Mikel Lo, M.D. and Mikel W. Lo, M.d, Inc. v. Mills , 231 Ariz. 531 ( 2012 )


Menu:
  •                                                                   FILED BY CLERK
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS                   SEP 20 2012
    STATE OF ARIZONA
    DIVISION TWO                         COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION TWO
    MIKEL LO, M.D. and MIKEL W. LO,             )     2 CA-SA 2012-0044
    M.D., INC.,                                 )     DEPARTMENT A
    )
    Petitioners, )     OPINION
    )
    v.                     )
    )
    HON. KENNETH LEE, Judge of the              )
    Superior Court of the State of Arizona, in )
    and for the County of Pima,                 )
    )
    Respondent, )
    )
    and                      )
    )
    VALERIE A. and DARRELL K. MILLS, )
    wife and husband,                           )
    )
    Real Parties in Interest. )
    )
    SPECIAL ACTION PROCEEDING
    Pima County Cause No. C20105329
    JURISDICTION ACCEPTED; RELIEF DENIED
    Broening Oberg Woods & Wilson, PC
    By Michael J. Ryan and Michelle L. Donovan                                 Phoenix
    Attorneys for Petitioners
    Piccarreta Davis PC
    By Barry M. Davis and Amy Hernandez                                          Tucson
    Attorneys for Real Parties in Interest
    H O W A R D, Chief Judge.
    ¶1             Mikel Lo petitions this court for special action review of the respondent
    judge’s order denying his motion for summary judgment in plaintiff-respondent Valerie
    Mills’s medical malpractice action against him.1 He contends the respondent erred by
    concluding Mills’s designated standard-of-care expert was not barred from testifying by
    A.R.S. § 12-2604(A)(1). Because Lo has no equally plain and speedy remedy by appeal,
    and because this case presents an issue of first impression and of statewide importance,
    we accept special action jurisdiction. Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 1(a); Lear v. Fields, 
    226 Ariz. 226
    , ¶ 6, 
    245 P.3d 911
    , 914 (App. 2011). For the reasons that follow, however, we
    deny relief.
    ¶2             In July 2010, Mills sued Lo, a board-certified ophthalmologist with a
    claimed subspecialty in oculoplastic surgery, asserting he had fallen below the applicable
    standard of care in performing a “laser facial skin treatment” on Mills, and she had
    suffered numerous injuries and complications as a result. Lo filed a motion for summary
    judgment and a motion to disqualify Mills’s standard-of-care expert, Dr. James Chao, a
    board-certified plastic surgeon. Lo argued that, pursuant to § 12-2604(A)(1), Chao was
    not qualified to testify against Lo because he was not a board-certified ophthalmologist
    and Mills, therefore, could not meet her burden of demonstrating Lo had violated the
    standard of care.
    1
    This matter includes Mikel W. Lo, M.D., Inc. as a defendant and Mills’s husband,
    Darrell, as a plaintiff. For ease of reference, we refer to Lo and Mills as individuals
    throughout this decision.
    2
    ¶3            The respondent judge denied Lo’s motion, reasoning that, although Lo was
    a board-certified ophthalmologist, he was also a specialist in cosmetic plastic surgery,
    and that the procedure he had performed on Mills fell within the latter specialty. Thus,
    the respondent concluded Chao, as a board-certified plastic surgeon, was qualified to
    offer testimony pursuant to § 12-2604(A)(1).
    ¶4            Lo claims the respondent judge erred by concluding Chao was qualified
    under § 12-2604 to testify concerning the appropriate standard of care. “Arizona law
    requires a plaintiff who asserts a medical negligence claim against a health care
    professional to prove that the health care professional failed to comply with the
    applicable standard of care.” Awsienko v. Cohen, 
    227 Ariz. 256
    , ¶ 8, 
    257 P.3d 175
    , 177
    (App. 2011), citing A.R.S. § 12-563. Section 12-2604(A)(1) requires an expert testifying
    “on the appropriate standard of practice or care” to have certain qualifications:
    If the party against whom or on whose behalf the
    testimony is offered is or claims to be a specialist, [the expert]
    specializes at the time of the occurrence that is the basis for
    the action in the same specialty or claimed specialty as the
    party against whom or on whose behalf the testimony is
    offered. If the party against whom or on whose behalf the
    testimony is offered is or claims to be a specialist who is
    board certified, the expert witness shall be a specialist who is
    board certified in that specialty or claimed specialty.
    ¶5            In Baker v. University Physicians Healthcare, we determined the
    legislature intended the term “specialty,” as used in § 12-2604(A)(1), to refer to the
    twenty-four specialty boards established by the American Board of Medical Specialties
    3
    (ABMS),2 and did not include subspecialties. 
    228 Ariz. 587
    , ¶¶ 7-8, 13, 
    269 P.3d 1211
    ,
    1214-15 (App. 2012). We also concluded the legislature chose “to base a testifying
    expert’s qualifications . . . on the training and certification of the specialist.” Id. ¶ 10. By
    doing so and using the ABMS boards, the legislature gave litigants an objective and
    verifiable standard to determine before filing an action what qualifications an expert must
    have in order to testify. Thus, we concluded an expert who was board certified in the
    ABMS specialty of internal medicine, with a subspecialty in hematology, did not qualify
    under § 12-2604(A)(1) to testify against the defendant, who was board certified in the
    ABMS specialty of pediatrics with a subspecialty in pediatric hematology. Id. ¶¶ 11-12.
    And we noted that we did not “decide if or in what way § 12-2604 applies when a
    defendant specialist is acting outside of his or her specialty.” Id. n.2.
    ¶6            Lo is a board-certified ophthalmologist. The ABMS describes that area of
    practice as follows:
    Ophthalmology is a specialty focused on the medical
    and surgical care of the eyes. Ophthalmologists are the only
    physicians medically trained to manage the complete range of
    the eye and vision care. They can prescribe glasses and
    contact lenses, dispense medications, diagnose and treat eye
    conditions and diseases and perform surgeries.
    2
    Baker and this case address the application of § 12-2604(A)(1) and the definition
    of “specialty” in the context of medical doctors covered by the ABMS. We do not
    consider whether the term “specialty” as applied to other health care professionals would
    be governed by other specialty boards, such as those established by the American
    Osteopathic      Association      (AOA).          See      AOA       Specialty     Boards
    https://www.osteopathic.org/inside-aoa/development/aoa-board-certification/Pages/aoa-
    specialty-boards.aspx (last visited Sept. 5, 2012) (listing eighteen specialty boards for
    doctors of osteopathy).
    4
    ABMS Member Boards, Ophthalmology, http://www.certificationmatters.org/abms-
    member-boards/ophthalmology.aspx (last visited Jul. 30, 2012). This definition does not
    specifically include plastic surgery. Lo acknowledges plastic surgeons perform facial
    laser resurfacing “such as [he] performed on [Mills],” but contends that, because the
    procedure also is performed by ophthalmologists with Lo’s particular claimed
    subspecialty—oculoplastic surgery, Chao is not qualified as an expert because he is not a
    board-certified ophthalmologist. Given that Lo is a board-certified ophthalmologist and
    the record supports his assertion that ophthalmologists perform this procedure, a board-
    certified ophthalmologist, otherwise qualified under Rule 702, Ariz. R. Evid., would
    qualify to testify pursuant to § 12-2604(A)(1).
    ¶7              But the respondent judge found that Lo also was a specialist, or at least
    claimed to be a specialist, in “cosmetic plastic surgery.” Plastic surgery is a recognized
    ABMS board and “deals with the repair, reconstruction or replacement of physical
    defects    of   form      or   function   involving   the   skin,   musculoskeletal   system,
    craniomaxillofacial structures, hand, extremities, breast and trunk and external genitalia
    or cosmetic enhancement of these areas of the body.” ABMS Member Boards, Plastic
    Surgery,    http://www.certificationmatters.org/abms-member-boards/plastic-surgery.aspx
    (last visited Jul. 30, 2012). “Cosmetic surgery is an essential component of plastic
    surgery,” id., and there is no ABMS member board for cosmetic surgery, see ABMS
    Member Boards, http://www.certificationmatters.org/abms-member-boards.aspx (last
    visited Sept. 6, 2012).
    5
    ¶8            Lo argues, however, that there is a distinction between cosmetic surgery
    and plastic surgery. At oral argument before this court he asserted he has not claimed a
    specialty in plastic surgery. He maintains rather that he was acting as an ophthalmologist
    performing cosmetic surgery. We disagree. First, the ABMS description of the practice
    of ophthalmology does not include cosmetic surgery, but the ABMS description of plastic
    surgery does.    Additionally, even assuming a distinction in these circumstances is
    meaningful, Lo’s argument is flatly contradicted by the record. In making his ruling, the
    respondent judge reviewed the information on Lo’s internet website which claims Lo has
    “master[ed] the art of cosmetic surgery,” including “general cosmetic surgery” and states
    he is “[b]oard eligible” for the “American Board of Cosmetic Surgery.” The website
    additionally describes Lo as “one of Tucson, Arizona’s leading cosmetic surgeons and
    facial plastic surgeons,” and states that “[h]is specialties include modern techniques in
    cosmetic surgery, facial plastic surgery and reconstructive surgery.”
    ¶9            Lo contended at oral argument that the contents of his website are irrelevant
    to determining whether he has a claimed specialty. Although we need not determine the
    full range of information that could establish whether a medical professional has a
    claimed specialty as contemplated by § 12-2604(A)(1), it clearly includes public
    assertions made by that professional in describing his or her areas of expertise. See
    Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 414 (1971) (definition of “claim” includes “to
    assert”); see also Rigel Corp. v. State, 
    225 Ariz. 65
    , ¶ 19, 
    234 P.3d 633
    , 637 (App. 2010)
    (court may consider common usage and dictionary definition when legislature has not
    6
    defined term). Based on Lo’s declarations on his website, he claims to be a specialist in
    plastic surgery as contemplated by § 12-2604(A)(1). Because Lo has a board-certified
    specialty in ophthalmology and a claimed specialty in plastic surgery, we must determine
    what qualifications § 12-2604(A) requires an expert witness to have in that situation.
    ¶10            “When interpreting a statute, our goal is ‘to fulfill the intent of the
    legislature that wrote it.’”     Baker, 
    228 Ariz. 587
    , ¶ 5, 269 P.3d at 1213, quoting
    Awsienko, 
    227 Ariz. 256
    , ¶ 11, 
    257 P.3d at 177
    . In doing so, “[w]e first look to the
    statute’s language and if its meaning is clear, we rely on the plain language rather than
    utilizing other ways of interpreting the statute.” 
    Id.
     “If a statute is ambiguous, such as
    when terms are undefined, ‘we determine legislative intent by looking first to the text and
    context of the statute.’” 
    Id.,
     quoting Kent K. v. Bobby M., 
    210 Ariz. 279
    , ¶¶ 14-15, 
    110 P.3d 1013
    , 1017 (2005). And § 1-211(B), A.R.S., requires us to interpret statutes
    “liberally . . . to effect their objects and to promote justice.”
    ¶11            Section 12-2604 requires “expert testimony on the appropriate standard of
    practice or care” for a specialty. As this court noted in Awsienko, the legislature intended
    that § 12-2604(A) “ensure that physicians testifying as experts have sufficient expertise
    to truly assist the fact-finder on issues of standard of care and proximate causation.” 
    227 Ariz. 256
    , ¶ 13, 
    257 P.3d at 178
    . The statute does not define the term “specialty” nor
    does its plain language require that, when a party has multiple specialties, a testifying
    expert must match each of those specialties, but rather only the relevant specialty, to
    testify about the “appropriate standard of . . . care.” § 12-2604(A)(1). To interpret § 12-
    7
    2604(A)(1) to require that a testifying expert match each specialty of a party with
    multiple specialties goes far beyond the intent of the legislature as determined in
    Awsienko and could lead to unmanageable and absurd results. See State v. Barragan-
    Sierra, 
    219 Ariz. 276
    , ¶ 17, 
    196 P.3d 879
    , 885 (App. 2008) (“We employ a common
    sense approach [when construing statutory language], reading the statute in terms of its
    stated purpose and the system of related statutes of which it forms a part, while taking
    care to avoid absurd results.”); see also Patches v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    220 Ariz. 179
    , ¶ 10,
    
    204 P.3d 437
    , 440 (App. 2009) (“[C]ourts must, where possible, avoid construing statutes
    in such a manner as to produce absurd or unconstitutional results.”).
    ¶12           In many cases where a party has multiple specialties or claimed specialties,
    some of those specialties would have no relevance to the underlying claim and would not
    determine “the appropriate standard of care.” Therefore, common sense would dictate
    that the testifying expert need not be trained in those specialties. And, as we noted
    above, we determined in Baker that the legislature chose “to base a testifying expert’s
    qualifications . . . on the training and certification of the specialist.” 
    228 Ariz. 587
    , ¶ 10,
    269 P.3d at 1215. Additionally, our interpretation of § 12-2604 is consistent with Rule
    702, Ariz. R. Evid., which requires any expert to possess “scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge [that] will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to
    determine a fact in issue.”
    ¶13           Moreover, a party with an uncommon or disparate set of specialties would
    be insulated from a malpractice claim despite the fact that one or more of the party’s
    8
    specialties might be wholly unrelated to the merits of the claim. And, because § 12-
    2604(A)(1) encompasses claimed specialties, such an interpretation might encourage
    parties to claim specialties they arguably do not possess to further decrease the likelihood
    that a qualifying expert could be found to testify against them. Neither of these results
    furthers legislative intent, and both arguably are inconsistent with our constitution.
    Article XVIII, § 6 of our constitution ensures that “[t]he right of action to recover
    damages for injuries shall never be abrogated.” Thus, although the legislature may
    regulate a right of action, “it must ‘leave[] a claimant reasonable alternatives or choices
    which will enable him or her to bring the action.        It may not, under the guise of
    ‘regulation,’ so affect the fundamental right to sue for damages as to effectively deprive
    the claimant of the ability to bring the action.’” Duncan v. Scottsdale Medical Imaging,
    Ltd., 
    205 Ariz. 306
    , ¶ 30, 
    70 P.3d 435
    , 442 (2003), quoting Barrio v. San Manuel Div.
    Hosp. for Magma Copper Co., 
    143 Ariz. 101
    , 106, 
    692 P.2d 280
    , 285 (1984) (alteration
    in Duncan).     Although we do not suggest it would render the statute facially
    unconstitutional, to interpret § 12-2604(A)(1) to require a testifying expert to match each
    and every specialty claimed by a party could, in some cases, so limit a plaintiff’s ability
    to secure an expert that his or her right of action would effectively be foreclosed. See
    Baker, 
    228 Ariz. 587
    , ¶ 21, 269 P.3d at 1216-17 (rejecting claim § 12-2604(A)(1)
    violates anti-abrogation clause in part because claimant “has not demonstrated that he
    was unable to procure a testifying expert”). We decline to interpret the statute in such a
    9
    way as to invite constitutional attack. See Patches, 
    220 Ariz. 179
    , ¶ 10, 
    204 P.3d at 440
    (court must avoid unconstitutional result in interpreting statute).
    ¶14           Lo claims to be a plastic surgery specialist. Chao is a board-certified
    plastic surgery specialist.   Therefore, Chao is qualified under § 12-2604 to testify
    concerning the appropriate standard of care.
    ¶15           As we understand his arguments, Lo further suggests that, because he is
    board certified in ophthalmology, the second sentence of § 12-2604(A)(1) requires that
    any testifying expert be board certified in ophthalmology irrespective of whatever other
    specialties Lo may have or claim to have. The above analysis applies to this sentence
    also. The second sentence of § 12-2604(A)(1) requires that the witness be board certified
    in a specialty in which the party is board certified. But, Lo is not board certified in
    plastic surgery, an ABMS specialty. Much like the statute’s first sentence, to read the
    second sentence to require an expert also to be board certified in the same specialty in
    which the party is board certified, when such specialty may have no application to the
    appropriate standard of care, could improperly insulate the party from relevant expert
    testimony regarding one of his or her other applicable specialties. We will not read the
    statute to compel this absurd result. See Barragan-Sierra, 
    219 Ariz. 276
    , ¶ 17, 
    196 P.3d at 885
    ; Patches, 
    220 Ariz. 179
    , ¶ 10, 
    204 P.3d at 440
    .
    ¶16           For the reasons stated, we conclude the respondent judge did not abuse his
    discretion in denying Lo’s motion to disqualify Mills’s expert and motion for summary
    judgment. See Ariz. R. P. Spec. Actions 3(c) (special action relief appropriate when
    10
    respondent abused discretion); Sonoran Desert Investigators, Inc. v. Miller, 
    213 Ariz. 274
    , ¶ 5, 
    141 P.3d 754
    , 756 (App. 2006) (denial of motion for summary judgment
    reviewed for abuse of discretion). Thus, although we accept jurisdiction of this special
    action, we deny relief.
    /s/ Joseph W. Howard
    JOSEPH W. HOWARD, Chief Judge
    CONCURRING:
    /s/ Peter J. Eckerstrom
    PETER J. ECKERSTROM, Presiding Judge
    /s/ J.   William Brammer, Jr.
    J. WILLIAM BRAMMER, JR., Judge*
    *A retired judge of the Arizona Court of Appeals authorized and assigned to sit as
    a judge on the Court of Appeals, Division Two, pursuant to Arizona Supreme Court
    Order filed August 15, 2012.
    11