FIRST DIVISION
BARNES, P. J.,
MERCIER and BROWN, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
March 12, 2020
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A19A1895. THE COLUMBUS CLINIC, P. C. v. WILLIAMS.
BARNES, Presiding Judge.
Reginald A. Williams, M. D. sued his former employer, the Columbus Clinic,
P. C., accusing it of terminating his employment in breach of their contract. The trial
court granted summary judgment to the Clinic with respect to liability. In Williams
v. Columbus Clinic, 332 Ga. App. 714 (773 SE2d 457) (2015), this Court reversed
that judgment, explaining that a genuine issue as to a material fact remained. On
remand, and upon a supplemented record, the trial court granted summary judgment
to Williams on the liability issue. Now, the Clinic appeals. As explained below, the
record does not establish that either party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law,
so we reverse.
Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that
there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled
to a judgment as a matter of law.” OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). “We review a grant or denial
of summary judgment de novo and construe the evidence in the light most favorable
to the nonmovant.” Matson v. Bayview Loan Servicing, 339 Ga. App. 890, 890 (795
SE2d 195) (2016).
As set out in Williams, 332 Ga. App. 714, the factual background of this case
includes the following.
Williams and the Clinic entered into a Physician Employment
Agreement (the “Agreement”) on December 31, 2008 under which
Williams was to “provide professional medical and surgical services on
behalf of [the Clinic] as an exclusive employee of [the Clinic]” and
receive a salary as set forth in [an exhibit] to the Agreement. The term
of the Agreement was for one year from its “Commencement Date” of
January 15, 2009, and the Agreement provided that “[u]nless terminated
as provided herein, this Agreement shall automatically renew for
successive terms of one (1) year each upon the anniversary date of the
Commencement Date.” Section 7.1 of the Agreement sets forth the
circumstances in which the Clinic was entitled to terminate the
Agreement for cause and provides in relevant part:
2
[The Clinic] shall . . . have the right to terminate this
Agreement immediately, with cause, upon written notice to
Physician if: . . . (ii) Physician’s privileges or staff
membership at any hospital are terminated, revoked,
suspended (other than for infrequent occurrences due to the
failure to complete medical records in a timely manner),
restricted, or terminated in any way (except for voluntary
termination of privileges undertaken at the request and
with the consent of [the Clinic]).
One of the Columbus hospitals where Williams had privileges
was Doctors Hospital (the “Hospital”). Williams was granted Medical
Staff membership on the Affiliate Staff at the Hospital in January 2009
and was granted Medical Staff membership on the Active Staff in
January 2010 with privileges to render certain delineated professional
services as approved by the Hospital’s board of directors. On or about
May 19, 2010, Williams was advised that the Medical Executive
Committee (“MEC”) of the Medical Staff of the Hospital was imposing
a three-month proctorship on him. On or about June 18, 2010, the Clinic
notified Williams that it was terminating his employment for cause
under Section 7.1 (ii) of the Agreement, effective June 25, 2010. The
Clinic’s partners and board of directors believed that the Clinic was
authorized to terminate the Agreement for cause because the mandatory
proctorship imposed by the Hospital constituted a restriction of
Williams’[s] privileges.
Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 715-716.
3
Williams filed this breach of contract action against the Clinic, claiming that
despite the proctorship, his privileges had not been restricted at any hospital as
contemplated by Section 7.1 (ii), and that the Clinic thus did not have requisite cause
to terminate their Agreement. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment
as to liability, the issue being whether the proctorship constituted a restriction of
privileges so as to provide the Clinic with cause to terminate their contract. Ruling
in favor of the Clinic, the trial court found that the language set out at Section 7.1 (ii)
was “clear, concise, controlling, and unambiguous,” and that thereunder, the Clinic
was authorized to terminate the Agreement when the hospital imposed a proctorship
on Williams. That ruling gave rise to Williams, 332 Ga. App. 714.
After reciting principles of contract construction,1 Williams turned to the
language in Section 7.1 (ii) of the Agreement authorizing the Clinic to terminate the
Agreement for cause if Williams’s “privileges . . . at any hospital are . . . restricted.”
Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 718 (1). The Clinic urged that affirmance of the summary
1
Among such principles, Williams recited that the cardinal rule of contract
construction is to ascertain the intent of the parties at the time they entered the
agreement; that while contractual terms generally carry their ordinary meanings,
technical words, or words of art, or used in a particular trade or business, will be
construed, generally, to be used in reference to this peculiar meaning; and that a court
must always consider the context in which a contractual term appears in determining
its meaning. Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 718 (1).
4
judgment required nothing further than applying the ordinary or dictionary definition
of “restrict,” but Williams found it “readily apparent from the context in which
‘restricted’ appear[ed] in this Agreement that we must look beyond a dictionary to
determine the intended meaning of the term.” Id. As Williams elaborated, “[t]he
privileges accorded to a physician to treat patients at a hospital are by their very
nature always ‘restricted’ within the ordinary or dictionary definition of the term.” Id.
(quoting, among other definitions of relevant terms, a medical dictionary that stated
that “[c]linical privileges are limited by the individual’s professional license,
experience, and competence”). And upon examining the Hospital’s Medical Staff
Bylaws, Williams reasoned that “interpreting ‘restricted’ in its ordinary sense here
would mean that the Clinic essentially enjoyed an unfettered right of termination, a
result contrary to the parties’ clear intent to create a non-at-will employment
relationship.” Id. at 719 (1).
Thus determining that “a ‘restriction’ of privileges at a hospital is a word or
term of art that should be interpreted in accordance with its ‘peculiar meaning’ in this
context,” Williams observed that the term “restricting” appeared in the Health Care
5
Quality Improvement Act (HCQIA).2 Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 719 (1).
Summarizing aspects of the HCQIA and related regulations, Williams noted,
Under the HCQIA, a hospital that takes a professional review action that
adversely affects the clinical privileges of a physician for a period longer
than 30 days shall report the action to the State Board of Medical
Examiners, and under the HCQIA’s implementing regulations also must
report the action to the [National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB)]. A
“professional review action” is defined in pertinent part as an action or
recommendation of a professional review body which is taken or made
in the conduct of professional review activity, which is based on the
competence or professional conduct of an individual physician and
which affects (or may affect) adversely the clinical privileges of the
physician. The term “adversely affecting” includes reducing, restricting,
suspending, revoking, denying, or failing to renew clinical privileges or
membership in a health care entity.
(Citations and punctuation omitted; emphasis in original.) Id. at 719-720 (1).
Realizing that “neither the HCQIA nor the regulations thereunder provide[d] a
definition of ‘restrict,’” Williams found pertinent guidance in the 2001 NPDB
Guidebook (portions of which were included in the record).3 Id at 720 (1). In
2
See 42 USC §§ 11101-11152.
3
Williams noted that the 2015 version of the NPDB Guidebook contained
statements providing additional guidance on the meaning of “restriction” and the
circumstances under which a proctorship constituted a restriction, but determined that
6
particular, Williams noted that the 2001 NPDB Guidebook provided examples of
actions that were reportable and nonreportable to the NPDB, and that such guidebook
further stated that it would not be reportable if “based on assessment of professional
competence, a proctor is assigned to supervise a physician . . . but the proctor does
not grant approval before medical care is provided by the practitioner.” Id.
In addition, Williams found instructive cases addressing when a hospital’s
action rises to the level of a professional review action that does or may adversely
affect a physician’s privileges for purposes of the HCQIA. As Williams analyzed, if
the actions or recommendations that underlay cases such as Mathews v. Lancaster
Gen. Hosp., 87 F3d 624 (3d Cir. 1996),4 Morgan v. PeaceHeath, 14 P3d 773 (Wash.
those statements were “not germane to determining the intent of the parties when they
entered the Agreement in December 2008.” Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 720 (1), n. 1.
4
In Mathews, “the Third Circuit concluded that a letter recommending focused
outside review of certain cases that had been identified by a hospital committee as
involving substandard care was not a ‘professional review action.’ The Third Circuit
stated generally that a ‘decision or recommendation to monitor the standard of care
provided by a physician or factfinding to ascertain whether a physician has provided
adequate care’ were professional review activities, i.e., preliminary investigative
measures taken in a reasonable effort to obtain facts relevant to a possible change in
privileges, not professional review actions.” Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 720 (1),
quoting Mathews, 87 F3d at 634.
7
App. 2000),5 and Wood v. Archbold Med. Center,738 FSupp.2d 1298 (M.D. Ga.
2010),6 did not constitute reportable professional review actions, then they
“necessarily did not adversely affect or restrict physician privileges.” Williams, 332
Ga. App. at 721 (1). Williams went on to contrast those cases with Azmat v. Shalala,
186 FSupp.2d 744 (W.D. Ky. 2001),7 and Fobbs v. Holy Cross Health System Corp,
789 FSupp. 1054 (E.D. Cal. 1992), rev’d in part on other grounds, 29 F3d 1439 (9th
5
In Morgan, the Washington Court of Appeals cited Mathews, supra, in
concluding that a recommendation that a physician submit to an outside professional
evaluation did not amount to a professional review action, even where the physician
was “warned that if he did not comply, his privileges would be automatically
suspended.” Id. at 780, 782 (I) (B). See Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 720-721 (1)
(reviewing Morgan, supra).
6
In Wood, the federal district court for the Middle District of Georgia cited
Morgan, supra, in concluding that a recommendation that a physician undergo an
outside psychiatric evaluation was not professional review action, even where the
physician was “told . . . that if he did not have the evaluation, his privileges would be
suspended.” Id. at 1363 (V) (B) (3). See Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 721 (1) (reviewing
Wood, supra).
7
In Azmat, supra, the federal district court for the Western District of Kentucky
concluded that a letter recommending that a surgeon obtain a second opinion on all
procedures that were not immediately life-threatening and acquire assistance from a
second physician on all major cases were restrictions on his privileges reportable
under the HCQIA. Id. at 750. See Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 721 (1) (discussing
Azmat, supra).
8
Cir. 1994).8 Upon considering those authorities, Williams concluded that “at the time
of contracting the parties would not have understood a hospital’s decision to appoint
a proctor to monitor or evaluate a physician or his or her standard of care as a
restriction of privileges unless the hospital imposed conditions or limitations that
would impact the physician’s independence or autonomy in providing care to
patients.” Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 721 (1).
When next turning to the question whether the proctorship imposed upon
Williams constituted a restriction on his privileges under that construction of the
Agreement, Williams found that an issue of material fact remained. Williams, 332 Ga.
App. at 721 (2). As Williams explained, “[d]etermining whether the proctorship was
a restriction on Williams’[s] privileges requires examination of the specific terms and
conditions of the proctorship”; yet, they were not sufficiently evinced by the record.
Id. at 721-722 (2). As Williams espoused,
8
In Fobbs, the federal district court for the Eastern District of California
determined that monitoring constraints – under which a physician was required to
have a second opinion on every admission (which included a history and physical
examination by the monitor), and the monitor was to be present during operations and
to participate in follow-up care – constituted professional review action. Id. at 1057,
1064 (V). See Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 721 (1) (discussing Fobbs, supra).
9
[T]he Hospital’s Medical Staff Bylaws provide that “[i]n most
instances, proctors act as monitors to evaluate the technical and
cognitive skills of another Practitioner and do not directly participate in
patient care, have no physician/patient relationship with the patient
being treated, do not receive a fee from the patient, represent the
Medical Staff, and are responsible to the Medical Staff.” (Emphasis
supplied.) While this provision may suggest that a proctor’s role
typically is solely evaluative, it also leaves open the possibility that a
proctor could assume different or additional responsibilities. The record
in this case contains scant evidence on the terms of the proctorship
under which Williams operated.
Id. at 721-722 (1). Pertinently, “the record [did] not contain evidence as to the final
proctorship terms, if any, to which the parties agreed.” Id. at 722 (2). Williams
acknowledged that evidence in the record – specifically, a June 18, 2010 letter from
the Hospital’s outside counsel to Williams’s counsel (“Hospital’s Letter”) that stated
that the proctor would not have to concur in Williams’s selection of surgical
procedures – militated in favor of finding that the proctorship was not a “restriction.”
Id. Notwithstanding, Williams recognized that the Court could not know whether
there were any additional terms associated with the proctorship that, similar to those
in Azmat, supra, and Fobbs, supra, would rise to the level of restricting Williams’s
privileges. Id. Based on the record before it, Williams held that the trial court erred
10
in concluding as a matter of law that the Clinic was authorized to terminate the
Agreement when the Hospital imposed a proctorship on Williams, and thus reversed
the summary judgment entered in the Clinic’s favor. Id.
Upon the remittitur being entered in the trial court, the record was
supplemented to include two documents: (i) the Proctoring Criteria, which was
enclosed with the Hospital’s Letter to Williams; and (ii) Williams’s Performance
Improvement Plan, wherein the Hospital’s MEC described for Williams the manner
in which his surgical cases would be “proctored concurrently.” Each party again
moved for summary judgment on the issue whether the proctorship constituted a
restriction under the terms of the Agreement. After conducting a hearing, the trial
court entered an order granting Williams’s motion and denying the Clinic’s. In
pertinent part, the trial court determined,
[T]he proctorship would largely have consisted of recommendations and
suggestions, but clearly left the final decision in the purview of
[Williams]. While certainly an inconvenience, such as advisor and
observer would not constitute a restriction (as interpreted with[in] its
“peculiar meaning” in this context) that would have adversely affected
his privileges. . . . This [c]ourt finds that as a matter of law, that the
terms of the Agreement were written such that, at the time of
contracting, the parties would not have understood or intended for a
11
hospital’s decision to appoint a proctor to, in and of itself, constitute a
restriction of privileges.
In this appeal, the Clinic contends that the trial court erred in ruling in
Williams’s favor. The Clinic asserts that the two documents added upon remand,
together with the Hospital’s Letter (which was already a part of the record, as
discussed in Williams, supra), provided all of the terms of the proctorship. Thus
positing that “[t]he undisputed facts clearly show that the proctorship was a
restriction as set forth in the Agreement,” the Clinic argues that the proctorship, as
a matter of law, constituted a restriction upon Williams’s privileges, and consequently
provided it with cause for terminating the Agreement. Williams counters that the
record demonstrates that summary judgment was properly entered in his favor.
As this Court explained in Williams, determining whether Williams’s privileges
were restricted requires examination of the specific terms and conditions of the
proctorship. Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 721 (2). At this juncture, both parties maintain
entitlement to summary judgment – each side relying on aspects of the record as
establishing as a matter of law that the proctorship either did or did not constitute a
12
restriction under the Agreement.9 The Clinic cites that the Proctoring Criteria (which
used “Surgeon” to refer to Williams ) set out, among other things, the following: (a)
if the proctor has been identified for a case but at the last minute the proctor is
himself called out for an emergency, “every attempt will be made by the Surgeon to
obtain another proctor but at no time should a case be canceled or not proceed when
the proctor is no longer available”; (b) with respect to the “[r]ole of proctor in
confirming decision to operate,” such document “suggest[ed]”10 that the “Surgeon
will consult with proctor on all cases prior to the case to discuss what surgical
procedures Surgeon is recommending”; (c) that if at any time the proctor disagrees
9
In some instances, the Clinic has made broad assertions, while providing in
support thereof record citations to a span of pages covering both the Proctoring
Criteria and the Performance Improvement Plan. See, however, Court of Appeals
Rule 25 (c) (2) (i) (“Each enumerated error shall be supported in the brief by specific
reference to the record or transcript. In the absence of a specific reference, the Court
will not search for and may not consider that enumeration.”). “Our requirements as
to the form of appellate briefs were created not to provide an obstacle, but to aid
parties in presenting their arguments in a manner most likely to be fully and
efficiently comprehended by this Court; a party will not be granted relief should we
err in deciphering a brief which fails to adhere to the required form.” (Punctuation
and footnote omitted.) Campbell v. Breedlove, 244 Ga. App. 819, 821 (535 SE2d 308)
(2000).
10
As noted above, among its bases for granting summary judgment to
Williams, the trial court expressly found that the proctorship “largely consisted of
recommendations and suggestions, but clearly left the final decision in the purview
of [Williams].”
13
with the decision to operate, the specific operation intended, or the specific
technique(s) being used during a procedure, “the Surgeon should follow the advice
of the proctor but the final decision lies with the Surgeon”; (d) that if, in elective
cases, the proctor disagrees with the decision to operate or on the specific
procedure/approach recommended, the document “suggest[ed]” that “the proctor and
Surgeon will attempt to solicit input from another member of the [Hospital’s] surgical
department. In elective cases, the final decision as to appropriateness of the procedure
needed lies with Surgeon”; and (e) that such document ended with the warning: “any
deviation from these guidelines and policies will result in further disciplinary action
by the [MEC].”
The Clinic further cites that the Performance Improvement Plan, which
expressly stated that “your surgical cases must be proctored concurrently,” set out that
“[i]n no event may an elective case be scheduled with less than 12 hours notice to the
proctor, unless the proctor agrees otherwise”; that “[t]he proctor has the authority to
intervene in the case if necessary to protect the patient from harm”; and that Williams
was “responsible for informing [his] patients that another physician will be examining
them and reviewing their chart.”
14
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Clinic (as the
nonmovant on Williams’s summary judgment motion), we agree with the Clinic that
Williams was not entitled to the grant of his motion. The evidence authorized a
finding that under the proctorship, Williams would consult the proctor beforehand to
discuss surgical operations and techniques intended; that the proctor would give
Williams his or her opinion(s) on whether the medical care planned by Williams was
appropriate; that if Williams and the proctor disagreed, the proctor could solicit input
from another member of the Hospital’s surgical department; that elective surgeries
that Williams scheduled within a 12-hour window could be halted (at least
temporarily) by the proctor; and that during surgical procedures, the proctor could
“intervene in the case if necessary to protect the patient from harm.” Viewed in the
Clinic’s favor, the evidence allows for a determination that the proctorship was more
akin to the circumstances underlying Azmat and Fobbs,11 and that it impacted
Williams’s independence or autonomy in providing care to his patients so as to
amount to a restriction on his privileges under the Agreement.
This does not automatically mean, however, that the Clinic’s summary
judgment motion should have been granted. For purposes of determining whether the
11
See footnotes 7 and 8, supra.
15
Clinic was entitled to the grant of its motion, we must construe the evidence in the
light most favorable to Williams (as the nonmovant). See Matson, 339 Ga. App. at
890. So viewed, the record indeed supports the trial court’s finding that the
proctorship consisted largely of recommendations and suggestions, while leaving
final decisions in Williams’s purview. The Proctoring Criteria plainly and repeatedly
placed final decisions solely with Williams. This would include the final decisions
as to any dispute between Williams and the proctor during a surgical procedure.
Seemingly contradictory to the Performance Improvement Plan (authorizing the
proctor “to intervene in the case if necessary to protect the patient from harm”), the
Proctoring Criteria set out:
If at anytime the proctor disagrees with the decision to operate; the
specific operation intended; or the specific technique(s) being used
during a procedure, the Surgeon should follow the advice of the proctor
but the final decision lies with the Surgeon. Immediately following the
procedure the proctor will report any deviation from recommendations
to the . . .[Hospital’s executive personnel]. If patient safety is in jeopardy
at anytime during the procedure due to a disputed decision between the
Surgeon and the proctor, the proctor will immediately notify the
Anesthesiologist who will notify the [Hospital’s executive personnel].12
12
(Emphasis supplied.) Williams asserts in his appellate brief that the final
sentence quoted above “obviously takes precedence over the language from the
16
The Clinic points out that the Proctoring Criteria warned that – as the Clinic puts it
– “if Williams did not follow the proctor’s advice, the case would be subject to
further review.” But such a warning as to after-the-fact measures available to the
Hospital could fairly be viewed as akin to the warnings given to the physicians in
Morgan and Wood13 and thus not restrictive of privileges here. See Williams, 332 Ga.
App. at 721 (1).
The Clinic points to evidence that the proctorship contemplated that Williams
would consult with the proctor on medical procedures, and obtain the proctor’s
approval when scheduling elective surgeries within a 12-hour window. But viewed
in Williams’s favor, the record allows for a determination that those matters were
geared toward facilitating that an adequate proctor was available and positioned to
monitor Williams’s technical and cognitive skills. As the Performance Improvement
Plan stated, “The person providing the concurrent proctoring must have appropriate
clinical privileges” and “must be present before the case is started and must remain
[Performance Improvement Plan] quoted by [the Clinic], as it was provided in the
Proctoring Criteria provided by the Hospital’s attorney with the June 18, 2010
Letter.” But the record shows that Williams executed the Performance Improvement
Plan on June 22, 2010, thereby agreeing to “abide by and participate in the
[P]erformance [I]mprovement [P]lan outlined [therein].”
13
See footnotes 5 and 6, supra.
17
throughout the duration of the case.” And as the Proctoring Criteria provided, “[i]n
elective cases, the final decision as to appropriateness of the procedure needed lies
with Surgeon.” (Emphasis supplied.) And as the Hospital’s Letter relayed, “Any costs
associated with the proctor must be assumed by Dr. Williams.” See Williams, 332 Ga.
App. at 720-722 (1) (ascertaining from Hospital’s Medical Staff Bylaws provision
that, where “proctors acts as monitors to evaluate the technical and cognitive skills
or another Practitioner and do not directly participate in patient care, have no
physician/patient relationship with the patient being treated, [and] do not receive a
fee from the patient being treated,” such role is “solely evaluative”).
In addition, Williams cites that the Hospital’s Letter explicitly informed him,
The role of the proctor is not to substitute his/her judgment for that of
Dr. Williams, but to assist, advise as requested, observe and report. The
proctor need not concur in the selection of the surgical procedure, but
the proctor’s concerns or disagreement should be noted and evaluated.
As such, the proctoring requirements are not reportable to the [NPDB]
an do not constitute an adverse action that gives rise to the right to
request a hearing.
And as Williams discerned, the Hospital’s Letter – stating that the proctor would not
have to concur in Williams’s selection of surgical procedures – militates in favor of
finding that the proctorship was not a restriction. Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 722 (2).
18
Williams further cites his own affidavit testimony that, as of the effective date
of his termination (June 25, 2010), the Hospital had not “ever submitted a report,
written or otherwise, to any appropriate physician licensing board that [his] medical
staff privileges had ever been denied, restricted, or revoked for any reason”; nor had
the Hospital “report[ed] [him] to either the appropriate Georgia licensing board or to
the [NPDB] when it imposed a proctorship upon [him].” See generally Williams, 332
Ga. App. at 719-720 (1) (ascertaining from HCQIA, related regulations, and 2001
NPDB Guidebook that it would not be reportable if a proctor is assigned to supervise
a physician, but the proctor does not grant approval before medical care is provided
by the practitioner). Such evidence that the Hospital did not report the proctorship
either to the Georgia licensing board or to the NPDB indicates that the proctorship
thus did not restrict Williams’s privileges.14 See Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 720-721
(1) (analyzing that if actions underlying cases such as Mathews, Morgan, and Wood,
14
See generally OCGA § 31-7-8 (a) (providing that “[t]he hospital
administrator or chief executive officer . . . shall submit a written report to the
appropriate licensing board when a person who is authorized to practice medicine, .
. . and who is a member of the medical staff at the institution, . . . has his medical staff
privileges at the institution . . . restricted . . . for any reason involving the medical
care given his patient”).
19
supra, did not constitute reportable professional review actions, then those actions did
not adversely affect or restrict physician privileges).
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Williams (as the
nonmovant on the Clinic’s summary judgment motion), we conclude that the Clinic
was not entitled to the grant of its motion. As noted above, the evidence supports the
trial court’s finding that the proctorship consisted largely of recommendations and
suggestions, while leaving final decisions in Williams’s purview. Moreover, the
evidence authorized (but did not require) the trial court’s findings that
While certainly an inconvenience, such as advisor and observer would
not constitute a restriction (as interpreted with[in] its “peculiar meaning”
in this context) that would have adversely affected his privileges. . . .
[And] at the time of contracting, the parties [did] not . . . intend[ ] for a
hospital’s decision to appoint a proctor to, in and of itself, constitute a
restriction of privileges.
Viewed in Williams’s favor, the evidence allows for a determination that the
proctorship put in place “preliminary investigative measures taken in a reasonable
effort to obtain facts relevant to a possible change in privileges,” (emphasis supplied)
Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 720 (1) (citing Mathews, 87 F3d at 634), but that it did not
20
rise to the level of impacting his independence or autonomy in providing care to his
patients so as to amount to a restriction on his privileges under the Agreement.
“The cardinal rule of contract construction is to ascertain the intent of the
parties at the time they entered the agreement.” Williams, 332 Ga. App. at 718 (1).
“Construing the terms of an express contract is generally a question of law for the
court, unless an ambiguity is presented which cannot be resolved by the ordinary
rules of construction.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id. At the time of Williams,
supra, the record did not allow for a determination as a matter of law whether the
proctorship imposed upon Williams constituted a restriction on his privileges under
the Agreement. Id. at 722 (2). Here, despite each party’s ongoing quest for summary
judgment upon a record supplemented after Williams, neither party has cited either
evidence or a principle of contract construction that resolves that ambiguity as a
matter of law. As neither party has demonstrated entitlement to summary judgment,
the contested judgment must be reversed.15 See Borders v. City of Atlanta, 298 Ga.
15
In his appellate brief, Williams asserts that his privileges were not restricted
on the additional ground that the Hospital’s MEC did not have legal authority to do
so. But such ground was not ruled upon by the trial court, and we do not reach it here.
Nothing herein precludes Williams from properly seeking a ruling from the trial court
as to that ground upon remand. See generally Mom Corp. v. Chattahoochee Bank, 203
Ga. App. 847, 847 (1) (418 SE2d 74) (1992) (“On a reversal of summary judgment,
a case is remanded in the posture existing prior to summary judgment.”).
21
188, 196 (II) (779 SE2d 279) (2015) (where the ambiguity remains after applying the
rules of construction, the issue of what the ambiguous language means and what the
parties intended must be resolved by a jury); Cowart v. Widener, 287 Ga. 622, 624
(1) (a) (697 SE2d 779) (2010) (“Summary judgments enjoy no presumption of
correctness on appeal, and an appellate court must satisfy itself de novo that the
requirements of OCGA § 9-11-56 (c) have been met.”).
Judgment reversed. Mercier and Brown, JJ., concur.
22