Victor Bernard Williams M.D. v. Baptist Health D/B/A Baptist Health Medical Center ( 2023 )


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  •                                      Cite as 
    2023 Ark. 100
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    No.    CV-22-636
    Opinion Delivered: June   8, 2023
    VICTOR BERNARD WILLIAMS, M.D.
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                             [NO. 60CV-14-808]
    BAPTIST HEALTH D/B/A BAPTIST     HONORABLE TIMOTHY DAVIS
    HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER, ET AL.    FOX, JUDGE
    APPELLEES
    AFFIRMED.
    RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice
    This appeal is from a circuit court’s award of attorneys’ fees after a medical doctor
    unsuccessfully sued a hospital following its revocation of his medical-staff and surgical
    privileges. The doctor challenges whether the timing of the attorneys’-fees award was
    defective, whether the hospital’s noncompliance with its bylaws negated his attorneys’ fee
    liability, and whether the court entered the award amount prematurely. We affirm because
    we conclude the attorneys’ fees request was timely, the hospital’s compliance with the
    bylaws was law of the case, and the circuit court followed the applicable rules and acted
    within its discretion in entering its order.
    I. Factual Background
    Dr. Victor Williams sued Baptist Health and others after his medical-staff
    membership and surgical privileges were terminated. The termination stemmed from
    allegations that Dr. Williams—a surgeon—provided care that fell short of standard surgical
    practice. The circuit court dismissed all of Dr. Williams’s claims. Most were dismissed by
    summary judgment in 2015 and 2016. One final claim went to a bench trial, and the circuit
    court dismissed that claim by an order entered in April 2017. On appeal, we affirmed the
    bulk of the circuit court’s rulings but remanded on three claims because of a discovery error.
    Williams v. Baptist Health, 
    2020 Ark. 150
    , at 13, 
    598 S.W.3d 487
    , 497 (“Williams I”).
    On remand, the circuit court dismissed the remaining claims with prejudice. The
    court entered its order on April 14, 2022. Baptist Health Defendants1 filed a motion for
    attorneys’ fees and costs on April 28. The motion cited an agreement signed by Dr. Williams
    when he first applied for medical-staff privileges at Baptist Health. The agreement set out
    that Dr. Williams would reimburse Baptist Health and its representatives for attorneys’ fees
    if he brought a lawsuit that largely did not succeed:
    I agree that in the event I institute litigation against any Baptist Health facility and/or
    representative and the relief and/or damages I request in such litigation are not
    granted or substantially granted by final judgment of a court of competent
    jurisdiction, then I will reimburse the Baptist Health facility and all representatives
    who are defendants in such action for reasonable attorney’s fees and other reasonable
    expenses incurred by them in the defense of such litigation.
    Dr. Williams objected to the fee request. He first argued that Baptist Health
    Defendants’ request was untimely. He contended they should have moved for fees when
    the circuit court dismissed his sole claim that went to a bench trial in April 2017 rather than
    waiting until a final judgment after remand following his appeal. Dr. Williams also argued
    1
    Baptist Health d/b/a Baptist Health Medical Center and these individuals are
    referred to collectively as Baptist Health Defendants: Doug Weeks, Tim Burson, M.D.;
    Scott Marotti, M.D.; Frederick A. Meadors, M.D.; Robert Casali, M.D.; T. Robert
    Moffett, M.D.; Susan Keathley, M.D.; William Everett Tucker, Jr., M.D.; and Chris Cate,
    M.D.
    2
    that Baptist Health violated its bylaws and breached its agreement with Dr. Williams, thus
    precluding the recovery of attorneys’ fees. Dr. Williams also requested that the court give
    him a chance to make adversary submissions. Yet Dr. Williams submitted no adversary
    evidence—such as depositions or affidavits—and never asked the circuit court for a hearing.
    Baptist Health Defendants replied on May 19. No other filings were submitted. The
    motion thus being ripe for decision, on June 24, the circuit court granted Baptist Health
    Defendants’ motion. In its order, the court considered and applied the relevant factors
    bearing on a reasonable attorneys’ fee award. See Chrisco v. Sun Indus., 
    304 Ark. 227
    , 
    800 S.W.2d 717
     (1990). The court then awarded Baptist Health Defendants $465,240 in
    attorneys’ fees and $23,860.66 in costs. Dr. Williams appealed and makes the same three
    arguments to us that he made to the circuit court.
    II. Law and Analysis
    A. Timeliness
    Generally, a party seeking attorneys’ fees must file and serve a motion “no later than
    14 days after entry of judgment.” Ark. R. Civ. P. 54(e)(2). A “judgment” under Rule 54 is
    “one that dismisses the parties, discharges them from the action, or concludes their rights to
    the subject matter in controversy.” Worsham v. Day, 
    2019 Ark. 160
    , at 5, 
    574 S.W.3d 150
    ,
    153. “This court has consistently interpreted Ark. R. Civ. P. 54(e) to be applicable only
    upon an entry of judgment that finally concludes the controversy for which attorneys’ fees
    are sought.” Id. at 5, 
    574 S.W.3d at
    153–54. When an appellate court remands a case for
    further proceedings on a claim, a Rule 54 judgment arises only after the circuit court
    disposes of the remanded claim. See Jones v. Flowers, 
    373 Ark. 213
    , 218, 
    283 S.W.3d 551
    ,
    3
    555 (2008). “A new period for filing will automatically begin if a new judgment is entered
    following a reversal or remand by the appellate court or the granting of a motion under
    Rule 59.” Ark. R. Civ. P. 54, Rpt. Notes 1997. The Rule 54 judgment was entered on
    April 12, 2022. This is when the circuit court fully resolved all claims in Baptist Health
    Defendants’ favor after our remand in Williams I. Because the motion for attorneys’ fees was
    filed on April 28, it fell within the fourteen-day period and was timely.
    B. Liability for Attorneys’ Fees
    Dr. Williams next argues that Baptist Health Defendants were not entitled to
    attorneys’ fees under the agreement. Dr. Williams argues that Baptist Health failed to comply
    with medical-staff bylaws while terminating his medical-staff membership and surgical
    privileges, thus negating his liability for attorneys’ fees under the agreement.
    But in Williams I, we rejected the argument that Baptist Health failed to follow its
    bylaws. “[W]e agree with the circuit court that the actions taken by Baptist Health appellees
    with respect to Dr. Williams’s administrative-review proceedings substantially complied
    with Baptist Health’s bylaws and professional-staff rules.” Williams I, 
    2020 Ark. 150
    , at 19,
    598 S.W.3d at 500. This holding has become law of the case. It has preclusive effect both
    upon the circuit court on remand and upon an appellate court on subsequent review. See
    Clinical Study Centers, Inc. v. Boellner, 
    2012 Ark. 266
    , at 4, 
    411 S.W.3d 695
    , 698. We cannot
    revisit this ruling now.2
    2
    To the extent Dr. Williams has tried to raise a separate issue about mutuality of
    obligations, he failed because it remained dependent entirely on his argument that Baptist
    Health failed to comply with its bylaws. See Appellant’s Brief at 23 (“Since the Baptist
    Appellees failed to comply with . . . the specific medical staff bylaw provisions . . . the
    4
    C. Two-Stage Decision
    Last, Dr. Williams argues that the circuit court should have decided whether he was
    liable for attorneys’ fees first and then allowed him to later make adverse submissions as
    permitted by Rule 54(e)(3). But the rule doesn’t require courts to make attorneys’-fees
    decisions in two stages. Rather, “the court may determine issues of liability for fees before
    receiving submissions bearing on issues of evaluation of services for which liability is
    imposed by the court.” 
    Id.
    Rule 54(e) cross-references Rule 43(c) and Rule 78, giving circuit courts the
    flexibility to handle the matter either by motion or with a hearing. Rule 43(c) allows the
    court to consider both affidavits and deposition testimony when resolving a motion based
    on facts absent from the record. And Rule 78(c) discusses, in part, the circumstances in
    which the court “may hold a hearing on a motion” (emphasis added); yet if a hearing is not
    requested, “a hearing will be deemed waived and the court may act upon the matter without
    further notice.”
    It appears from Dr. Williams’s brief that he thinks we should reverse and remand for
    the circuit court to reconsider his liability for attorneys’ fees and then also allow him the
    chance to make adverse submissions about the reasonableness of Baptist Health’s fee request,
    which he failed to do initially. Yet Baptist Health Defendants filed a motion for attorneys’
    fees with over two hundred pages of supporting fee documentation. Dr. Williams’s response
    did not seek a hearing or directly contest the itemized fee documentation. He did not
    attorney fee provisions . . . should be void and unenforceable as there was no mutuality of
    obligations.”).
    5
    analyze and suggest how application of the Chrisco factors would negate or lessen the
    requested fees. Nor did Dr. Williams submit additional evidence, such as affidavits or
    depositions, that would impact the circuit court’s decision on attorneys’ fees. Instead, Dr.
    Williams asked the court to reach the liability issue first and then allow him to submit
    adversary documentation.
    Our rules do not oblige the circuit court to grant this request. The plain language of
    Rule 54 provides that a circuit court may determine issues of liability before receiving
    submissions, not that it shall. This language is permissive, not mandatory. Nor do the rules
    require that the circuit court hold a hearing when one is not requested. Again, the language
    from the rule is permissive, not mandatory: “The court, upon notice to all parties, may hold
    a hearing on a motion . . . .” Ark. R. Civ. P. 78(c) (emphasis added). And if no hearing is
    requested, then a hearing will be deemed waived. 
    Id.
    If Dr. Williams wanted to submit adversary documentation, he should have done so
    in the months following the motion for attorneys’ fees or requested a hearing and presented
    it then. Instead, he simply responded to Baptist Health Defendants’ motion with procedural
    arguments that did not directly challenge Baptist Health’s substantive request for fees. By
    the time the circuit court entered its ruling granting attorneys’ fees, the motion was ripe for
    decision. We have said before that we will not let a party remain silent on attorneys’ fees
    and decline to take full opportunity when the matter is squarely before the circuit court. See
    Hargis v. Hargis, 
    2019 Ark. 321
    , at 6, 
    587 S.W.3d 208
    , 211–12.
    Last, Dr. Williams has not challenged the award amount specifically, nor has he
    asserted that the circuit court abused its discretion in the application of the Chrisco factors.
    6
    Given our standard of review, which is abuse of discretion, we affirm the circuit court’s
    attorneys’ fee award on this record. See KBX, Inc. v. Zero Grade Farms, 
    2022 Ark. 42
    , at 26,
    
    639 S.W.3d 352
    , 368 (describing standard of review).
    Affirmed.
    Andre K. Valley, for appellant.
    Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates & Woodyard, P.L.L.C., by: Byron Freeland and Audra
    K. Hamilton, for appellees.
    7