, Division Two.
Oct. 31, 2002.
Motion for Rehearing and Transfer Denied Nov. 22, 2002.
Application for Transfer Denied Dec. 24, 2002.
209 S.W.3d 212
In sum, this record does not reveal any acts by Plaintiff that were inconsistent with the position she takes in this suit, i.e., that her quitclaim deed did not release ex-husband‘s property from the judgment lien. By inserting the limiting language in the quitclaim deed, Plaintiff intended to preserve the priority of her judgment lien. Her acceptance of $42,000 from her ex-husband on a $102,000 judgment is not inconsistent with her openly avowed intent to preserve her judgment lien. The trial court‘s ruling that “estoppel does not lie” is supported by substantial evidence and is not against the weight of the evidence. Point V is denied.
POINT VI: Equitable Lien Argument
In Appellants’ sixth and final point, they insist the trial court erred in rejecting their claim of entitlement to an equitable lien. We disagree.
To establish an equitable lien a party must prove “(1) a duty or obligation owed by one person to another; (2) a res to which that obligation fastens and which can be identified; and (3) an intent, express or implied, that the property serve as security for the payment of the debt or obligation.” First American Title Ins. Co. v. Birdsong, 31 S.W.3d 531, 535[5] n. 9 (Mo.App.2000).
To recite the elements of an equitable lien in the factual context of this case demonstrates their inapplicability. Since Plaintiff was not indebted to or otherwise obligated to Defendants for anything, she had no duty or obligation to Defendants. As such, Defendants have failed to establish the first element of an equitable lien.
Second, Defendants stipulated that “Plaintiff‘s intent in signing the quit claim deed was to convey her ownership interest in the Property to [ex-husband] and to preserve her lien interest in the Property.” That concession by Defendants directly contradicts Appellants’ argument that Plaintiff, by making and delivering the deed so ex-husband could get a loan, intended for the real estate to serve as first lien collateral for the First Choice loan. The trial court did not err when it concluded Defendants were not entitled to an equitable lien. Point VI is denied.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
PREWITT, P.J., and RAHMEYER, C.J., concurs.
Bruce A. Copeland, Copeland & Scott, Joplin, Mathew W. Placzek, Placzek & Francis, Springfield, for respondent.
Joanne E. Joiner, Gerald M. Sill, Jefferson City, amicus curiae in Support of Relator.
Before PREWITT, P.J., RAHMEYER, C.J., and MAUS, S.J.
PER CURIAM.
In an underlying breach of contract suit between St. John‘s Regional Medical Center (“St. John‘s“) and Missouri Joplin Radiology, Inc. (“MJR“), the Honorable David C. Dally (“Respondent“) ordered St. John‘s to “turn over” to MJR certain “peer review materials.” Thereon, St. John‘s filed an original petition for prohibition in this court seeking to restrain Respondent from enforcing his order. St. John‘s contends that the requested materials are privileged and not discoverable per
On July 1, 1990, MJR and St. John‘s entered into a written contract pursuant to which MJR agreed to provide radiology services in St. John‘s Hospital. Disputes about each party‘s performance under this contract first arose in 1997. Finally, on April 11, 2000, MJR filed a breach of contract suit against St. John‘s. On May 10, 2000, St. John‘s filed an answer and a counterclaim. In both of its pleadings, St. John‘s alleged MJR materially breached the contract by, among other things, “failing to participate in ongoing quality assurance program studies involving standards of care rendered in the radiology department in cooperation with the quality assurance department of St. John‘s, and by failing to preрare and present quality assurance reports at monthly radiology department meetings.”
The discovery efforts by MJR included a first and a sixth request for production of documents directed to St. John‘s. For various reasons, including its claim that the materials sought were privileged per the peer review statute, St. John‘s objected to thirteen of MJR‘s requests in its first motion and thirty-two requests in MJR‘s sixth motion. The following are illustrative (but not all-inclusive) of the types of documents sought by MJR and which St. John‘s claimed were privileged as peer review materials:
Minutes and reports of all meetings of hospital‘s quality assurance department/committee between July 1, 1990, and June 30, 2000;
All correspondence, memorandums, or other documents from the Hospital‘s quality assurance department/committee
to the Radiology Department between January 1, 1998, and June 30, 2000; All quality assurance studies involving standards of care for every department in the Hospital from July 1, 1990, through June 30, 2000;
Any personnel files kept or maintained by or on behalf of St. John‘s for any physician employed by MJR between July 1, 1990, and June 30, 2000;
Any credentials files kept or maintained by or on behalf of Hospital for any physician employed by MJR between July 1, 1990, and Junе 30, 2000;
All documents wherein any person or committee at St. John‘s leveled a quality concern about or against any physician employed by MJR between July 1, 1990, and December 28, 1997;
The parties, being unable to resolve their disputes over discovery, ultimately submitted the matter to Respondent. On January 17, 2002, Respondent found that the
Thereon, St. John‘s petitioned here to prohibit Respondent from enforcing his order directing production of documents. St. John‘s alleges that Missouri‘s Peer Review statute,
Contrarily, MJR maintains that we should interpret
In its reply brief, St. John‘s points out that “Respondent did not determine [St. John‘s] waived its right to assert the peer review privilege[]” and “[t]he sole basis for ordering production was that the peer review privilege did not apply to an action of this nature.” Accordingly, St. John‘s insists that “the issue of waiver is not relevant to this Prohibition Proceeding.” St. John‘s is simply wrong in this assertion. The petition in prohibition, the answer “directed to the petition,” and any motions accompanying the answеr form the pleadings in a prohibition proceeding.
Here, we need not reach the statutory interpretation question presented by Respondent‘s ruling, i.e., whеther
“Peer review, the process by which physicians and hospitals evaluate and discipline staff doctors, has become an integral component of the health care system in the United States.” Bryan v. James E. Holmes Regional Medical Center, 33 F.3d 1318, 1321 (11th Cir.1994). In 1973, the Missouri legislature sought to promote peer review by creating a peer review committee privilege.2 Specifically, it enacted
In Health Midwest Development v. Daugherty, 965 S.W.2d 841 (Mo.banc 1998), the Supreme Court of Missouri equated the statutory peer review privilege to other privileges when, in analyzing
With the foregoing principles as our guide, we begin our analysis of
It is reasonable to conclude that “[t]he peer review privilege exists to pro-
Missouri‘s peer review statute does not explicitly address the issue of waiver, and no Missouri cases have directly considered that subject. Accordingly, we look for guidance in “the general principles that govern [waiver of other] privileges.” See Daugherty, 965 S.W.2d at 843. Missouri courts have found waiver to exist in a number of circumstances, and the “at issue” waiver is prominent among them. The “at issue” waiver has been described as occurring “when the privilege holder makes assertions in a litigation context that put its otherwise privileged communications in issue.” Resolution Trust v. Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins., 200 F.R.D. 183, 191 (W.D.N.Y.2001) (citаtions omitted). The fact that Missouri recognizes and applies the “at issue” waiver doctrine is best illustrated by State ex rel. McNutt v. Keet, 432 S.W.2d 597 (Mo.banc 1968), and its progeny. McNutt held that a party waives his or her physician-patient privilege in any case where such party voluntarily files a pleading that places his or her physical or mental condition in issue. Id. at 601. See also Sappington v. Miller, 821 S.W.2d 901, 904[12] (Mo.App.1992) (holding waiver of attorney-client privilege may be found where client places the subject matter of the privileged communication in issue).
Privilege may also be waived when invoked in some fundamentally unfair way. The so-called “fairness doctrine” is grounded in the notion that it is unfair to permit a party to make use of privileged information as a sword when it is advantageous for the privilege holder to do so, and then as a shield when the party opponent seeks to use privileged information that might be harmful to the privilege holder. In re von Bulow, 828 F.2d 94, 101 (2nd Cir.1987). The rationale is that a party should not be able to use a privilege to prejudice an opponent‘s case or to disclose some selected communications for self-serving purposes. U.S. v. Bilzerian, 926 F.2d 1285, 1292[2] (2nd Cir.1991). Accordingly, a privilege may be waived when a party asserts a claim that in fairness requires examination of proteсted communications. Id. at 1292.
Without calling it the “fairness doctrine,” Missouri courts apply its rationale when analyzing privilege waiver issues. Thus, in McNutt the court found that the legislature never intended for the physician/patient privilege to be used both as “a shield and a dagger at one and the same
Here, St. John‘s was the entity capable of neutrally balancing the interests at stake and protecting the entire peer review process. However, rather than acting in a neutral manner, St. John‘s put its self-interest ahead of the public policy underlying the peer review privilege statute by making assertiоns in its pleadings that put otherwise privileged materials in issue. More than that, St. John‘s disclosed part of the documents it claimed were privileged when it was strategically favorable to do so, but otherwise continues to invoke the privilege on all other documents. Disclosure of these documents occurred in September 2000 in connection with the taking of the deposition of Dr. Howard Meridy, a non-party.4 Dennis Manley, director of quality and risk management, testified that some of his duties were to oversee the quality program, risk management, and infection control. Moreover, his jоb included protection of peer review information from disclosure and working with St. John‘s lawyers in deciding what should be redacted from materials produced pursuant to discovery requests. Even so, he provided documents, the types St. John‘s claims were privileged, for use in Dr. Meridy‘s deposition without redaction, and St. John‘s lawyers used them in unredacted form as an exhibit to which Dr. Meridy referred during his deposition testimony. The documents thus disclosed, identified as Exhibit 55 at the deposition, included minutes of the Department of Radiology Quality Improvement Subcommittee for April, July, and October 1996. Each of thesе documents was stamped, “CONFIDENTIAL Quality Assurance Peer Review-Protected by Missouri Statute 537.035,” yet were fully disclosed during the deposition. This occurred even though Mr. Manley candidly admitted that the documents included “case specific information” and not just “aggregate information.”
Guided by the admonition in Daugherty that the peer review privilege is to be
Our holding necessarily means that some case-specific patient information will be disclosed via MJR‘s discovery efforts, albeit with patient names redacted and with any other protection that the trial judge can fashion while ensuring the litigants a fair trial. We are not persuaded, however, that such disclosure is fatal to our analysis or that the
Moreover, we are not persuaded the legislature intended the peer review statute as a reaffirmation of the physician-patient privilege as the dissent suggests. The Supreme Court of Missouri has concluded that the peer review statute was designed to shield healthcare professional participants from liability for their comments made during the peer review process. Darnold, 944 S.W.2d at 215. This interpretation of the peer review statute does not indicate reaffirmation of a physician/patient privilege since a patient has neither involvement in, nor opportunity to comment during peer review. More than that, the peer review statute reveals a legislative intent, аt least in one instance, to restrict or limit the scope of the physician/patient privilege. See
The preliminary order in prohibition is quashed.
PREWITT, P.J., and RAHMEYER, C.J., CONCUR.
MAUS, S.J., DISSENTS WITH ATTACHED OPINION.
ALMON H. MAUS, Senior Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The resolution of this proceeding in prohibition involves the construction and application of the Peer Review Statute,
MoRS § 537.035.4 “Except as otherwise provided in this section, the proceedings, findings, deliberations, reports, and minutes of peer review committees concerning the health care provided any patient are privileged and shall not be subject to discovery, subpoena, or other means of legal compulsion for their release . . . or be admissible into evidence in any judicial or administrative action for failure to provide appropriate care.” (emphasis added)
MoRS § 535.035.5 . “The provisions of subsection 4 . . . limiting discovery and admissibility of testimony as well as the proceedings [and] records . . . do not apply to any judicial or administrative action brought by a . . . legal entity [that formed a peer committee] which . . . operates to deny, restrict, or revoke the hospital staff privileges or license to practice of a physician or other health care providers or when . . . the legal entity . . . is sued for actions taken by such committee which operate to deny, restrict or revoke the hospital staff privileges or license to practice of a physician.” (emphasis added)
The central issue in the underlying action is the termination of a contract providing for MJR to provide radiological services to St. John‘s Hospital. Nonetheless, it is not an action brought by the legal entity St. John‘s Hospitаl which “operates to deny, restrict or revoke the hospital staff privileges” of a health care provider. Nor is it an action in which St. John‘s Hospital is sued for actions taken by a peer review committee which operates to deny, restrict or revoke hospital staff privileges. In short, it is not an action that falls within the exception created by Subsection 5.
The privilege of
By construction of the statute, the privilege created by
However, the purpose of
It is established that records that fall within the ambit of
As noted, the provisions of the peer review statute include the privilege created by
It is not necessary to determine if the same principles apply to the waiver of the professional privilege created by
The order of the trial court compels the production of the records in question and directs that the names of the patients re-
Even when that determination has been made “(p)atients must, however, be protected against humiliation, embarrassment or disgrace by appropriate protective orders . . . To this end, identifying characteristics should be redacted, and the trial court should conduct an in camera inspection of the documents to ensure that patients are protected from humiliation, embarrassment, or disgrace.” State ex rel. Health Midwest Development Group, Inc. v. Daugherty, 965 S.W.2d 841, 844 (Mo.banc 1998).
In this case the required determination of the demands of a societal interest has not been made. The court has not conducted an in camera inspection of the records. It determined that the physician-patient privilege recognized in and professional privilege created by the Peer Review Statute
No. 24657.
Missouri Court of Appeals, Southern District, Division Two.
Oct. 31, 2002.
Motion for Rehearing and Transfer to Supreme Court Denied Nov. 21, 2002.
Application for Transfer Denied Dec. 24, 2002.
