MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is a medical malpractice case.
It is undisputed that the plaintiff, John Waggoner, suffered severe injuries — permanent brain damage that will leave him totally disabled for the rest of his life — as the result of events which took place during a “routine” operation on his knee in May of 1983. Through his father and guardian, Dennis Waggoner, he seeks substantial damages. 1
However, because of the Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act, Tеx. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4590i, sections 11.-02-11.04 (Vernon Supp.1986) (“the Act”), Waggoner will not be able to recover more than $500,000 — even if he establishes, at trial, that the negligence of the defendants caused his injuries (a matter that is denied, and vigorously contested, by both defendants).
For the reasons explained below, this Court — like the three intermediate appellate courts of Texas that have considered this issue — holds that the Act is unconstitutional under both the federal and state constitutions. Accordingly, Waggoner— and other plaintiffs in medical malpractice cases in Texas — will not, if their evidence warrants, be limited to a maximum recovery of $500,000.
1. The Facts
John Waggoner was admitted to Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas on May 5, 1983, for non-emergency surgery on his right knee. That evening, the defendant Burney Gibsоn, a board-certified anesthesiologist, met with Waggoner. It is disputed whether or not Dr. Gibson explained to Waggoner the “specific risks, hazards, and complications” involved with the anesthesia to be used, particularly in view of Waggoner’s asthmatic condition. In the operating room on the following day, Dr. Gibson administered a spinal block anesthetic — using, in *1104 part, respiratory deprеssants, including morphine, valium, fentanyl, and droperidol. Shortly after the operation began, Waggoner’s breathing ceased and he experienced a cardiac arrest. Although he was resuscitated in 6-10 minutes, Waggoner remained in a coma for several months. He suffered severe and irreversible damage to his brain and nervous system, and is totally disabled.
This malpractice suit was filеd on October 9, 1984. There is diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. section 1382(a)(1). Wag-goner alleges that Dr. Gibson was negligent “before, during and after the anesthesia procedure.” He also claims that the defendant Presbyterian Hospital is “vicariously liable for the negligence of Dr. Gibson” because the anesthesiologist was “the apparent or ostensible agent of Presbyterian Hospital.” Because he will be totally disabled for life, Waggoner seeks to recover damages well in excess of $800,000 from the defendants. (See footnote 1.)
2. The Act
However, the Texas legislature has placed a $500,000 limit on recovery of damages by plaintiffs in malpractice suits in this state, including John Waggoner. In doing so, the legislature “found” that the number of malpractice suits has increased “inordinantly,” as has the amount of money paid by insurers in judgments and settlements; and that this “situation has created a medical malpractice insurance crisis in the State of Texas.” Act, section 1.02(a)(1), (3), & (5). The actual existence of such a crisis in Texas is, however, a matter of some debate. 2
Although the Act states an intention not to “unduly restrict a claimant’s rights any more than necessary to deal with the crisis,” Act, section 1.02(b)(3), it raises no distinctions between malpractice victims to whom $500,000 would be a boon and those to whom $500,000 would barely be a beginning. See Act, section 11.02; see also Act, section 11.03 (alternative limitation in case 11.02 is stricken). Its statement of purpose does not explain why the only legislative response to the insurance “crisis” is to limit the recoveries of malpractice claimants with the most meritoriоus and substantial suits, and is silent as to other conceivable avenues of investigation 3 — including questions of whether the increases in insurance cost are, in fact, caused solely by increased litigiousness among patients rather than the quality of investments made by the insur *1105 anee industry, and whether increases in premiums are, in fact, warranted by existing market conditions. 4 Nor does the Act address only nоn-meritorious claims. The limitation of damages that may be recovered in all malpractice cases, regardless of merit, is the sole response of the legislature to the putative “crisis.”
3. The Law
Each Texas court considering the Act has found its limitations on recovery to constitute impermissible limitations on the constitutional protections afforded malpractice litigants. In
Baptist Hospital of Southeast Texas v. Baber,
Of the six other states which have considered the constitutionality of malpractice limitation statutes, two have upheld the statutes — but four have joined Texas in finding them to be invalid.
See Fein v. Permanente Medical Group,
(a) Equal Protection
In the absence of a resolution of this conflict from the United States Supremе Court, 5 or of a determination by the Texas Supreme Court, 6 this Court will fol *1106 low the unanimous view among the Texas appellate courts and the more persuasive reasoning of the state courts in New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, and Illinois. Accordingly, the Texas Act is unconstitutional because it violates the equal protection clauses of both the federal and the state constitutions. U.S. Const, amend. XIV; TEX. CONST, art. 1, section 3.
In subjecting malpractice damage limitations to equal-protection analysis, courts apply a rational relationship test with due-process underpinnings. Because classifications based on the right to recover in tort do not involve fundamental textual constitutional rights or suspect classes, stricter standards of review are not appropriate; however, application of the rational relationship test is not “an all but certain indication of validity” for malpractice statutes.
7
The applicable equal-protection standards require “some rational relationship to legitimate state purposes.”
San Antonio School District v. Rodriquez,
The legitimacy of imposing recovery limitations on only the most severely injured victims of malpractice
8
is undermined by a lack of a societal
quid pro quo
for the displacement of the victims’ common-law right of recovery.
See Baber,
A statutory “limitation of recovery does not provide adequate compensation to patients with meritorious claims; on the cоntrary, it does just the opposite for the most seriously injured claimants. It does noth
*1107
ing toward the elimination of nonmeritorious claims.”
Arneson,
This result is not vitiated by the existence of a malpractice insurance “crisis.” Even assuming that such a “crisis” hаs a basis in fact, it is indisputable that constitutional protections are not suspended in time of even the most legitimate crises.
See Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
(b) Open Courts Provision
In addition to the equal protection clauses, there is an independent state ground for striking down limits on malpractice recovery — the open-courts provision of the Texas constitution.
12
That pro
*1108
vision, contained in article I, section 13, requires that “all courts be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.” The section is interpreted broadly as a due process guarantee, and accords Texas citizens even greater protections than the federаl guarantee of due process.
13
See Sax v. Votteler,
The open-courts provision provides greater protection than the federal due-process guarantee largely by providing a less stringent test determining the validity of a limitatiоn on malpractice recovery. Two requirements are presented by the open-courts provision — first, that a right to redress, such as a “cognizable common law cause of action,” is being restricted, and, second, that the restriction is unreasonable or arbitrary when balanced against the “purpose and basis of the statute.”
Sax,
First, there is no doubt that limiting the amount of recovery of malpractice victims displaces a common-law cause of action in tort. Second, that displacement is, indeed, arbitrary and unreasonable when balanced against the purpose of the statute.
See ante
at 1105-1106. It is impossible for a seriously injured victim of malpractice to obtain any recompense above the statutory maximum for his or her injuries; how, one might ask, is this impossibility “any less onerous than requiring a party to sue where there are no courts?”
Nelson v. Krusen,
For these reasons, sections 11.02-11.04 of the Medical Liability and Insuranсe Improvement Act, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4590i, are unconstitutional under both the federal and Texas constitutions; and, because these sections are invalid, no limitation will be placed on the plaintiff’s recovery, as may be warranted by the evidence when this malpractice case is tried.
Notes
. He has rejected an Offer of Judgment under Rule 68, Fed.R.Civ.P., for more than $800,000.
. See Witherspoon, Constitutionality of the Texas Statute Limiting Liability for Medical Malpractice, 10 Tex.Tech.L.Rev. 419, 446 (1979) (concluding that nine states do have such crises, but that Texas does not); cf. Redish, Legislative Response to the Medical Malpractice Insurance Crisis: Constitutional Implications, 55 TexX.Rev. 759 (1977) (study funded by American Hospital Association urging judicial restraint, but not considering Texas "crisis" separately). Indeed, one of the legal profession’s foremost empirical analysts has concluded that the entire "litigation explosion” that has precipitated "tort reform” measures (like the Medical Liability and Insurance Improvement Act of Texas) is nonexistant. See Galanter, Reading the Landscape of Disputes: What We Know and Don’t Know (and Think We Know) About Our Allegedly Contentious and Litigious Society, 31 U.C.L.A.L. Rev. 4 (1983). Galanter’s conclusions are borne out by the only comрrehensive studies on tort litigation that have been accomplished. See Trubek, Grossman, Felstiner, Kritzer & Sarat, Civil Litigation Research Project, Final Report (March 1983), described in Trubek, Sarat, Felstiner, Kritzer & Grossman, The Costs of Ordinary Litigation, 31 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. 73 (1983); see also Administrative Office, U.S. Courts, Annual Report of the Director A-6 (1985) (tort cases are only 17 percent of caseload) and Danzón, The Frequency and Severity of Medical Malpractice Claims (Rand Corp. 1982) (claims have increased by only 3.5 percent per year).
. The social wisdom of the legislature’s policy choices is, of course, irrelevant to the question of constitutionality of the Act. Complete disregard for other potential policy options is, however, of at least tangential relevance when considering whether a legislative or administrative goal is a legitimate one.
See, e.g., Motor Vehiclе Manufacturers Ass’n v. State Farm Mutual Ins. Co.,
. Cf. Report of the Tort Policy Working Group on the Causes, Extent, and Policy Implications of the Current Crisis in Insurance Availability and Affordability (Washington, D.C.: General Accounting Office, February 1986) (finding that increases in 1984 malpractice premiums went far beyond requirements of profitability); see also Kirchner, Is Your Practice Begging for More Money7, Medical Economics 230 (Nov. 12, 1984) (highest-risk group [neurosurgeons] spends only 5.8 percent of income on malpractice insurance) and Danzón, Evaluation of the Current Malpractice System (presentation to Urban Institute’s National Medical Malpractice Conference, 1985) (in 1982, premiums averaged 1-6 percent of physician gross income).
. The Supreme Court has been urged to resolve the conflict among state courts, but has refused to do so.
See Fein v. Permanente Medical Group,
— U.S. -,
. The Texas Supreme Court granted review in
Baber,
but, almost two years later, declined to address the constitutional issue and denied the writ with “no reversible error.” In its
per curiam
opinion, the сourt noted that the amount awarded by the jury did not exceed the permissible amount under the statute, adjusted for inflation. Although it might be preferable for a federal district court to allow the highest court of a state to rule on the constitutionality of an act of that state’s legislature, the disposition of all malpractice cases cannot be indefinitely delayed in the interim.
See Brownsville Medical Center v. Gracia,
. See Redish, supra, at 770-771 nn. 72 & 80 (citing himself for the proposition that the rational relationship test requires a sort of political-question abstention in favor of "democratic political bodies"). Indeed, courts in at least five states, including three separate judicial districts in Texas, have disagreed and found malpractice statutes cоnstitutionally invalid under the rational relationship test.
. It is beyond doubt that the Texas statute operates against only those malpractice victims who are most severely injured; the plaintiff in this case (if his claims are proven at trial) provides a fitting paradigm. A blanket limitation means that a jury could award damages of up to the statutory limit to an only slightly injured patient, but a patient who is permanently and severely disabled would be entitled to no greater recompense. The slightly injured patient is, thus, not affected by the statute — while the most severely injured patient is greatly handicapped by it. The Act thus discriminates not only between classes of tort victims, but also between serious and non-serious classes of malpractice victims.
. The contrary argument is found in
Fein v. Permanente Medical Group,
. The "alternative partial limit” of section 11.03 —a $150,000 limit on recovery in malpractice cases "for all past and futurе noneconomic losses,” such as physical pain and suffering, mental anguish, consortium, and disfigurement — is to become effective in the event the $500,000 limit of section 11.02 is invalidated. Both sections, of course, suffer from the same constitutional infirmities.
. This result is not limited solely to hospitals, as in
Baber
— where the result was limited only because a hospital was the sole defendant.
See id.
. Other sections of the Act, notably the limitations period for filing suit, have been the subject of open-courts challenges in the Texas Supreme Court and the courts of appeals.
See Morrison v. Chan,
. It is neither unusual nor improper for a state constitution to grant state residents greater protections than the federal constitution; the federal document establishes a foundation that the states are free to build upon.
See
Harrington,
The Texas Bill of Rights and Civil Liberties,
17 Tex.Tech.L.Rev. 1487, 1497 (1986);
see also Olson v. State,
