Bowden v. the Medical Center, Inc.

Court: Supreme Court of Georgia
Date filed: 2015-06-15
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297 Ga. 285
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         S14G1632. BOWDEN v. THE MEDICAL CENTER, INC.

      NAHMIAS, Justice.

      Georgia law gives a hospital a lien for the reasonable charges for its care

and treatment of an injured person against all causes of action accruing to that

person on account of her injuries, and establishes a process for the hospital to

perfect its lien for the amount claimed to be due. See OCGA §§ 44-14-470, 44-

14-471. The Medical Center, Inc. (TMC) provided hospital care to Danielle

Bowden, who did not have health insurance, after she was injured in a car

wreck, billed her $21,409.59 for her care, and filed a hospital lien for that

amount. In a subsequent lawsuit, Bowden sought to invalidate the lien on the

ground that the billed charges were grossly excessive and did not reflect the

reasonable value of the care she received, while TMC alleged that $21,409.59

was a reasonable amount for Bowden’s care and sought a declaratory judgment

establishing the validity of its lien.

      During discovery, TMC objected to Bowden’s requests for, among other

things, information and documents regarding the amounts that the hospital

charged insured patients for the same type of care. Bowden filed a motion to
compel discovery, which the trial court granted subject to the entry of a

protective order to ensure confidentiality. On interlocutory appeal, the Court of

Appeals reversed, holding that the trial court abused its discretion in granting

the motion because “the discovery Bowden seeks is not relevant to her claim

that TMC’s medical charges for her treatment were unreasonable.” The Medical

Center, Inc. v. Bowden, 327 Ga. App. 714, 714 (761 SE2d 116) (2014). We

granted Bowden’s petition for certiorari to review that holding.

      As explained below, where the subject matter of a lawsuit includes the

validity and amount of a hospital lien for the reasonable charges for a patient’s

care, how much the hospital charged other patients, insured or uninsured, for the

same type of care during the same time period is relevant for discovery

purposes. The Court of Appeals erred in concluding otherwise and in holding

on that ground that the trial court abused its discretion in granting Bowden’s

motion to compel. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment.

      1.    On July 1, 2011, the rental car in which Danielle Bowden was a

passenger was involved in an accident. At about 10:40 p.m., Bowden, who was

21 years old and did not have health insurance, was taken by ambulance to

TMC’s hospital in Columbus, Georgia, where she received emergency medical

                                       2
treatment that included surgery for a broken leg. At some point on July 2,

Bowden’s mother allegedly signed an admission form that said in relevant part:

            I, the undersigned, am seeking treatment at The Medical
      Center, Inc. . . . for myself or a person for whom I am responsible
      for his/her medical care. . . . The undersigned agrees, whether as
      Agent, Guarantor, or Patient, that in consideration of the services to
      be rendered to the patient, the undersigned is individually obligated
      to pay the account in full of the Hospital, and attending physicians,
      or organizations, or other satisfactory financial arrangements must
      be made prior to time of patient discharge.

Bowden was discharged from the hospital on July 4. On July 13, she returned

to the hospital for physical therapy and allegedly signed the same admission

form herself. TMC billed Bowden a total of $21,409.59 for her care and filed

a hospital lien for that amount pursuant to OCGA § 44-14-470 (b).1


      1
        OCGA § 44-14-470 (b) says:
               Any person, firm, hospital authority, or corporation operating a hospital,
      nursing home, or physician practice or providing traumatic burn care medical practice
      in this state shall have a lien for the reasonable charges for hospital, nursing home,
      physician practice, or traumatic burn care medical practice care and treatment of an
      injured person, which lien shall be upon any and all causes of action accruing to the
      person to whom the care was furnished or to the legal representative of such person
      on account of injuries giving rise to the causes of action and which necessitated the
      hospital, nursing home, physician practice, or provider of traumatic burn care medical
      practice care, subject, however, to any attorney’s lien. The lien provided for in this
      subsection is only a lien against such causes of action and shall not be a lien against
      such injured person, such legal representative, or any other property or assets of such
      persons and shall not be evidence of such person’s failure to pay a debt. This
      subsection shall not be construed to interfere with the exemption from this part
      provided by Code Section 44-14-474 [exempting moneys that become due under the
      workers’ compensation statutes].

                                                3
      On July 27, 2012, the rental car company (Enterprise) filed a complaint

in interpleader against Bowden and TMC and paid $25,000 into the registry of

the trial court. The complaint alleged that Enterprise was self-insured with an

insurance certificate that provided automobile coverage up to $25,000; that

Bowden presented a claim against Enterprise, which Enterprise offered to settle

for the policy limit; and that the offer was rejected because Bowden and TMC

were unable to agree on how much of the settlement proceeds should go to TMC

to release its hospital lien.2

      On August 20, 2012, Bowden answered the complaint and filed a

crossclaim against TMC, alleging that she was uninsured and indigent at the

time of her treatment and that her bill of $21,409.59 was grossly excessive and

did not reflect the reasonable value in the community of her treatment. Bowden

also alleged that the emergency nature of her injuries and treatment prevented

her from utilizing the provisions of OCGA § 31-7-11 to make pre-treatment cost

comparisons.3 She denied signing a payment contract with TMC and alleged

      2
          TMC had offered to settle its lien for $8,333, but Bowden declined.
      3
          OCGA § 31-7-11 says:
                     (a) Any hospital shall, upon request, provide a written
             summary of certain hospital and related services charges, including
             but not limited to:

                                                4
that any such contract would be void as both procedurally and substantively

unconscionable. Bowden asserted a claim against TMC for unjust enrichment

and, alternatively, breach of contract and violation of Georgia’s version of the

Uniform Deceptive Trade Practices Act (“UDTPA”), OCGA §§ 10-1-370 to 10-

1-375. As relief, she sought damages and attorney fees and asked that TMC’s

“lien be dismissed.”



                             (1) The average total charges per patient day for the facility’s
                     previous fiscal year;
                             (2) The daily rate for a room in said hospital, which rate shall
                     include an explanation of the categories of services included in said
                     charge;
                             (3) Anesthesia charges, with an explanation of the categories
                     of services included in this charge;
                             (4) Operating room charges;
                             (5) Recovery room charges;
                             (6) Intravenous administration charges;
                             (7) Emergency room charges, with an explanation of the
                     categories of services included in the charge;
                             (8) The charge for the patient care kit or admission kit or other
                     such items furnished to the patient on admission;
                             (9) Charges for specific routine tests, including but not limited
                     to a complete blood count, urinalysis, and chest X-ray; and
                             (10) Charges for specific special tests, including but not
                     limited to electrocardiogram, electroencephalogram, CAT scan of
                     the head, CAT scan of liver, CAT scan of lungs, CAT scan of
                     skeletal system, spirometry, and complete pulmonary function.
              Such written summary of charges shall be composed in a simple clear fashion so as
      to enable consumers to compare hospital charges and make cost-effective decisions in the
      purchase of hospital services.
              (b) The [Department of Community Health] shall adopt rules and
      regulations to implement the provisions of this Code section and shall implement such
      regulations as provided in Code Section 31-7-2.1.

                                              5
      Along with her answer and crossclaim, Bowden served on TMC a request

for production of documents and a set of seven written interrogatories, as

discovery authorized by the Civil Practice Act. See OCGA §§ 9-11-33

(authorizing interrogatories to parties); 9-11-34 (authorizing, among other

things, requests for production of documents).            The document request

sought: (1) medical records and bills related to Bowden’s treatment and the

hospital lien; and (2) for its fiscal years 2010, 2011, and 2012, TMC’s pricing

agreements with Medicaid, Medicare, BlueCross/BlueShield of Georgia, and

TRICARE and TMC’s own indigent care program prices. The interrogatories

asked TMC what Bowden’s specific, itemized charges would have been if she

were covered by Medicaid, Medicare, BlueCross/BlueShield of Georgia,

TRICARE, or TMC’s indigent care program; what TMC’s total gross revenues

were from services billed at the OCGA § 31-7-11 rates and from services billed

at less than those rates for the fiscal year prior to Bowden’s admission; for fiscal

years 2010 and 2011, the percentages of patients who paid the OCGA § 31-7-11

rates and who paid less than those rates; and, since July 1, 2011, how many

uninsured patients TMC had treated in its emergency room and how many of

those patients TMC had billed for their treatment.

                                         6
      On August 23, 2012, TMC answered Enterprise’s complaint and filed a

counterclaim alleging that it billed Bowden the “fair and reasonable amount” of

$21,409.59 for the care that she received and requesting that the trial court enter

a declaratory judgment that its hospital lien for that amount was “valid and

attaches to any settlement proceeds received by Danielle Bowden.”              On

September 21, TMC answered Bowden’s crossclaim, denying her allegation that

her bill was grossly excessive and did not reflect the reasonable value of her

treatment. On the same day, TMC served responses to Bowden’s discovery

requests. The responses are not contained in the record on appeal, but it appears

from other materials in the record that TMC provided Bowden with copies of

her medical records and bills but no other documents and that TMC answered

none of the interrogatories, instead responding only with boilerplate objections.

      On January 16, 2013, Bowden filed a motion under OCGA § 9-11-37 (a)

to compel the remaining discovery from TMC. On January 17, Bowden served

a second set of discovery requests on TMC, seeking a blank copy of every form

that TMC used from 2006 to 2012 that asked patients to guarantee or authorize

payment for medical treatment or to assign benefits to TMC or that discussed

how or at what rates patients or their insurers might be charged, and asking

                                        7
TMC to identify the specific dates during which each form was in use. Bowden

also filed a motion to extend the discovery period for 90 days. On February 15,

TMC filed a brief opposing Bowden’s motion to compel, focusing its objections

on relevance and confidentiality. On February 20, TMC responded to Bowden’s

second set of discovery requests, raising numerous objections but producing no

documents and not answering the interrogatory; Bowden then amended her

motion to compel to include the second set of requests.

      The trial court held a hearing on the motion to compel on May 30, 2013.

Bowden argued that information concerning how much TMC charged other

patients, whether insured or uninsured, for the same care during the same time

period was relevant to the reasonableness of TMC’s charges for her care. TMC

argued that Bowden’s discovery requests sought information that was not

relevant to the case and asked the court to enter a protective order in the event

that it granted Bowden’s motion, noting that many of its agreements with health

insurance companies included confidentiality clauses. See OCGA § 9-11-26 (c)

(authorizing the court to enter, for good cause shown, “any order which justice

requires to protect a party or person from annoyance, embarrassment,

oppression, or undue burden or expense, including one or more of the

                                       8
following:       . . . (7) That a trade secret or other confidential research,

development, or commercial information not be disclosed or be disclosed only

in a designated way. . . .”). On June 20, 2013, the trial court entered an order

granting Bowden’s motion to compel subject to the entry of an appropriate

protective order to ensure confidentiality, which the parties were directed to

submit within 20 days. The trial court then granted TMC’s request for a

certificate of immediate review; the Court of Appeals granted TMC’s

application for interlocutory appeal; and TMC filed a timely notice of appeal.4

       On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s discovery order,

holding that the court had abused its discretion in granting the motion to compel

because “the broad range of discovery Bowden requests is not relevant to her

claim.” Bowden, 327 Ga. App. at 719. We granted Bowden’s petition for

certiorari.

       2.      (a)     OCGA § 9-11-26 contains the general provisions regarding


       4
           After the trial court granted Bowden’s motion to compel, TMC filed a motion for summary
judgment and supporting materials, and Bowden then filed a motion and supporting affidavit asking
the court to deny TMC’s motion and to reopen and extend the discovery period in light of the
ongoing discovery dispute, noting that the court had not yet ruled on her previously filed motion to
extend the discovery period. See OCGA § 9-11-56 (f). It does not appear from the record on appeal
that the trial court has ruled on these motions. See OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) (stating that the filing of a
notice of appeal after the granting of an application for interlocutory appeal acts as a supersedeas).

                                                  9
civil discovery in Georgia courts. As to the scope of discovery, OCGA § 9-11-

26 (b) (1) says that in general, unless otherwise limited by order of the court,

      [p]arties may obtain discovery regarding any matter, not privileged,
      which is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending
      action, whether it relates to the claim or defense of the party seeking
      discovery or to the claim or defense of any other party . . . .

Moreover, “It is not ground for objection that the information sought will be

inadmissible at the trial if the information sought appears reasonably calculated

to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” Id. In this civil suit, Bowden

seeks to invalidate TMC’s hospital lien on the ground that the lien amount —

which was the amount TMC billed her for — grossly exceeds the reasonable

charges for her care, while TMC alleges that $21,409.59 was a reasonable

charge for her care and seeks a declaratory judgment that its lien is valid. Thus,

the “subject matter involved in the pending action” indisputably includes

whether, in the words of the hospital lien statutes, “the amount claimed to be

due” by TMC, OCGA § 44-14-471 (a) (2), consists of the “reasonable charges”

for Bowden’s hospital care, OCGA § 44-14-470 (b). See Bowden, 327 Ga.

App. at 717 (“At issue in this case is whether TMC’s charges to Bowden were

reasonable.”).


                                        10
       The question, then, is whether the documents Bowden requested and the

interrogatories she propounded are “relevant” — in the broad discovery rather

than the narrower trial sense of that term — to the reasonableness of TMC’s

charges for her care. As the United States Supreme Court explained in

interpreting the analogous federal rule of civil procedure as it read at that time:

             The key phrase in this definition — “relevant to the subject
       matter involved in the pending action” — has been construed
       broadly to encompass any matter that bears on, or that reasonably
       could lead to other matter that could bear on, any issue that is or
       may be in the case.

Oppenheimer Fund, Inc. v. Sanders, 437 U. S. 340, 351 (98 SCt 2380, 57 LE2d

253) (1978) (citations and footnotes omitted). Thus, in the discovery context,

courts “‘should and ordinarily do[ ] interpret “relevant” very broadly to mean

matter that is relevant to anything that is or may become an issue in the

litigation.’” Id. at 351, n. 12 (citation omitted). See generally 8 Richard L.

Marcus, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2008 (3d ed. updated 2015).5

       5
         In 1972, the General Assembly “comprehensively and exhaustively” revised the discovery
provisions of the Civil Practice Act to conform very closely, although not entirely, to the discovery
provisions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure as they had been amended in 1970. Ga. L. 1970,
p. 510. Cases and commentary interpreting the language used in the 1970 version of the federal
discovery rules are therefore persuasive authority in interpreting Georgia’s discovery statutes. See
G.H. Bass & Co. v. Fulton County Bd. of Tax Assessors, 268 Ga. 327, 327-328 (486 SE2d 810)
(1997) (looking to court decisions and commentary interpreting a federal discovery rule as
persuasive authority in construing an identically worded Georgia discovery statute). The Georgia

                                                11
       In accordance with this view, this Court has explained that “through the

discovery process, non-privileged information which is in the possession of one

party and which gives that party a tactical advantage may be required to be

shared with the opposing side,” and we have cautioned trial courts that in

exercising their discretion to determine the permissible scope of discovery, they

should “keep[ ] in mind that the discovery procedure is to be construed liberally

in favor of supplying a party with the facts.” Tenet Healthcare Corp. v.

Louisiana Forum Corp., 273 Ga. 206, 210 (538 SE2d 441) (2000). See also

Hampton Island Founders v. Liberty Capital,283 Ga. 289, 297 (658 SE2d 619)

(2008) (noting that the discovery rules are designed to remove the potential for

secrecy and to provide parties with knowledge of all the relevant facts to reduce

the element of surprise at trial); Wayne M. Purdom, Georgia Civil Discovery §

4.5 (updated 2015) (discussing the Georgia courts’ broad view of what is



discovery statute at issue here – OCGA § 9-11-26 – was virtually identical to the corresponding
federal rule that was in effect in 1972; the only substantive difference was in OCGA § 9-11-26 (b)
(4) (A) (ii). Aside from technical amendments, OCGA § 9-11-26 has not been revised since 1972.
Over the past 43 years, however, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26 has been substantially amended,
including several amendments to narrow the scope of discovery, and further amendments will take
effect on December 1, 2015, unless Congress disapproves them. See Order adopting amendments
to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (Apr. 29, 2015), available at
http://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/ordersofthecourt.aspx; 8 Federal Practice & Procedure § 2008
(discussing prior amendments to Rule 26).

                                               12
relevant for discovery purposes).

      The amounts that TMC charged to (and agreed to accept as payment in full

from) other patients treated at the same hospital for the same type of care during

the same general time frame that Bowden was treated may not be dispositive of

whether TMC’s charges for Bowden’s care were “reasonable” under OCGA

§ 44-14-470 (b), to the extent that the other patients were not similarly situated

in other economically meaningful ways. But that does not mean that how much

TMC charged those other patients is entirely irrelevant — particularly in the

broad discovery sense — to the reasonableness of the charges for Bowden’s

care. See McMillian v. McMillian, 310 Ga. App. 735, 740 (713 SE2d 920)

(2011) (Blackwell, J.) (distinguishing between dispositive and probative

information for purposes of deciding what is “relevant” in the discovery

context).

      The fair and reasonable value of goods and services is often determined

by considering what similar buyers and sellers have paid and received for the

same product in the same market, with adjustments upward or downward made

to account for pertinent differences, and we see no reason why the same cannot

be true of health care. See Melo v. Allstate Ins. Co., 800 FSupp.2d 596, 602 (D.

                                       13
Vt. 2011) (observing that “relevant evidence of the reasonable value of medical

services” may include “evidence as to what the provider usually charges for the

services provided, or what other providers usually charge”); Mark A. Hall &

Carl E. Schneider, Patients as Consumers: Courts, Contracts, and the New

Medical Marketplace, 106 Mich. L. Rev. 643, 686 (2008) (“In practice, courts

[seeking to determine the reasonableness of health care charges] primarily ask

(1) what the provider usually charges for the service and (2) what other

providers usually charge.”). Suppose that, as Bowden argued at the motion to

compel hearing, 99% of TMC’s patients who received the same care as she did

during the same time period had insurance and therefore paid the same much

lower sum for their care – say, just $1,000. Under that scenario, a fairminded

juror might conclude that the “reasonable charge” for that care was much closer

to $1,000 than to the $21,409.59 that TMC billed Bowden. Bowden is entitled

to determine if evidence exists to support such an argument.

      Of course, TMC would be entitled to present evidence and to argue in

response that what it charged its insured patients is not fairly comparable to

what it charged uninsured patients like Bowden, because the insured patients

were charged based on the hospital’s contracts with their insurers that

                                      14
reasonably reflected such economic factors as volume discounts or promises of

prompt and full payment, or based on the rates that the government was willing

to pay under Medicare or Medicaid. See Huntington Hosp. v. Abrandt, 779

NYS2d 891, 892 (N.Y. App. Term 2004) (“The fact that lesser amounts for the

same services may be accepted from commercial insurers or government

programs as payment in full does not indicate that the amounts charged to

defendant were not reasonable.”). TMC might even argue that the varied

amounts it charged patients for the care it provided were wholly unrelated to the

reasonable value of that care. See Hall & Schneider, supra at 665 (stating that

some “[h]ospital executives confess that ‘the vast majority of (charges) have no

relation to anything, and certainly not to cost’” (footnote omitted)).

      There may be reasons why some or all of the information and documents

TMC would have to provide in response to the trial court’s order may not be

admissible at trial. See McMillian, 310 Ga. App. at 740. But as the advisory

committee’s note on the 1970 amendments to the corresponding federal rule

explained, that is no obstacle to discovery:

            Since decisions as to relevance to the subject matter of the
      action are made for discovery purposes well in advance of trial, a
      flexible treatment of relevance is required and the making of

                                       15
      discovery, whether voluntary or under court order, is not a
      concession or determination of relevance for purposes of trial.

Fed. R. Civ. Proc. 26 advisory comm. note. At issue now is an order compelling

discovery, not a judgment validating or invalidating TMC’s hospital lien or even

a ruling on the admissibility at trial of specific evidence — all matters on which

we express no opinion. For present purposes, all we hold is that the discovery

Bowden sought may have some relevance to the reasonableness of TMC’s

charges for her care, and thus, assuming no other objections to her various

requests are made and sustained, before this case proceeds to summary judgment

or trial, not only TMC but Bowden is entitled to see what the information and

documents show and whether they support her claims and defenses. See

McMillian, 310 Ga. App. at 741. See also Hall & Schneider, supra at 684-687

(discussing, in the context of the current health care marketplace, different ways

that the reasonable value of hospital and other medical care has been determined

by courts and methods of valuation proposed by legal and economics scholars).

Consequently, the trial court acted within its discretion in ordering TMC to

provide the requested discovery.




                                       16
      (b)   To reach the contrary conclusion, the Court of Appeals relied on the

following analysis. First, the court noted that hospitals are free to contract with

insurance companies to set preferred rates for their insureds, citing a series of

its precedents beginning with Cox v. Athens Regional Medical Center, Inc., 279

Ga. App. 586 (631 SE2d 792) (2006), which hold — in the summary judgment

context — that charging uninsured patients higher rates than insured patients

does not constitute breach of contract, unjust enrichment, or a violation of the

UDTPA. See Bowden, 327 Ga. App. at 718 (citing, in addition to Cox,

Satterfield v. Southern Regional Health System, Inc., 280 Ga. App. 584 (634

SE2d 530) (2006); Morrell v. Wellstar Health System, Inc, 280 Ga. App. 1 (633

SE2d 68) (2006); and Pitts v. Phoebe Putney Mem. Hosp., 279 Ga. App. 637

(631 SE2d 830) (2006)). In response to Bowden’s argument that the Cox line

of cases was inapplicable because she did not sign a consent form for treatment

that obligated her to pay the hospital charges, the Court of Appeals said that

Bowden’s mother signed such a form on Bowden’s behalf as authorized by

OCGA § 31-9-2 (a) (3) and that in any event consent for emergency treatment

is implied by law under OCGA § 31-9-3 (b). See Bowden, 327 Ga. App. at 718,

n. 3. Finally, the court said that Bowden could prove through expert testimony

                                        17
or evidence from other medical providers or consumers that TMC’s charges

were unreasonable. See id. at 717-718.6

       We see three basic flaws in this analysis. First and foremost, the Court of

Appeals appears to have concluded, based on its Cox line of cases, that if

Bowden signed a contract to pay for her treatment, she would be precluded from

challenging the reasonableness of the charges reflected in the hospital’s lien.

But the Cox line of cases does not directly apply here, because those were

summary judgment cases, not discovery cases, and none involved a challenge

to a hospital lien. And the general proposition that hospital charges are

automatically “reasonable” whenever the patient (or someone authorized to act

on her behalf) has signed a contract agreeing to pay those charges is incorrect,

because the contract price for goods and services does not necessarily equal their

reasonable value. See, e.g., City of Calhoun v. N. Ga. Electric Mem. Corp., 264

Ga. 205, 208 (443 SE2d 469) (1994) (recognizing the distinction between the

       6
          The Court of Appeals also cited its opinion in MCG Health, Inc. v. Kight, 325 Ga. App.
349 (750 SE2d 813) (2013) (Kight I), for the proposition that where a hospital has contracted with
an insurance company to accept a certain reimbursement rate, “the hospital would be entitled to
collect the full amount of its bill under the lien statute, not merely the lower reimbursement rate
contracted between the insurance company and the hospital.” Bowden, 327 Ga. App. at 717 (citing
Kight I, 325 Ga. App. at 353). However, in Kight v. MCG Health, Inc., 296 Ga. 687 (769 SE2d 923)
(2015) (Kight II), we deemed this part of the Court of Appeals’ opinion in Kight I to be dicta. See
Kight II, 296 Ga. at 690.

                                               18
contract price and the reasonable value of services). See also 24 Richard A.

Lord, Williston on Contracts § 64:2 (4th ed. 2015) (same). OCGA § 44-14-470

(b) says that the hospital has a lien for the “reasonable charges” for a patient’s

care, not a lien for “whatever the patient agreed to pay.” Indeed, the lien is not

against the patient, but rather against the causes of action giving rise to the

patient’s injuries, see id., and thus the lien is normally paid off by the tortfeasor

or the tortfeasor’s insurer — neither of whom was a party to any contract

between the patient and the hospital.

      Second, as the case now stands, no contract by Bowden to pay for her

treatment has been established. In Bowden’s crossclaim, she specifically

alleged that “[t]here is no valid written contract or non-written contract between

[her] and [TMC] for the provision of medical services and goods” and that any

such contract would be “void due to unconscionability.” She further alleged

that “[i]f an implied contract for medical treatment is found to exist, [TMC] is

entitled to recover from the interpleaded insurance funds only the reasonable

value of the benefit conferred.” TMC did not ask the trial court to address the

merits of Bowden’s allegations that no valid contract exists before the court

ruled on the motion to compel discovery, see footnote 4 above, and “[n]ormally,

                                         19
the trial court will not determine whether the legal theory upon which the

discovery is based is sound . . . [unless] the claim or defense is sufficiently

baseless.” Georgia Civil Discovery § 4.5. See also Austin v. Clark, 294 Ga.

773, 776-777 (755 SE2d 796) (2014) (Nahmias, J., concurring) (discussing the

sequencing of discovery and dispositive motions on particular issues). Compare

Best Concrete Products Co. v. Medusa Corp., 157 Ga. App. 97, 100-101 (276

SE2d 147) (1981) (holding that where the trial court had already dismissed

Best’s claim of discriminatory pricing as preempted by federal law, discovery

from Medusa as to its dealings with other customers was properly refused as

irrelevant).

      Moreover, on the day before the hearing on the motion to compel, TMC

for the first time provided Bowden with a copy of the form consenting to and

agreeing to pay for Bowden’s emergency treatment that was allegedly signed by

her mother, but Bowden denied authorizing her mother to sign a payment

contract on her behalf, and the form by its own terms appears to obligate only

Bowden’s mother to pay for the emergency care, as it said that “the undersigned

[i.e., Bowden’s mother] is individually obligated to pay the account in full to the

Hospital.” Nor do OCGA §§ 31-9-2 and 31-9-3 support the Court of Appeals’

                                        20
ruling. OCGA § 31-9-2 (a) (3) authorizes parents to consent to medical

treatment on behalf of their adult children who are unable personally to consent

in certain situations, but it does not say or even suggest that parents can bind

their adult children to payment terms included in a treatment consent form.

Similarly, OCGA § 31-9-3 (b) says only that when an emergency exists, consent

to medical treatment recommended by a duly licensed physician may be implied

by law; the statute does not address the patient’s obligation to pay for such

treatment — much less pay whatever amount the hospital decides to charge.

      Finally, the Court of Appeals’ observation that Bowden could show

through expert testimony or evidence from other medical providers or

consumers that TMC’s charges were unreasonable seems to acknowledge

(correctly) that how much other patients are charged for the same services in the

same market is relevant to the issue of reasonableness. If that is so, then more

directly applicable information of that type — how much TMC itself charged

other patients for the same services — would be even more relevant. The

availability of one form of proof does not make other forms of proof irrelevant

under OCGA § 9-11-26 (b) (1). See Hampton Island Founders, LLC, 283 Ga.



                                       21
at 295-297.7

       (c)     For these reasons, the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the trial

court abused its discretion in granting Bowden’s motion to compel on the

ground that all of the discovery Bowden sought was not “relevant” under OCGA

§ 9-11-26 (b) (1). We therefore reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment.

       Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.




                                  Decided June 15, 2015.

       Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia – 327 Ga. App. 714.

      Charles A. Gower, Charles A. Gower, Jr., David T. Rohwedder, for
appellant.

       Fischer Scott, Bobby Lee Scott, Scott C. Crowley, for appellee.




       7
         In some situations, the production in discovery of one type of relevant information may
make it possible to demonstrate that producing another very similar, or another less relevant, type
of information would be unduly burdensome or expensive, justifying a protective order under OCGA
§ 9-11-26 (c). But TMC has not argued for a protective order on this ground.

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