Waddoups v. Noorda , 746 Utah Adv. Rep. 24 ( 2013 )


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  •                 This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2013 UT 64
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    MELISSA WADDOUPS and COREY WADDOUPS,
    Plaintiffs and Appellees,
    v.
    BARRY A. NOORDA, M.D;
    INTERMOUNTAIN HEALTH CARE INC.,
    dba LOGAN REGIONAL HOSPITAL;
    CACHE VALLEY WOMEN’S CENTER; and DOES 1–X,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    No. 20120310
    Filed November 1, 2013
    On Certification from the United States District Court
    for the District of Utah
    Attorneys:
    G. Eric Nielson, Ryan M. Springer, Michael D. Karras,
    Salt Lake City, for appellees
    Julia M. Houser, Salt Lake City, for appellant
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING authored the opinion of the
    Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE PARRISH,
    JUSTICE LEE, and JUDGE CHRISTIANSEN joined.
    Having recused herself, JUSTICE DURHAM
    does not participate herein; Court of Appeals
    JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN sat.
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶ 1 The Federal District Court for the District of Utah has
    certified the following question to this court:
    Does section 78B-3-425 of the Utah Code clarify
    existing law and therefore retroactively apply
    to bar negligent credentialing claims that arose
    prior to its enactment?
    WADDOUPS v. NOORDA
    Opinion of the Court
    Utah Code section 78B-3-425 reads:
    Prohibition on cause of action for negligent
    credentialing. It is the policy of this state that
    the question of negligent credentialing, as
    applied to health care providers in malpractice
    suits, is not recognized as a cause of action.
    We hold that Utah Code section 78B-3-425, because it is a
    substantive amendment and contains no expression of
    retroactivity, does not apply retroactively (to its effective date),
    and therefore does not bar Plaintiffs’ claim which arose prior to its
    enactment.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶ 2 On May 24, 2010, Melissa Waddoups underwent several
    gynecological procedures performed by Dr. Barry Noorda at
    Logan Regional Hospital, an Intermountain Health Care (IHC)
    facility. Mr. and Mrs. Waddoups allege Dr. Noorda negligently
    performed those procedures and they suffered harm as a result.
    The sole claim relevant to this appeal is the Waddoups’ fifth cause
    of action against IHC alleging negligent credentialing. Mr. and
    Mrs. Waddoups maintain that IHC failed to exercise reasonable
    care in granting privileges to Dr. Noorda and failed to properly
    credential Dr. Noorda, and as a result, he performed surgical
    procedures on Mrs. Waddoups that he was not qualified to
    perform. The Waddoups seek the same damages for negligent
    credentialing as they do for their claims for health care
    malpractice and negligence.
    ¶ 3 On May 14, 2010, this court issued its opinion in Archuleta
    v. St. Mark’s Hospital.1 In that case, we were asked to decide
    whether Utah Code sections 58-13-5(7),2 58-13-4(2),3 and 26-25-14
    1   
    2010 UT 36
    , 
    238 P.3d 1044
    .
    2 The title of section 58-13-5 is “Information relating to
    adequacy and quality of medical care -- Immunity from liability.”
    Subsection (7) reads:
    An individual who is a member of a hospital
    administration, board, committee, department,
    medical staff, or professional organization of health
    care providers, and any hospital, other health care
    entity, or professional organization conducting or
    (con’t.)
    2
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    2013 UT 64
                            Opinion of the Court
    sponsoring the review, is immune from liability
    arising from participation in a review of a health care
    provider’s professional ethics, medical competence,
    moral turpitude, or substance abuse.
    3
    The title of section 58-13-4 is “Liability immunity for health
    care providers on committees -- Evaluating and approving
    medical care.” Subsection (2) reads:
    (2) Health care providers serving in the following
    capacities and the organizations or entities sponsoring
    these activities are immune from liability with respect
    to deliberations, decisions, or determinations made or
    information furnished in good faith and without
    malice:
    (a) serving on committees:
    (i) established to determine if hospitals and
    long-term care facilities are being used
    properly;
    (ii) established to evaluate and improve the
    quality of health care or determine whether
    provided health care was necessary,
    appropriate, properly performed, or provided
    at a reasonable cost;
    (iii) functioning under Pub. L. No. 89-97 or as
    professional standards review organizations
    under Pub. L. No. 92-603;
    (iv) that are ethical standards review
    committees; or
    (v) that are similar to committees listed in this
    Subsection (2) and that are established by any
    hospital, professional association, the Utah
    Medical Association, or one of its component
    medical societies to evaluate or review the
    diagnosis or treatment of, or the performance
    of health or hospital services to, patients
    within this state;
    (b) members of licensing boards established
    under Title 58, Occupations and Professions, to
    license and regulate health care providers; and
    (c) health care providers or other persons
    furnishing information to those committees, as
    (con’t.)
    3
    WADDOUPS v. NOORDA
    Opinion of the Court
    required by law, voluntarily, or upon official
    request.
    4  Section 26-25-1 is titled “Authority to provide data on
    treatment and condition of persons to designated agencies --
    Immunity from liability,” and reads:
    (1) Any person, health facility, or other organization
    may, without incurring liability, provide the following
    information to the persons and entities described in
    Subsection (2):
    (a) information as determined by the state
    registrar of vital records appointed under Title 26,
    Chapter 2, Utah Vital Statistics Act;
    (b) interviews;
    (c) reports;
    (d) statements;
    (e) memoranda;
    (f) familial information; and
    (g) other data relating to the condition and
    treatment of any person.
    (2) The information described in Subsection (1) may
    be provided to:
    (a) the department and local health departments;
    (b) the Division of Substance Abuse and Mental
    Health within the Department of Human
    Services;
    (c) scientific     and    health    care    research
    organizations affiliated with institutions of higher
    education;
    (d) the Utah Medical Association or any of its
    allied medical societies;
    (e) peer review committees;
    (f) professional review organizations;
    (g) professional societies and associations; and
    (h) any health facility’s in-house staff committee
    for the uses described in Subsection (3).
    (3) The information described in Subsection (1) may
    be provided for the following purposes:
    (a) study and advancing medical research, with
    the purpose of reducing the incidence of disease,
    morbidity, or mortality; or
    (con’t.)
    4
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                             Opinion of the Court
    granted hospitals immunity from negligent credentialing claims.
    A majority of this court concluded that “the legislature did not
    intend to immunize negligent credentialing claims brought by
    patients” in its enactment of any of these three statutes, and
    “therefore formally recognize[d] negligent credentialing as a
    valid common-law cause of action.”5 We held negligent
    credentialing to be “simply the application of broad common law
    principles of negligence,” and a “natural extension of torts such
    as negligent hiring.”6
    ¶ 4 The following year, the Utah Legislature passed Senate
    Bill 150, subsequently codified on May 10, 2011 as section 78B-3-
    425, which reads:
    (b) the evaluation and improvement of hospital
    and health care rendered by hospitals, health
    facilities, or health care providers.
    (4) Any person may, without incurring liability,
    provide information, interviews, reports, statements,
    memoranda, or other information relating to the
    ethical conduct of any health care provider to peer
    review committees, professional societies and
    associations, or any in-hospital staff committee to be
    used for purposes of intraprofessional society or
    association discipline.
    (5) No liability may arise against any person or
    organization as a result of:
    (a) providing information or material authorized
    in this section;
    (b) releasing or publishing findings and
    conclusions of groups referred to in this section to
    advance health research and health education; or
    (c) releasing or publishing a summary of these
    studies in accordance with this chapter.
    (6) As used in this chapter:
    (a) “health care provider” has the meaning set
    forth in Section 78B-3-403; and
    (b) “health care facility” has the meaning set forth
    in Section 26-21-2.
    5   Archuleta, 
    2010 UT 36
    , ¶¶ 15–16.
    6   
    Id. ¶ 15
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    5
    WADDOUPS v. NOORDA
    Opinion of the Court
    Prohibition on cause of action for negligent
    credentialing. It is the policy of this state that
    the question of negligent credentialing, as
    applied to health care providers in malpractice
    suits, is not recognized as a cause of action.
    This case concerns the effect of section 78B-3-425 on the
    Waddoups’ claims, specifically, whether section 78B-3-425
    retroactively bars Plaintiffs’ negligent credentialing claim which
    accrued before the enactment of the statute.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶ 5 “A certified question from the federal district court does
    not present us with a decision to affirm or reverse a lower court’s
    decision; as such, traditional standards of review do not apply.
    On certification, we answer the legal questions presented without
    resolving the underlying dispute.”7
    ANALYSIS
    ¶ 6 It is well established that “[t]he courts of this state operate
    under a statutory bar against the retroactive application of newly
    codified laws,” and therefore “parties’ substantive rights and
    liabilities are determined by the law in place at the time when a
    cause of action arises.”8        The statute barring retroactive
    application of new laws contains a single exception, “[a] provision
    of the Utah Code is not retroactive, unless the provision is
    expressly declared to be retroactive.”9 “Thus, absent clear
    legislative intent to the contrary, we generally presume that a
    statute applies only prospectively.”10 “The intent to have a statute
    operate retroactively may be indicated by explicit [statutory]
    statements” to that effect, “or by clear and unavoidable
    implication that the statute operates on events already past.”11
    7  U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. U.S. Sports Specialty Ass’n, 
    2012 UT 3
    ,
    ¶ 9, 
    270 P.3d 464
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    8State v. Clark, 
    2011 UT 23
    , ¶¶ 11–12, 
    251 P.3d 829
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    9   UTAH CODE § 68-3-3.
    10   Warne v. Warne, 
    2012 UT 13
    , ¶ 25, 
    275 P.3d 238
    .
    11Evans & Sutherland Computer Corp. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n,
    
    953 P.2d 435
    , 437 (Utah 1997).
    6
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                            Opinion of the Court
    Like all matters of statutory interpretation, we evaluate
    retroactivity by first examining the text of the statute, because “[i]t
    is axiomatic that the best evidence of legislative intent is the plain
    language of the statute itself.”12 “Only when we find ambiguity in
    the statute’s plain language need we seek guidance from the
    legislative history and relevant policy considerations.”13
    ¶ 7 The statutory language in this case is a single sentence:
    “It is the policy of this state that the question of negligent
    credentialing, as applied to health care providers in malpractice
    suits, is not recognized as a cause of action.”14 This phrase
    contains no words indicative of retroactive application,15 nor does
    any language appear that evinces a “clear and unavoidable
    implication that the statute operates on events already past.”16
    Both of the verbs which appear in the sentence are in present
    tense: “is” and “is not recognized.”17 It simply cannot be said
    that the use of the present tense communicates a clear and
    unavoidable implication that the statute operates on events
    already past. If anything, use of the present tense implies an
    intent that the statute apply to the present, as of its effective date,
    and continuing forward. There is nothing ambiguous about the
    statute that would necessitate further analysis beyond the plain
    language. However, that does not end our analysis.
    ¶ 8 In addition to the single statutory exception, we have
    long recognized a distinction between substantive and procedural
    12Anderson v. Bell, 
    2010 UT 47
    , ¶	9, 
    234 P.3d 1147
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    13 World Peace Movement of Am. v. Newspaper Agency Corp., 
    879 P.2d 253
    , 259 (Utah 1994).
    14   UTAH CODE § 78B-3-425.
    15 See, e.g., UTAH CODE § 19-6-302.5(3)(a) (“this act applies
    retroactively”); 
    Id. § 48-3-206
    (“is effective retroactively”)
    (repealed 2013); 
    Id. § 77-40-113
    (“provisions of this chapter apply
    retroactively”).
    16 See, e.g., UTAH CODE § 75-7-1103(1) (“[T]his chapter applies
    to: all trusts created before, on, or after July 1, 2004 . . . [and]
    judicial proceedings concerning trusts commenced before July 1,
    2004.”).
    17   UTAH CODE § 78B-3-425.
    7
    WADDOUPS v. NOORDA
    Opinion of the Court
    laws as it relates to retroactive application of newly enacted
    statutes.18 Laws that “enlarge, eliminate, or destroy vested or
    contractual rights” are substantive and are barred from retroactive
    application absent express legislative intent.19 However, laws
    which “merely pertain[] to and prescribe[] the practice and
    procedure or the legal machinery by which the substantive law is
    determined or made effective” are procedural and “may be given
    retrospective effect.”20 In purporting to eliminate the cause of
    action of negligent credentialing, section 78B-3-425 cannot be said
    to be merely procedural, but rather is clearly substantive in
    nature. IHC concedes this point.
    ¶ 9 IHC argues that section 78B-3-425 is merely a clarifying
    amendment and thus subject to the judicially-created exception
    that “when the purpose of an amendment is to clarify the
    meaning of an earlier enactment, the amendment may be applied
    retroactively in pending actions.”21 However, since the time oral
    argument was heard in this case, this court has decided Gressman
    v. State,22 which repudiated such exception. In Gressman, we
    noted that although
    our case law has occasionally referred to
    “amendments clarifying statutes” as an
    “exception” to the retroactivity ban, we have
    never applied them as such. Instead, our
    retroactivity case law has invoked this
    “exception” only in connection with statutory
    amendments that we have characterized as
    procedural. And when our cases discuss the
    18 Boucofski v. Jacobsen, 
    104 P. 117
    , 119 (Utah 1909) (“While it is
    true that a party’s rights in a judgment, as a general rule, may not
    be affected by legislative acts passed . . . the rule does not apply to
    laws . . . which only affect matters of procedure or practice.”),
    overruled on other grounds by State v. Hansen, 
    734 P.2d 421
    (Utah
    1986).
    19 Brown & Root Indus. Serv. v. Indus. Comm’n of Utah, 
    947 P.2d 671
    , 675 (Utah 1997) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    20   
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    21   Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Higgs, 
    656 P.2d 998
    , 1001 (Utah 1982).
    22   
    2013 UT 63
    , __ P.3d __.
    8
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                              Opinion of the Court
    “clarifying amendment exception,” it is always
    in tandem with or as a counterpart to our
    analysis of the above-noted distinction
    between substance and procedure. . . . The
    governing statute . . . makes no express room
    for an exception for clarifying amendments per
    se. The sole exception spelled out explicitly by
    statute requires an express provision for
    retroactivity.23
    ¶ 10 Having repudiated the sole exception IHC relies on in
    this case, our work is done. The statute is not retroactive.
    ¶ 11 We note that our repudiation of the clarifying
    amendment exception does not deny the legislature the
    opportunity to clarify statutes and have such clarifications act
    retroactively. Rather, it requires the legislature to convey such
    intent expressly in the language of the statute if it desires such
    effect.
    ¶ 12 Having found that the statute does not apply
    retroactively, we need not address any of the constitutional issues
    raised.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶ 13 In sum, we answer the certified question in the
    negative; section 78B-3-245 of the Utah Code does not apply
    retroactively to bar negligent credentialing claims that arose prior
    to its enactment.
    23   
    Id. ¶ 16
    (citations omitted) (footnotes omitted).
    9