Opinion Number: 2000-NMCA-026
Filing Date: January 24, 2000
Docket No. 19,336
KIMBERLY KUCEL,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
NEW MEXICO MEDICAL REVIEW
COMMISSION and MICHAEL RUECKHAUS,
Director of the Medical Review Commission,
Respondents-Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF EDDY COUNTY
Jay W. Forbes, District Judge
Mary Lynn Bogle
Dean B. Cross
Ernest Carroll
Losee, Carson, Haas & Carroll, P.A.
Artesia, NM
for Petitioner-Appellant
J.E. Casados
Gallagher, Casados & Mann, P.C.
Albuquerque, NM
for Respondents-Appellees
SUTIN, Judge.
{1}
In this appeal we decide whether the Director of the
New Mexico Medical Review Commission has discretion under
the Medical Malpractice Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 41-5-1 through -29 (1976, as amended through 1997), to redact some of an
applicant's, here Petitioner Kimberly Kucel's, legal claims
and factual allegations before submitting her application to
a panel for review. We hold that the Act does not give the
Director that discretion. We therefore conclude that the
district court erred by ruling that the Director had
implicit discretion to remove issues from Petitioner's application. We also conclude that the Director should not
have redacted any of Petitioner's averments or legal
contentions from her application. We vacate the district
court's order and reverse and remand for entry of an order
requiring the Director to submit Petitioner's complete
application to a panel.
BACKGROUND
{2}
Under the Act, "[n]o malpractice action may be filed in
any court against a qualifying health care provider before
application is made to the medical review commission and its
decision is rendered." Section 41-5-15(A). The application
must state "the facts of the case, nam[e] the persons
involved, [and] the dates and the circumstances, so far as
they are known, of the alleged act or acts of malpractice."
Section 41-5-15(B)(1). Once the application is received,
the Director serves a copy of the application on the health
care provider involved, see § 41-5-16(A), and transmits the
application to the health care provider's professional
society, association, or licensing board, see § 41-5-17(A).
Three specialists in the health care provider's field and
three lawyers from the state bar association are then chosen
to serve on a confidential panel that will review the
application. See § 41-5-17(B). After holding a hearing on
the application, the volunteer panel decides "whether there
is substantial evidence that the acts complained of occurred
and that they constitute malpractice[,] and . . . whether
there is a reasonable medical probability that the patient
was injured thereby." Section 41-5-20(A).
{3}
In accordance with this procedure, Petitioner filed a
written application with the Commission claiming, among
other things, that her doctor committed medical malpractice
by negligently failing to recognize, to properly diagnose,
and to properly treat the transference and
countertransference phenomena that developed during her
medical and psychiatric treatment.
{4}
Petitioner was initially referred to the doctor in
March 1993 for treatment of hematuria. After a hysterectomy
later that year, the doctor treated Petitioner for
persistent diarrhea and weight loss. By mid-June 1994,
Petitioner had lost a significant amount of weight. The
doctor then began providing Petitioner with physical and
psychological or psychiatric treatment for anorexia nervosa.
The doctor billed Petitioner's insurance company for
psychiatric services. Although the record is not entirely
clear on this point, it appears that Petitioner's treatment
by the doctor lasted into July 1994 and that the doctor
continued to contact Petitioner into the fall of that year.
{5}
The transference and countertransference phenomena have
been described as:
[t]he process whereby the patient
displaces on to the therapist feelings,
attitudes and attributes which properly
belong to a significant attachment
figure of the past, usually a parent,
and responds to the therapist
accordingly. . . . A further phenomenon
that may occur is countertransference,
when the therapist transfers his own
problems to the patient.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Love, 459 N.W.2d 698, 700
(Minn. 1990) (citation and quotation omitted). Petitioner
enumerated specific acts, including sexual acts, and
omissions by the doctor as evidence from which the panel
members might conclude that the doctor was negligent in
failing to diagnose and treat the transference and counter-transference phenomena that existed between patient and
doctor.
{6}
Nevertheless, the Director refused to transmit
Petitioner's application to a panel. In a letter to
Petitioner, the Director wrote that he believed the doctor's
intentional sexual conduct could not be considered medical
malpractice and that transference and countertransference
were not medically recognized phenomena. In another letter,
the Director further explained that:
[t]he [Medical Malpractice] Act . . .
was specifically not designed to have
six professionals evaluate issues of
alleged intentional torts including
sexual misconduct. . . . It does not
make good sense that the legislature
would establish a tribunal of six
volunteer professionals (rather than
just six anybodys) to merely determine
whether a certain professional had, or
tried to have, sexual relations with a
patient.
{7}
The same letter went on to say that even though the
Commission "would [not] be lacking volunteer panelists, I am
reluctant to impose upon a panel to undertake this very
questionable burden" of inquiring into an issue of
intentional sexual conduct, rather than professional
negligence, "unless some judge compels me to do so." After
receiving this letter, Petitioner filed a petition for an
alternative writ of mandamus with the district court to
compel the Director to transmit her application to a panel.
The district court issued the alternative writ, which
ordered the Director to show cause why a peremptory writ
should not be issued. After the Director answered and a
hearing was held, the district court issued a "Decision"
with findings of fact and conclusions of law. Ten days later, on November 24, 1997, the district court entered an
order that decided that "a Partial Alternative Writ of
Mandamus compelling the Director . . . to set a panel
hearing on only those issues of medical negligence readily
apparent in the Petition . . . should issue." The order
also found that "the Director . . . is implicitly invested
with discretion as to the selection of those issues to be
submitted and considered by the panel and is thus entitled
to redact from the Petition any issues of claimed
intentional sexual misconduct." Petitioner did not appeal
the decision or order.
{8}
The Director redacted all factual allegations and legal
claims relating to transference and countertransference and
transmitted Petitioner's application to the Commission. The
redacted material included Petitioner's allegations that:
the doctor called her on numerous occasions and thereby
encouraged her dependence on him; the doctor told her that
he was physically attracted to her; the doctor was unwilling
to discontinue counseling Petitioner even after he had
developed an inappropriate attraction for her; the doctor
revealed information about his personal life, beliefs, and
ideas about beauty during a private meal with Petitioner at
a restaurant; the doctor told Petitioner that he would like
to see her socially; the doctor initially refused to refer
Petitioner for hospitalization, but complied with her
request for hospitalization only after she threatened to
obtain another doctor; the doctor kissed her on at least two
occasions; the doctor engaged in oral sex with Petitioner on
one occasion and attempted to engage in intercourse with her
on that same occasion; the doctor repeatedly told Petitioner
that he was the only physician who could care for and heal
her; the doctor failed to refer Petitioner for treatment by
appropriate mental health and health professionals even
after he diagnosed her with a life threatening eating
disorder; the doctor attempted to limit Petitioner's contact
with other physicians, therapists, and psychiatrists; and
Petitioner told others that the doctor was the only person
with the skills necessary to cure her. Appendix A to this
opinion quotes those portions of Petitioner's application
that the Director redacted prior to transmitting her
application to a panel.
{9}
After the Director sent Petitioner's redacted
application to a panel, Petitioner moved the district court
for an order to show cause why the Director should not be
held in contempt of court for failing to comply with the
November 24, 1997, order. According to Petitioner, by
redacting those portions of the application concerning the
doctor's negligence in recognizing, diagnosing, and treating
the transference and counter-transference, the Director went
beyond what the order allowed in that the Director redacted
more than "issues of claimed intentional sexual misconduct,"
as stated in the November 24, 1997, order. On February 24,
1998, the district court denied Petitioner's motion for an order to show cause. On March 2, 1998, Petitioner appealed
from the February 24, 1998, order denying her motion for an
order to show cause. Petitioner emphasized below and on
appeal that the doctor's sexual conduct is not the
professional negligence for which she seeks redress; rather,
the doctor's negligence was his failure to diagnose and
treat the transference and countertransference that
developed during her treatment.
DISCUSSION
{10}
First, we address Respondents' attempt to dispose of
this appeal on the grounds that Petitioner had no right to
appeal from the denial of the motion for an order to show
cause, and that, if this Court intends to hear the merits of
the appeal, we should limit the scope of our review to the
issue of whether the Director abused his discretion, and not
review the issue of whether the Director had any discretion
at all. Then, because we find Respondents' procedural
arguments unpersuasive, we address the merits of
Petitioner's appeal.
Jurisdiction
{11}
This appeal is taken from the district court's February
24, 1998, order denying Petitioner's motion for an order to
show cause. Respondents argue that we should dismiss this
appeal because, according to Respondents, an order
declining to hold a party in civil contempt is not an
appealable order. Citing NMSA 1978, § 39-3-15(A) (1966),
Respondents argue that only persons held in contempt have a
right of appeal. In making this argument, Respondents fail
to give adequate consideration to applicable constitutional,
statutory and common-law principles. Respondents also
misconstrue Section 39-3-15(A).
{12}
Our state constitution guarantees an aggrieved party an
"absolute right to one appeal." N.M. Const. art. VI, § 2
(1965). This constitutional guarantee has been implemented
by the Legislature through NMSA 1978, §§ 39-3-2 (1917, as
amended 1966) (providing for appeal by "any party aggrieved"
by "final order after entry of judgment which affects
substantial rights") and 34-5-8(A)(1) (1966, as amended
through 1983) (vesting appellate jurisdiction in court of
appeals to review "any civil action not specifically
reserved to the jurisdiction of the supreme court").
Contempt proceedings are a principal means of enforcing
mandatory orders such as injunctions or writs of mandamus.
42 Am. Jur. 2d, Injunctions § 339 (1969); 52 Am. Jur. 2d.,
Mandamus § 482 (1970). "Civil contempts are those
proceedings instituted to preserve and enforce the rights of
private parties to suits and to compel obedience to the
orders, writs, mandates and decrees of the court. . . ." In
re Klecan, 93 N.M. 637, 638, 603 P.2d 1094, 1095 (1979). As
a practical matter, a party who has obtained a mandatory order such as a writ of mandamus, but subsequently is
wrongfully denied enforcement, may be just as "aggrieved" as
a party who is wrongfully denied the order in the first
place. We note that on at least two prior occasions, the
New Mexico Supreme Court--albeit without discussing the
basis of its jurisdiction--has entertained appeals from
orders declining to hold a party in contempt. See Nesbit v.
Nesbit, 80 N.M. 294, 454 P.2d 776 (1969); Ingalls v.
Ingalls, 119 N.M. 85, 888 P.2d 967 (1994).
{13}
In addition to our general grant of appellate
jurisdiction over civil cases, the Legislature in Section
39-3-15(A) has specifically provided for appeal to this
Court from judgments in civil contempt proceedings:
Any person aggrieved by the judgment of
the district court in any proceeding for
civil contempt and any person convicted
of criminal contempt except criminal
contempt committed in the presence of
the court may appeal within thirty days
from the judgment [or]See footnote 1 conviction to
the supreme court or the court of
appeals, as appellate jurisdiction may
be vested by law in these courts. . . .
(Emphasis added). We view the statutory distinction between
"any person aggrieved" (in the case of proceedings for civil
contempt) as opposed to "any person convicted" (in the case
of criminal contempt) as an indication of the
Legislature's intention to extend the right of appeal in
civil contempt proceedings to persons such as Petitioner who
have unsuccessfully sought enforcement of an order through a
contempt proceeding.
{14}
Petitioner was an aggrieved party for purposes of
appellate jurisdiction inasmuch as the order denying her
motion to show cause effectively precluded Petitioner from
presenting her theory of malpractice involving
transference/countertransference to a panel. We conclude
that jurisdiction to review the district court's February
24, 1998, order is conferred by our general grant of civil
appellate jurisdiction as well as by the specific grant of jurisdiction applicable to civil contempt proceedings.
Scope of Review
{15}
Petitioner argues that the issue of whether the
district court erred in ruling that the Director had
implicit discretion to delete portions of her application
was appropriately brought up for review by her appeal from
the February 24, 1998, order denying her motion for an order
to show cause. Respondents argue that the only issue
properly before this Court is whether the Director abused
his discretion under the November 24, 1997, order.
According to Respondents, Petitioner waived the right to
appeal the issue of whether the Act vests the Director with
discretion when Petitioner failed to appeal within thirty
days from the November 24, 1997, order granting the writ of
mandamus. Respondents argue that in view of Petitioner's
failure to appeal the November 24, 1997, order, that order
conclusively established as the law of this case that the
Director is vested with implicit discretion to review and
redact applications.
{16}
We agree with Respondents that the November 24, 1997,
order granting the writ of mandamus was a final, appealable
order. An order is final if it includes "decretal language
that carries the decision into effect by ordering that
something happen." Khalsa v. Levinson, 1998-NMCA-110, ¶ 13,
125 N.M. 680, 964 P.2d 844. The order entered in this case
determined that "a Partial Alternative [sic]See footnote 2 Writ of
Mandamus compelling the Director of the New Mexico Medical
Review Commission to set a panel hearing on only those
issues of medical negligence readily apparent in the
Petition filed with the Commission by Kimberly Kucel should
issue[.]" This decretal language granting a writ of
mandamus rendered the November 24, 1997, order a final
judgment for purposes of appeal. See 52 Am. Jur. 2d,
Mandamus § 471 (1970) (discussing formal requirements of
judgment in mandamus proceeding). "[I]n all cases of
proceedings by mandamus in any district court of this state,
the final judgment of the court thereon shall be reviewable
by appeal or writ of error in the same manner as now
provided by law in other civil cases." NMSA 1978, § 44-2-14
(1899); see also Hart v. City of Albuquerque, 1999-NMCA-043,
¶ 16, 126 N.M. 753, 975 P.2d 366 ("A final judgment on a
writ of mandamus is reviewable on appeal."); 52 Am. Jur. 2d
Mandamus § 491 (1970) (explaining that an appeal lies from
the judgment granting or denying a peremptory writ).
{17}
We disagree, however, with Respondents' suggestion that
our hands are tied by the district court's unappealed November 24, 1997, order. Assuming, without decidingSee footnote 3,
that Petitioner's failure to appeal the November 24, 1997,
order established as the law of the case the Director's
discretion to redact applications, it is well-settled that
the law of the case doctrine is flexible and discretionary,
see State v. Breit, 1996-NMSC-067, ¶ 12, 122 N.M. 655, 930
P.2d 792, and does not require us "to uphold a clearly
incorrect decision." Trujillo v. City of Albuquerque, 1998-NMSC-031, ¶ 41, 125 N.M. 721, 965 P.2d 305. The law of the
case doctrine allows--but does not require--courts to refuse
to consider matters already decided in the case. See
Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 486 U.S. 800,
802 (1988) ("[T]he doctrine merely expresses the practice of
courts generally to refuse to reopen what has been decided,
not a limit on their power."); Breit, 1996-NMSC-067, ¶ 12.
{18}
For reasons explained below, we believe the district
court's determination that the Director has implicit
discretion is manifestly erroneous and clearly contrary to
the Act. If we were to apply the law of the case doctrine
here, we would be forced to address the question whether the
Director's conduct was an abuse of discretion when our own
review of the Act convinces us he has no discretion. To
attempt to decide whether the Director has abused his
discretion when it is clear to us that the Director has no
discretion would be a futile exercise. "[W]hen we conclude
that a former decision is erroneous, and we still have the
opportunity to correct it as affecting those parties whose
interests are concerned in the original ruling, we should
apply the law of the land rather than the law of the case."
Farmers' State Bank v. Clayton Nat'l Bank, 31 N.M. 344, 355,
245 P. 543, 548 (1925), quoted with approval in Reese v.
State, 106 N.M. 505, 506, 745 P.2d 1153, 1154 (1987). Thus,
we may exercise our discretion to determine and apply the
law of the land--the law as the Legislature wrote it and
intended it. We note that in the present case doing so
merely serves to inform a public servant, the Director, of
his duties under the law. See Farmers' State Bank, 31 N.M.
at 356, 245 P. at 548 ("As affects the parties concerned,
the evil effects of [not following the law of the case] are
trivial as compared to the unfortunate consequences of
perpetuating the error.").
{19}
As a final procedural matter, we note that to the
extent that Respondents imply that Petitioner did not
preserve the argument that the Director has no discretion, they are incorrect. Prior to issuance of the order,
Petitioner argued that the Director had no discretion to
redact her claims and averments. Thus, neither the law of
the case doctrine nor our preservation requirement limits
Petitioner to arguing that the Director abused his
discretion in this case, and we may properly decide whether
the Act affords the Director discretion to make redactions
before submitting an application to a panel. We now turn to
the merits of Petitioner's case.
The Director Has No Discretion to
Redact Legal Claims and Factual
Allegations From an Application
{20}
The Act created the Commission "to provide panels to
review all malpractice claims against health care providers
covered by [the Act]." Section 41-5-14(A). The panels
"consider . . . all cases involving any alleged act of
malpractice occurring in New Mexico." Section 41-5-14(C)
(emphasis added). The panels also decide "whether there is
substantial evidence that the acts complained of occurred
and that they constitute malpractice." Section 41-5-20(A)
(emphasis added). Under these sections of the Act, it is
the duty of the panels--not the Director--to consider all
malpractice claims and to determine whether the allegations
in these claims amount to malpractice as it is defined under
the Act.
{21}
The Director initiates the panel's review of an
application by promptly transmitting the application to the
health care provider involved, see § 41-5-16(A), and to the
professional society, association, or licensing board to
which the health care provider belongs, see § 41-5-17(A),
(B). The Director fixes the date, time, and place of the
hearing on the application, see § 41-5-18, and chairs the
panel, see § 41-5-17(F). In cases involving multiple health
care providers, the Director has discretion to assign a
single panel to review the claims against all of the
providers or to assign a panel for each individual provider.
See § 41-5-17(C). If the panel concludes that the applicant
presented substantial evidence that the events alleged
actually occurred and that they constitute malpractice, then
the Director signs the panel's decision and assists the
applicant in retaining an expert who will help prepare the
case and appear as a witness. See § 41-5-23. If the panel
is evenly divided as to whether the applicant has presented
substantial evidence, then the Director casts the deciding
vote. See § 41-5-20. Aside from voting in the case of a
tie and perhaps deciding whether to assign one or more
panels, the Director's duties are limited, ministerial
duties.
{22}
The Act does not expressly grant the Director any
discretion to redact portions of an application or to
withhold an application or any part of an application from a panel. Nevertheless, the Director appears to believe that
such discretion is necessary in order to avoid convening
volunteer panels for what he believes to be frivolous
claims. Although reading some discretion into the statute
might shrink the workload of the volunteers who serve on the
panels, we believe that doing so would allow the Director to
usurp the panel's express functions. Allowing the Director
to screen applications and unilaterally eliminate portions
of applications before sending them to a panel is akin to
allowing the Director to act as a judge deciding a motion
for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be
granted. The Director has no such decision-making authority
or discretion under the Act. The Director has authority to
decide issues related to the merits of the application in
only one limited circumstance: breaking a tie after a panel
has considered an application. As to all substantive
matters concerning malpractice, the Legislature expressly
gave decision-making authority to the panels, not the
Director. We cannot glean from the Act implicit discretion
to redact averments in applications; nor will we read into
the Act such authority. We see no reasonable basis for
determining that the Legislature intended to grant such
discretion out of a concern that without such discretion
claimants would burden volunteer panels with frivolous
claims. Additionally, allowing the Director to eliminate
claims and averments would subvert an important purpose of
the Act, which is to assist a prevailing applicant in
"retaining a physician qualified in the field of medicine
involved." See § 41-5-23.
{23}
We conclude that the Director does not have any
discretion to redact an applicant's legal claims or factual
averments from an application to the Commission. In
reaching this decision, we intimate no opinion as to whether
failure to diagnose or treat transference and
countertransference constitutes malpractice or whether the
specific events in this case rise to the level of
malpractice.
CONCLUSION
{24}
We conclude the Director had no discretion to redact
portions of Petitioner's application before submitting her
application to the panel. We vacate the district court's
order and reverse and remand for entry of an order requiring
the Director to submit Petitioner's complete application to
a panel. Petitioner is awarded her costs on appeal.
{25}
IT IS SO ORDERED.
______________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
WE CONCUR:
_________________________________
A. JOSEPH ALARID, Judge
_________________________________
RUDY S. APODACA, Judge
The Director redacted the following from Petitioner's
application:
[The doctor] telephoned Ms. Kucel on a regular
basis while she was at home, inquired about her
condition, and indicated to Ms. Kucel that he was
seriously concerned about her welfare. The manner,
contact, and frequency of contact by [the doctor] with
Ms. Kucel, caused Ms. Kucel to develop a dependence
upon [the doctor] beyond that of a physician treating a
physical ailment. [The doctor] developed a personal
attraction for Ms. Kucel and used the telephone calls
to check on Ms. Kucel's condition as a subterfuge to
feed his personal attraction.
. . . [The doctor] failed to recognize that Ms.
Kucel totally relied on [him]. . . .
. . . .
. . . [The doctor] was negligent in continuing to
counsel Ms. Kucel after he had developed an
inappropriate attraction for Ms. Kucel.
. . . During each succeeding appointment, [the
doctor's] attraction for Ms. Kucel escalated from
telling her how beautiful she was to hugging her, to
kissing her, and to continuing telephone calls to Ms.
Kucel at her home.
After one of the appointments, [the doctor] asked
Ms. Kucel to have lunch with him. [The doctor] told
Ms. Kucel to meet him at the Stevens Motel in Carlsbad.
During lunch, [the doctor] talked about family,
religion, religious revivals, and about [his] concept
of beauty and how he thought a little extra weight
would make Ms. Kucel more attractive. [The doctor] was
drinking wine, offered some wine to Ms. Kucel, but Ms.
Kucel refused.
After lunch, [the doctor] went to the car with Ms.
Kucel. [The doctor] and Ms. Kucel stood by Ms. Kucel's
car. Ms. Kucel thanked [him] for lunch. [The doctor]
indicated that he wanted to see her again and felt that
he could help her with her problem. Ms. Kucel did not
respond either affirmatively or negatively.
. . . .
While admitting Ms. Kucel to the hospital, [the
doctor] told[] Ms. Kucel's husband . . . that [he] had
better not bring Ms. Kucel back in this condition again
or she could die and that [he (the doctor)] was the
only one that could save her. [The doctor], upon Ms.
Kucel's dismissal from Guadalupe Medical Center,
resisted Mr. Kucel's efforts to get Ms. Kucel admitted
to Charter Hospital. Only after Mr. Kucel threatened
to get another physician to be the referring physician,
did [the doctor] agree to be the referring physician.
. . . [During her hospitalization, the doctor]
came into Ms. Kucel's room one evening, french-kissed
Ms. Kucel, and told her how much he cared for her.
After Ms. Kucel was released from Guadalupe
Medical Center the second time, [the doctor] continued
to call Ms. Kucel at home. The telephone calls had at
this point, evolved into personal conversations in
which [the doctor] expressed his attraction for Ms.
Kucel. [He] told Ms. Kucel [that] he wanted to see her
and tried to give Ms. Kucel a number for her to reach
him.
Ms. Kucel finally contacted [the doctor] at his
office to tell [him] to not call her at home anymore.
[The doctor] told Ms. Kucel to meet him at his office
on a Saturday. When Ms. Kucel arrived, [the doctor]
met Ms. Kucel in the parking lot. [The doctor]
directed Ms. Kucel to [his] office. When Ms. Kucel
entered [his] office, [the doctor] backed Ms. Kucel up
against the door, began to french kiss her and leaned
her up against the reception desk.
Ms. Kucel, wanting to get away from the office,
suggested going for coffee. [The doctor] then
suggested that he knew where they could go. Ms. Kucel
followed [the doctor] in her car. [The doctor] drove
to the country, back to town, and eventually to a motel
in Carlsbad. [The doctor] registered and invited Ms.
Kucel to the room. After [she] entered the motel room,
[the doctor] offered Ms. Kucel some wine, undressed
himself and undressed Ms. Kucel. However, when both
parties were naked, [the doctor] noticed that Ms. Kucel
was very thin and covered with bruises and attempted
but was unable to consummate intercourse. [The doctor]
directed Ms. Kucel to perform oral sex on him and also
performed oral sex on Ms. Kucel.
After the incident at the motel, Ms. Kucel called
[the doctor] and told him she was sorry that she wasn't
what he expected. [The doctor] told Ms. Kucel that she
had done fine and he was the only [one who] could take care of her and heal her.
[The doctor] expressed at the time of the second
hospitalization to both Ms. Kucel and Mr. Kucel, that
Ms. Kucel's eating disorder was life-threatening
because of Ms. Kucel's inability to cope with self
image and the underlying psychological problems which
were responsible for her eating disorder. Following
Ms. Kucel's dismissal from the hospital and after the
sexual contact with Ms. Kucel, [the doctor] continued
to telephone Mr. [sic-Ms.] Kucel at home and inquire
about her condition but failed to follow up his
treatment of [her] by referring [her] to other health
professionals that could treat [her] serious and life
threatening psychological problems.
. . . [The doctor] embarked on a course of
treatment to build on Ms. Kucel's self-esteem by
inviting her to lunch, hugging [her], kissing [her],
making remarks about how her appearance would be
improved by additional weight and eventually attempting
intercourse with her. [The doctor's] attempt to treat
Ms. Kucel's self-esteem interfered with and
detrimentally affected the psychiatric treatment
provided by [another doctor].
. . . .
During the fall of 1994, [the doctor] continued to
call Mr. [sic-Ms.] Kucel on a regular basis to inquire
about Ms. Kucel's condition and to request copies of
[her] medical records at Charter. [The doctor]
continued to try to advise Mr. [sic-Ms.] Kucel and
influence [her] treatment . . . , until informed by
[another doctor], who was then Ms. Kucel's treating
psychologist, that Ms. Kucel had disclosed [the
doctor's] abuse, including [his] statements to Ms.
Kucel that he was the only one that could help [her]
and that without him, Ms. Kucel would perish.
. . . arising from [the doctor's] abuse . . . .
[The doctor's] attempts to limit Ms. Kucel's
contact with other physicians, therapists, and
psychiatrists was a last desperate attempt . . . to
continue control of Ms. Kucel and [the doctor's] method
of treatment. [The doctor's] treatment of Ms. Kucel's
self-esteem via hugging . . . , kissing . . . ,
commenting on Ms. Kucel's beauty being enhanced by
increased weight, and by attempting to enhance Ms.
Kucel's perception of her sexual desirability by having
intercourse with Ms. Kucel was an act of malpractice.
. . . .
. . . .
. . . .
. . . .
. . . .
. . . .
. . . Ms. Kucel's perception of [the doctor] as the
sole person with skill necessary to cure her, caused a
transfer of inappropriate feelings to [the doctor]. . .
. this transference.
. . . .
. . . .
[The doctor] was negligent in attempting to control the
treatment of Ms. Kucel and prevent discovery of his
abuse even up until the time Ms. Kucel was dismissed
from Charter Hospital as an in-patient;
[The doctor] was negligent in the care and
treatment of Ms. Kucel by failing to recognize that Ms.
Kucel had transferred feelings to [him];
[The doctor] was negligent in the care and
treatment of Ms. Kucel by failing to properly treat Ms.
Kucel's transference of her feelings toward [the
doctor] once the transference occurred;
[The doctor] was negligent in the care and
treatment of Ms. Kucel by failing to recognize and
treat his counter-transference of inappropriate
feelings for Ms. Kucel and burdened Ms. Kucel with
[his] inappropriate feelings.
. . . .