L.L. v. Orinda Care Center CA1/1 ( 2021 )


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  • Filed 12/8/21 L.L. v. Orinda Care Center CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not
    certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been
    certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    L.L., et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,                         A163601
    v.
    ORINDA CARE CENTER, LLC, et                                (Contra Costa County
    al.,                                                       Super. Ct. No. MSC21-
    Defendants and Respondents.                           00589)
    After suffering a stroke, plaintiff L.L.1 was admitted to the Orinda Care
    Center LLC (Orinda), a skilled nursing facility. In the pending action, she
    alleges violation of the Patient’s Bill of Rights,2 elder abuse/neglect, and
    negligence. Her daughter, Regina, is also a plaintiff and alleges a cause of
    action for negligent infliction of emotional distress.
    Orinda brought a motion to compel arbitration of all causes of action
    based on L.L.’s admission documentation. The trial court denied the motion,
    ruling (a) Regina, who executed the documentation, did not have authority to
    To protect plaintiff’s privacy interests, we refer to her by her initials,
    1
    and to protect the privacy interests of her immediate family, we refer to them
    by their first names. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.90 (b)(2), (8).)
    Health and Safety Code section 1430, subdivision (b); California Code
    2
    of Regulations, title 22., section 72527.
    1
    bind L.L. to arbitration, and (b) Regina did not sign the arbitration
    agreement in her individual capacity. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    L.L. was admitted into Orinda in March 2019, after suffering a stroke.
    At the time, she was “half unconscious” and had “difficulty understanding
    English.” She also had a PEG tube for feeding and an in-dwelling Foley
    catheter due to incontinence.
    A few days after L.L.’s admission, Orinda gave Regina a “package of
    admission documents” and told her she “had to sign all fields which required
    a signature.” L.L. had no power of attorney or advance health care directive
    at the time, nor was she a conservatee.3
    Regina signed the admission agreement as “Resident Representative.”
    The agreement explained, “References to the ‘Resident’s Representative’ are
    references to [Regina], the person who will sign on your behalf to admit you
    to this Facility, and/or who is authorized to make decisions for you in the
    event you are unable to. To the extent permitted by law, you may designate a
    person as your Representative at any time.”
    One of the documents Regina signed was titled “Resident-Facility
    Arbitration Agreement.” It provided in part: “any dispute as to medical
    malpractice . . . [¶] . . . [or] any dispute between Resident and Facility,
    including any action for injury or death arising from negligence, intentional
    tort and/or statutory causes of action . . . will be determined by submission to
    arbitration as provided by California law and not by lawsuit or resort to court
    process except as California law provides for judicial review of arbitration
    proceedings. Resident and Facility, as parties to this agreement, are giving
    3   Regina applied to be appointed L.L.’s guardian ad litem in order to
    file this lawsuit.
    2
    up their Constitutional rights to have a dispute under this agreement decided
    in a court of law before a jury, and instead are accepting the use of
    arbitration. . . . [¶] . . . [¶] Agreement to arbitrate is not a precondition for
    medical treatment or for admission to this facility. [¶] . . . This agreement
    may be rescinded by written notice within thirty (30) days of signature. This
    Agreement is binding on all parties, including their personal representatives,
    successors, family members, and heirs. [¶] . . . [¶] You do not, however, give
    up your right to sue for a violation of the Patient’s Bill of Rights.”4
    (Capitalization & color text omitted.)
    The arbitration agreement further provided “The undersigned certifies
    that he/she . . . is either the Resident, or is the representative of the
    Resident, duly authorized to execute the above and accept its terms.” Regina
    signed the agreement as the “Resident Representative.” L.L. did not sign the
    agreement.
    Regina also signed a Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment
    form (POLST) on L.L.’s behalf in March 2019.
    L.L. was discharged multiple times from Orinda in order to be admitted
    to the hospital. Orinda “had a rule that every time [L.L.] was admitted to the
    hospital they did not need to hold her bed for more than 7 days.” After four of
    the discharges which were longer than seven days, Orinda presented new
    readmission documents, which included new arbitration agreements, for
    signature. Each time L.L. was admitted to Orinda, “she was not able to sign
    4 Orinda does not dispute that the arbitration agreement does not
    apply to L.L.’s cause of action for violation of the Patient’s Bill of Rights.
    Instead, it maintains the trial court should have stayed that claim “until
    after the rest of [plaintiffs’] claims have been fully arbitrated.” L.L. asserts
    the converse: “any arbitrable claims must be stayed” until the remaining
    claims are tried. As we shall explain, we need not and do not reach that
    issue.
    3
    because she suffered from dementia; therefore the documents were presented
    to [L.L.’s son Leonid] or . . . Regina to sign. [She] was unable to tell the staff
    if she wanted [Regina or Leonid] to sign the documents for her.”
    Due to COVID-19 restrictions, Leonid could not visit L.L. at Orinda for
    several months. When Leonid was able to visit in April 2021 he “was told
    [he] needed to sign admission documents for her July 30, 2020 and
    September 9, 2020 admissions which had not yet been signed.” Leonid signed
    the admission documents but refused to sign the arbitration agreements.
    In April 2021, Regina signed an “Attestation of Responsible Party”
    which stated in part: “I attest I am the Responsible Party as indicated above
    for [L.L.] who was admitted to Orinda Care Center on 9/9/20. I have the
    authority to sign the Admission Agreement and to make medical decisions for
    [L.L.]”
    In March 2021, L.L. and Regina filed suit against Orinda, with Regina
    acting as L.L.’s guardian ad litem. They alleged Orinda failed to monitor
    L.L.’s PEG tube, resulting in L.L. being hospitalized with sepsis due to her
    PEG tube feeding into her peritoneal cavity rather than her stomach. They
    also alleged Orinda failed to monitor, prevent, and treat L.L.’s pressure
    ulcers, and that Orinda failed to provide adequate catheter care, resulting in
    infection and acute kidney failure.
    After defendants filed an answer, they filed a petition to compel
    arbitration. The trial court denied the petition. It found it “was undisputed
    that [L.L.] did not sign an arbitration agreement, . . . [¶] . . . [¶] . . . [and] no
    evidence shows [L.L.] authorized Regina, or anyone else, to act on her behalf.”
    The court ruled, in turn, that Regina’s ability to make certain medical
    decisions for her mother L.L., “including signing a ‘Physician Orders for Life
    4
    Sustaining Treatment form,’ ” did not mean Regina had “the ability to
    commit her mother to arbitration.”
    DISCUSSION
    Actual Authority
    Orinda maintains the court erred in ruling Regina had no actual or
    ostensible authority to sign the arbitration agreement on behalf of L.L.
    “ ‘ “Generally speaking, one must be a party to an arbitration
    agreement to be bound by it or invoke it.” [Citations.] “There are exceptions
    to the general rule that a nonsignatory to an agreement cannot be compelled
    to arbitrate and cannot invoke an agreement to arbitrate, without being a
    party to the arbitration agreement.” ’ [Citation.] ‘ “ ‘As one authority has
    stated, there are six theories by which a nonsignatory may be bound to
    arbitrate: “(a) incorporation by reference; (b) assumption; (c) agency; (d) veil-
    piercing or alter ego; (e) estoppel; and (f) third-party beneficiary.” ’ ” ’ ”
    (Pillar Project AG v. Payward Ventures, Inc. (2021) 
    64 Cal.App.5th 671
    , 675
    (Pillar Project).) “ ‘ “ ‘Whether an arbitration agreement is binding on a third
    party (e.g., a nonsignatory) is a question of law subject to de novo review.’ ” ’ ”
    (Ibid.)
    Orinda maintains Regina had both “actual authority to sign the
    arbitration agreement” and ostensible authority to do so. “Actual authority
    arises as a consequence of conduct of the principal which causes an agent
    reasonably to believe that the principal consents to the agent’s execution of
    an act on behalf of the principal. [Citations.] Similarly, ostensible authority
    arises as a result of conduct of the principal which causes the third party
    reasonably to believe that the agent possesses the authority to act on the
    principal’s behalf.” (Tomerlin v. Canadian Indemnity Co. (1964) 
    61 Cal.2d 638
    , 643 (Tomerlin), italics omitted; Civ. Code, §§ 2316, 2317.)
    5
    Courts have generally concluded that, where a patient has not
    designated a relative as an agent or given them power of attorney, that
    relative has no authority to enter into an arbitration agreement on behalf of
    the patient. (Goldman v. Sunbridge Healthcare, LLC (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 1160
    , 1176–1177 (Goldman); Pagarigan v. Libby Care Center, Inc. (2002)
    
    99 Cal.App.4th 298
    , 301–303 (Pagarigan); Warfield v. Summerville Senior
    Living, Inc. (2007) 
    158 Cal.App.4th 443
    , 448–449 (Warfield).)
    In Goldman, the decedent’s wife (Wife) sued two skilled nursing
    facilities on behalf of her husband for elder abuse, fraud, and violations of the
    Patient’s Bill of Rights, and on her own behalf for negligent infliction of
    emotional distress and wrongful death. (Goldman, supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at
    pp. 1165–1166.) Wife had signed an arbitration agreement as part of the
    facility’s documentation. (Id. at p. 1166.) Her husband had executed a
    “Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care and Living Will” that appointed
    Wife as “his health care agent in the event he became unable to make
    decisions for himself.” (Ibid.) Wife declared “ ‘a person from the facility
    merely told me that I needed to sign some more forms for my husband. The
    person . . . did not say what the forms were, that they involved arbitration, or
    that there was a choice. . . . The person . . . never inquired of me whether my
    husband was capable of signing the documents. . . . Had this issue been
    raised, I certainly would have told the facility employee that my husband was
    capable of making his own health care decisions.’ ” (Id. at pp. 1166–1167.)
    The court concluded Wife was not authorized to sign the arbitration
    agreement on Husband’s behalf. It pointed out there was no evidence
    Husband lacked the capacity to make his own decisions, and therefore Wife
    had no power to bind Husband under the durable power of attorney and
    advance directive. (Goldman, supra, 220 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1170–1171.)
    6
    Wife likewise had no inherent authority as a spouse to contractually bind
    Husband to the arbitration agreement, and there was no evidence Husband
    conferred authority on Wife as his agent to sign the arbitration agreement.
    (Id. at pp. 1171–1172.) The court also rejected the facilities’ claim that
    “labeling [Wife] as [Husband’s] ‘representative’ somehow conferred upon her
    the decisionmaking authority he expressly retained for himself.” (Id. at
    p. 1174.)
    Similarly, in Pagarigan, two daughters signed an arbitration
    agreement with a skilled nursing facility after their mother was admitted.
    (Pagarigan, supra, 99 Cal.App.4th at pp. 300, 301–302.) Mother “was
    mentally incompetent at the time she was admitted . . . [and] [t]here was no
    evidence [she] had signed a durable power of attorney.” (Id. at p. 301.) The
    court concluded “It necessarily follows [their mother] lacked the capacity to
    authorize either daughter to enter into the arbitration agreements on her
    behalf.” (Ibid.) The court also rejected the facility’s claim of actual or
    ostensible agency, stating there was “no evidence [their mother] had ever
    employed either of her daughters as her agent in any capacity. Nor did [the
    facility] produce any evidence this comatose and mentally incompetent
    woman did anything which caused them to believe either of her daughters
    was authorized to act as her agent in any capacity.” (Id. at p. 302.) Lastly,
    the court rejected the facility’s claim that the daughters’ authority as “next of
    kin” to “make medical treatment decisions for the patient at the request of
    the treating physician translates into authority to sign an arbitration
    agreement on the patient’s behalf.” (Ibid.)
    Likewise, in Warfield, the court rejected a residential care facility’s
    claim that a husband had authority to sign an arbitration agreement binding
    his wife, both as her spouse and her “ostensible agent.” (Warfield, supra,
    7
    158 Cal.App.4th at pp. 446, 448–449.) The court observed “ ‘ “ ‘formation of
    an agency relationship is a bilateral matter. Words or conduct by both
    principal and agent are necessary to create the relationship.’ ” ’ ” (Id. at
    p. 448, italics omitted.) Because “the facility has presented absolutely no
    evidence of the wife’s ‘express or implied consent to have her husband act as
    her agent,’ ” the arbitration agreement did not bind the wife. (Ibid.)
    Orinda nevertheless claims, here, that Regina had both actual and
    ostensible authority to sign the arbitration agreement and bind her mother.
    Relying on two much older cases—Tomerlin, supra, 
    61 Cal.2d 638
     and County
    First National Bank v. Coast Dairies & Land Co. (1941) 
    46 Cal.App.2d 355
    (First National)—Orinda asserts L.L. “conferred actual authority on Regina
    to sign the arbitration agreement despite there not being an official power of
    attorney.”
    The issue in Tomerlin was whether “an attorney hired by an insurance
    company to defend an insured possesse[d] the authority to bind the insurer
    with regard to coverage of the policy.” (Tomerlin, supra, 61 Cal.2d at p. 643.)
    Because the attorney had informed the insured’s personal attorney that the
    insurance company “ ‘was continuing without a reservation of rights to
    defend the action,’ ” the insured permitted his personal attorney to withdraw
    from the case. (Id. at p. 642.) After the plaintiff dismissed the negligence
    counts against the insured, the insured asked the attorney if “ ‘this changed
    the picture as far as [the] insurance coverage was concerned, and he said no,
    that the coverage is still the same.’ ” (Ibid.) Immediately after the verdict
    against the insured, the attorney also assured the insured’s wife that “the
    insurance company remained liable.” (Ibid.) A month later, however, the
    attorney informed the insured that the insurer “disclaimed any liability to
    pay the . . . judgment.” (Ibid.)
    8
    The trial court found the attorney’s representations were binding on
    the insurance company, and that the insured had permitted his personal
    attorney to withdraw in reliance on those representations. (Tomerlin, supra,
    61 Cal.2d at p. 643.)
    On appeal, the court explained the claim that the attorney lacked
    authority to bind the insured was “a challenge to the sufficiency of the
    evidence; we need therefore determine only whether the record contains any
    substantial evidence to support the findings of the trial court.” (Tomerlin,
    supra, 61 Cal.2d at p. 643.)
    The court indicated substantial evidence supported the trial court’s
    finding of both actual and ostensible authority. The evidence showed the
    insurer engaged the attorney to represent the insured in the lawsuit and to
    represent its own interests. (Tomerlin, supra, 61 Cal.2d at p. 644.) The
    insurer “failed to notify [the attorney] of any actual limitations upon his
    authority although it knew [the attorney] concerned himself with the
    question of policy coverage and, indeed, had notified [the insurer] that its
    reservation of rights agreement was ineffective.” (Ibid.) There was “a
    volume of correspondence between [the attorney] and [the insurer]
    concerning coverage problems. [The insurer’s] silence in the face of this
    continuing correspondence could reasonably cause [the attorney] to believe
    that he possessed actual authority to represent [the insurer] in his relations
    with [the insured] concerning questions of coverage.” (Ibid.)
    As to ostensible authority, the court concluded the insurer’s “conduct in
    retaining [the attorney] and in remaining silent in the face of actual
    knowledge of [the attorney’s] participation in coverage problems constitutes
    sufficient evidence to sustain a finding of ostensible authority.” (Tomerlin,
    supra, 61 Cal.2d at pp. 644–645.)
    9
    In First National, the general manager of a land company executed a
    promissory note on its behalf. (First National, supra, 46 Cal.App.2d at
    p. 357.) The trial court found the general manager had neither express nor
    implied authority to execute the note. (Ibid.)
    The Court of Appeal reversed. (First National, supra, 46 Cal.App.2d at
    p. 367.) The undisputed facts showed the general manager had been acting
    as such for over 10 years. (Id. at p. 358.) He was in “full charge of all of the
    company’s affairs,” including the corporate records and seal and finances of
    the company, fixing and collecting rentals, negotiating for the sale of real
    estate, making investments for the company, keeping the company books,
    and settling litigation. (Ibid.) Signature cards were filed with the bank
    authorizing the general manager to draw checks on the land company’s
    account. All correspondence with the bank for over 10 years was “over [his]
    signature, and during all of such period he conducted business with the bank
    personally and by correspondence as the general manager of the company.”
    (Ibid.) The vice-president knew the general manager “signed notes and
    renewal notes on behalf of [the land company], and that this was done with
    his full knowledge and permission.” (Ibid.) While there was no authorization
    at the bank permitting the general manager to “borrow for the account of the
    company, the renewals [of the note], which preserved the credit of the
    company, were without dissent on [the company’s] part, and payments
    thereon . . . were made through [the general manager] for the account of the
    company.” (Id. at p. 360.) The company did not repudiate any of the general
    manager’s dealings with the bank on its behalf over the course of more than a
    decade. (Id. at pp. 360–361.)
    The facts in Tomerlin and First National bear no resemblance to the
    case at hand. There is no dispute that L.L. had not granted Regina power of
    10
    attorney, had not executed an advance health care directive, and was not a
    conservatee. There is no evidence she ever authorized Regina to bind her
    contractually, no evidence Regina had ever done so before, and no evidence
    that she was aware that Regina was so acting and acquiesced. Indeed, at the
    time L.L. was admitted to Orinda, she had suffered a stroke, was “half
    unconscious,” and had difficulty understanding English. She also suffered
    from dementia and was unable to tell the staff if she wanted her children to
    sign any documents for her.
    Despite L.L.’s undisputed medical and cognitive issues, Orinda claims
    L.L. “had a general idea of Regina’s actions in signing the arbitration
    agreement.” It also asserts “[d]espite understanding that she had been
    admitted and readmitted to Orinda to receive medical care, [L.L.] did not
    object to or attempt to limit Regina’s power to make medical decisions and to
    sign medical documents on [her] behalf.” Orinda concludes “[i]t is thus
    apparent that [L.L.] conferred implied actual authority onto Regina to make
    medical decisions on [her] behalf.”
    Orinda provides no citation to the record for these factual claims, nor
    could it. There is simply no evidence in the record L.L. “had a general idea of
    Regina’s actions in signing the arbitration agreement,” or understood she was
    being “admitted and readmitted to Orinda to receive medical care” but failed
    to object to Regina signing documents on her behalf. Indeed, all evidence is to
    the contrary.
    Ostensible Authority
    Orinda alternatively claims Regina had ostensible authority to sign the
    arbitration agreement.
    “ ‘An agency is ostensible when the principal intentionally, or by want
    of ordinary care, causes a third person to believe another to be his agent who
    11
    is not really employed by him.’ [Citation.] ‘A principal is bound by acts of his
    agent, under a merely ostensible authority, to those persons only who have in
    good faith, and without want of ordinary care, incurred a liability or parted
    with value, upon the faith thereof.’ (Civ. Code, § 2334.) ‘Before recovery can
    be had against the principal for the acts of an ostensible agent, three
    requirements must be met: The person dealing with an agent must do so
    with a reasonable belief in the agent’s authority, such belief must be
    generated by some act or neglect by the principal sought to be charged[,] and
    the person relying on the agent’s apparent authority must not be negligent in
    holding that belief.’ ” (Markow v. Rosner (2016) 
    3 Cal.App.5th 1027
    , 1038
    (Markow).)
    Orinda claims it was led to believe “Regina had the necessary authority
    to sign the arbitration agreement . . . [because she] signed an attestation
    stating that she was [L.L.’s] princip[al] medical decisionmaker.” Orinda cites
    the “Attestation of Responsible Party” signed by Regina, which states in part:
    “I attest that I am the Responsible Party as indicated above for [L.L.] who
    was admitted to Orinda Care Center on 9/9/2020. I have the authority to sign
    the Admission Agreement and to make medical decisions for [L.L.].”5 The
    document indicates it was signed on April 15, 2021. Orinda also asserts
    Regina’s execution of the POLST and “other medical documents,” combined
    with L.L.’s “failure to limit her daughter’s authority in any way” led Orinda
    “to reasonably believe [Regina] had [the] authority to sign the arbitration
    agreement.”
    5  Regina maintains the attestation form in the record cited by Orinda
    “was actually signed by [L.L.’s] son, Leonid.” Although the signature is not
    legible, the form itself indicates it was signed by Regina as L.L.’s daughter.
    Even if the attestation form was signed by Leonid rather than Regina, it has
    no effect on our conclusion as to the claim of ostensible authority.
    12
    Orinda’s ostensible agency theory suffers from two fatal flaws. The
    first is that ostensible agency cannot be predicated on action of the supposed
    agent, but “ ‘must be generated by some act or neglect by the principal sought
    to be charged’ ” (Markow, supra, 3 Cal.App.5th at p. 1038, italics added.) “A
    person cannot become the agent of another merely by representing herself as
    such.” (Pagarigan, supra, 99 Cal.App.4th at p. 301.) Orinda has pointed to
    no evidence of any “ ‘act or neglect’ ” (Markow, at p. 1038) by L.L. that could
    generate a reasonable belief that Regina was her agent for purposes of
    signing the arbitration agreement. Orinda’s reliance on the attestation form,
    signed by Regina, is not evidence of any act or neglect by L.L. To quote
    Pagarigan, Orinda does not explain “how the next of kin’s authority to make
    medical treatment decisions for the patient . . . translates into authority to
    sign the arbitration agreement.” (Pagarigan, at p. 302.)
    The second flaw in Orinda’s claim is that the attestation form provides
    no evidence that L.L. had given Regina authority to make decisions for her
    regarding arbitration agreements. It states only that Regina is the
    “Responsible Party as indicated above” with “authority to sign the Admission
    Agreement and to make medical decisions for [L.L.].” “[A]s indicated above”
    refers to the section in the attestation agreement indicating “Relationship to
    patient.” That section identified Regina as “Family Member . . . daughter,”
    rather than the other choices of “Durable Power of Healthcare,” “Power of
    Attorney,” or “Legal Guardian.”
    Furthermore, the attestation form was not signed at the time of L.L.’s
    initial admission in March 2019, when Regina signed the arbitration
    agreement; rather, it was signed more than two years later. Thus, even if the
    attestation indicated Regina had power to sign an arbitration agreement,
    13
    which it did not, it certainly does not indicate she had authority to sign an
    arbitration agreement two years earlier.
    Ratification
    Orinda additionally maintains L.L. ratified Regina’s action in signing
    the arbitration agreement. Orinda claims L.L. “ratified Regina’s action in
    signing the arbitration agreement by accepting the benefits of staying at
    Orinda . . . by continuing to reside at Orinda . . . [and by] not attempt[ing] to
    rescind the arbitration agreement withing 30 days of Regina signing it and
    . . . not tak[ing] action to prevent Regina from making medical decisions for
    her while she stayed at Orinda.” Orinda asserts L.L. “must have had
    knowledge that she was staying at Orinda and that various medical
    documents needed to be signed to allow her to continue staying at Orinda.”
    “ ‘ “The fundamental test of ratification by conduct is whether the
    releasor, with full knowledge of the material facts entitling him to rescind,
    has engaged in some unequivocal conduct giving rise to a reasonable
    inference that he intended the conduct to amount to a ratification.’ ”
    [Citations.] Where, as here, ‘[t]here is no evidence [the principal] knew the
    arbitration agreements existed, that [the agent] signed them, or that [the
    principal] had a right to rescind them,’ no ratification has occurred.” (Pillar
    Project, supra, 64 Cal.App.5th at pp. 676–677, italics omitted.)
    Orinda points to no evidence that L.L. knew the arbitration agreement
    existed, knew that Regina signed it, or knew that she had the right to rescind
    it. Indeed, the evidence was to the contrary: L.L. was recovering from a
    stroke, “half unconscious,” unable to speak or sign documents, and suffering
    from dementia. Orinda concedes in its opening brief that L.L. was “suffering
    from numerous medical ailments and was incapacitated at the time of her
    14
    admission to Orinda.” There was simply no evidence L.L. ratified Regina’s
    signing of the arbitration agreement.6
    Regina’s NIED Claim
    Orinda lastly claims that, at the very least, Regina’s cause of action for
    negligent infliction of emotional distress is subject to arbitration. It
    maintains that, because “Regina signed a valid arbitration agreement that
    included a clause stating it would be binding on [L.L.’s] family members, the
    Ruiz [v. Podolsky (2010) 
    50 Cal.4th 838
     (Ruiz)] case mandated that Regina’s
    personal injury claim be arbitrated.”
    Ruiz does not aid Orinda. In Ruiz, a patient’s wife and children filed a
    medical malpractice and wrongful death action against his physician. (Ruiz,
    supra, 50 Cal.4th at p. 842.) The patient had signed an arbitration
    “agreement [that] provided for the arbitration of any malpractice claims. . . .
    The agreement further provided that it was the intention of the parties ‘that
    this agreement binds all parties whose claims may arise out of or relate to
    treatment or service provided by the physician including any spouse or heirs
    of the patient and any children, whether born or unborn, at the time of the
    occurrence giving rise to the claim.’ Elsewhere the agreement specifically
    provided for arbitration of wrongful death and loss of consortium claims.”
    (Id. at pp. 841–842.)
    The high court considered whether Code of Civil Procedure section
    1295 applied. That provision mandates that specific language be included in
    “[a]ny contract for medical services which contains a provision for arbitration
    of any dispute as to professional negligence of a health care provider” and it
    6 Given our disposition as to L.L., we need not and do not address her
    claims that the arbitration agreement was unconscionable, was not operative
    once she was hospitalized and readmitted to Orinda, and Orinda
    unreasonably delayed in moving for arbitration.
    15
    defines “ ‘[p]rofessional negligence’ ” as “a negligent act or omission to act by
    a health care provider in the rendering of professional services, which act or
    omission is the proximate cause of a personal injury or wrongful death.”
    (Code Civ. Proc., § 1295, subd. (g)(2).) It further provides “Such a contract is
    not a contract of adhesion, nor unconscionable nor otherwise improper, where
    it complies with . . . this section.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 1295, subd. (e).) Code of
    Civil Procedure section 1295 was “ ‘enacted as part of the Medical Injury
    Compensation Reform Act of 1975. . . . The purpose of section 1295 is to
    encourage and facilitate arbitration of medical malpractice disputes.’ ” (Ruiz,
    
    supra, 50
     Cal.4th at pp. 843–844.)
    Our Supreme Court concluded “[Code of Civil Procedure] section 1295,
    construed in light of its overall purpose, is sufficiently clear in its inclusion of
    wrongful death claims to be understood as intending to permit patients to
    bind their heirs to health care arbitration agreements.” (Ruiz, 
    supra, 50
     Cal.4th at p. 852.)
    The critical difference between Ruiz and this case is that the patient,
    L.L., did not sign the arbitration agreement, and therefore she could not, and
    did not, bind Regina to the arbitration agreement. Accordingly, Ruiz does not,
    contrary to Orinda’s claim, “mandate[] that Regina’s personal injury claim be
    arbitrated.”
    DISPOSITION
    The order is affirmed. Costs on appeal to respondents.
    16
    _________________________
    Banke, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    Humes, P.J.
    _________________________
    Sanchez, J.
    A163601, LL et al v. Orinda Care Center LLC
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A163601

Filed Date: 12/8/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/8/2021