If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
MARY ANNE MARKEL, UNPUBLISHED
January 4, 2024
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 350655
Oakland Circuit Court
WILLIAM BEAUMONT HOSPITAL, LC No. 2018-164979-NH
Defendant-Appellee,
and
HOSPITAL CONSULTANTS, PC, LINET
LONAPPAN, M.D., and IOANA MORARIU,
Defendants.
ON REMAND
Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and SHAPIRO and SWARTZLE, JJ.
SHAPIRO, J. (dissenting).
I respectfully dissent, as the majority has (1) failed to comply with the Supreme Court’s
remand directions, and (2) erred on the question of ostensible agency.
In our prior opinion, Markel v William Beaumont Hosp, unpublished per curiam opinion
of the Court of Appeals, issued April 22, 2021 (Docket No. 350655) (Markel I), the panel
concluded that a question of fact on ostensible agency was not created, despite the following facts:
1. The patient entered the hospital through the emergency department and was
admitted by emergency room physicians, not her personal physician. Her
personal physician had no involvement with any of plaintiff’s treatment at
the hospital.
2. Plaintiff had no preexisting relationship with defendant Dr. Lonappan.
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3. Dr. Lonappan is an internal medicine physician with a subspecialty in
“hospitalist medicine.” She has no private clinic and does not see or treat
patients outside of Beaumont Hospital. Her practice is limited solely to
serving as the attending physician for hospitalized patients not being
admitted by their own, personal physician. According to Yale Medicine:
A hospitalist is a physician who cares for inpatients,
meaning they only work inside a hospital. These doctors
have often completed residency training in general internal
medicine, pediatrics, neurology, obstetrics and gynecology,
or oncology. They may also be board-certified in hospital
medicine. Hospitalists provide timely attention to all your
needs, including diagnosis, treatment, and coordination of
care across the many specialists you might see during your
stay.
Because they only work in this setting, hospitalists
know how to navigate the hospital staff and protocols, and
they are experts in treating the most common conditions that
bring people to the hospital. You can think of a hospitalist as
an in-house, temporary primary care physician focused on
your care while you are hospitalized. Though hospitalists
sometimes get to know their patients well, they do not
continue to care for them after discharge. [Carrie
MacMillan, Yale Medicine, What Is a Hospitalist?
(posted October 26, 2022) (accessed December 21, 2023).]
4. Upon admission, the hospital assigned Dr. Lonappan to serve as plaintiff’s
attending physician. As the trial court put it, “once Beaumont assigned Dr.
Lonappan a patient, Dr. Lonappan was responsible for examining the
patient, coming up with a plan for that patient’s diagnosis and treatment,
and ultimately deciding whether to discharge the patient.”
5. When on duty, Dr. Lonappan wears a white lab coat with credentials that
say: “Beaumont Health System.” The credentials also contain the words:
“Hospital Consultants, PC.” Plaintiff does not recall how Dr. Lonappan
introduced herself and neither did Dr. Lonappan when she testified.
However, Dr. Lonappan testified that when she introduces herself to
patients, she simply says: “I’m Dr. Lonappan,” without identifying any
affiliations.1
1
When questioned by plaintiff’s counsel, Dr. Lonappan testified that introducing herself by name
only was her standard practice. However, when questioned by her own counsel, she said that if
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The Supreme Court reversed this Court’s prior opinion and remanded for this Court to again
consider the case, but this time “under the proper legal standard.” Markel v William Beaumont
Hosp, ___ Mich ___, ___; 982 NW2d 151, 152 (2022) (Markel II). The Supreme Court cited
Grewe v Mt Clemens Gen Hosp, 404 Mich 240; 273 NW2d 429 (1978), for the three elements of
that standard:
[First] The person dealing with the agent must do so with belief in the
agent's authority and this belief must be a reasonable one; [second] such belief must
be generated by some act or neglect of the principal sought to be charged; [third]
and the third person relying on the agent's apparent authority must not be guilty of
negligence. [Markel II, 982 NW2d at 152, quoting Grewe, 404 Mich at 253
(alterations in original).]
The Supreme Court’s order remanding this case went on to state:
The rule from Grewe is that when a patient presents for treatment at a hospital
emergency room and is treated during their hospital stay by a doctor with whom
they have no prior relationship, a belief that the doctor is the hospital’s agent is
reasonable unless the hospital does something to dispel that belief. [Markel II, 982
NW2d at 153.]
In Brackens v Detroit Osteopathic Hosp, 174 Mich App 290; 435 NW2d 472 (1989), this
Court held that it was a question of fact whether the defendant hospital could be held liable for two
physicians’ negligence in failing to properly diagnose the plaintiff. The two physicians were both
independent contractors. In reversing summary disposition and reaching the conclusion that the
agency issue was one for the jury, this Court stated: “Factors to be considered are whether the
plaintiff had an independent relationship with the physician prior to entering the hospital and
whether the hospital was really the situs for treatment by plaintiff’s own physician.” Id. at 293.
Application of this rule is straightforward in this case. First, plaintiff presented for
treatment at the hospital emergency room. Second, she was treated during her hospital stay by a
physician with whom she had no prior relationship. Third, she reasonably believed that Dr.
Lonappan was an agent of the hospital, and the hospital did nothing to dispel that belief.
In our prior opinion, Markel I, unpub op at 4, the majority, citing VanStelle v Macaskill,
255 Mich App 1; 662 NW2d 41 (2003), overruled in part by Markel II, 982 NW2d 151, erroneously
concluded that ostensible agency may not be found absent an affirmative act by the hospital. This
Court stated: “[T]he defendant as the putative principal must have done something that would
the patient’s primary care physician contracted with Hospital Consultants, she would tell the
patient that she was seeing them in place of their primary care physician, and that she is a
hospitalist “associated” with that physician. Certainly, if the fact-finder finds this second
explanation credible, it would weigh against a finding of ostensible agency, but, at this stage, our
role is to consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, plaintiff.
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create in the patient’s mind the reasonable belief that the doctors were acting on behalf of the
defendant hospital.” Markel I, unpub at 4.
The Markel I majority went on to cite VanStelle’s reliance on Sasseen v Community Hosp
Foundation, 159 Mich App 231, 240; 406 NW2d 193 (1986), for the principle that “[a]gency does
not arise merely because one goes to a hospital for medical treatment. There must be some action
or representation by the principal (hospital) to lead the third person (plaintiff) to reasonably believe
an agency in fact existed.” Markel I, unpub op at 4. VanStelle’s reliance on Sasseen is dubious.
In Sasseen, the plaintiff was admitted and treated by her personal physician while at the hospital.2
Sasseen, 159 Mich App at 233-234. That situation clearly falls outside of Grewe and is far afield
from circumstances in the instant case. Indeed, the majority’s initial reliance on VanStelle is
difficult to understand since that case involved treatment at a physician’s private office. VanStelle,
255 Mich App at 3-5. Thus, the circumstances in VanStelle and Sasseen affirmatively demonstrate
that the physician was not the hospital’s agent.
However, when a patient is admitted by the emergency department or by a hospitalist, the
opposite is true. A patient will reasonably assume a physician is the hospital’s agent absent some
action that makes clear to a reasonable person that this is not the case.
The only post-Grewe medical malpractice case even cited in the majority’s opinion is
Wilson v Stilwill, 411 Mich 587; 309 NW2d 898 (1981).3 However, like Sasseen and VanStelle,
the facts in Wilson are far afield from the instant case. In Wilson, “there was an independent
physician-patient relationship prior to the hospital treatment.” Id. at 610. Given that the physician
in Wilson was not negligent, there could be no hospital liability based on agency, regardless of
whether it was termed “ostensible agency” or “agency by estoppel.” Id. Rather than recognizing
Wilson’s inability to support its view, the majority opinion hangs its hat on the fact that, in Wilson,
the Court referred to both “agency by estoppel” and “ostensible agency.” From there, it backs into
the view it stated in Markel I—that unless the plaintiff can demonstrate an affirmative
2
Similarly, in Chapa v St Mary’s Hosp of Saginaw, 192 Mich App 29; 480 NW2d 590 (1991), the
plaintiff asserted that the hospital was liable for the negligence of his attending physician and a
consultant requested by the attending physician. Id. at 30-31. We held the hospital was not
vicariously liable, because even though the malpractice occurred at the hospital, the attending
physician was the plaintiff’s own family physician. Id. at 32-34.
3
The majority does, however, cite a 1927 case involving a commercial contract for the sale of
flour, David Stott Flour Mills v Saginaw Co Farm Bureau, 237 Mich 657; 213 NW 147 (1927), a
1942 commercial case dealing with the sale of sausages, Flat Hots Co, Inc v Peschke Packing Co,
301 Mich 331; 3 NW2d 295 (1942), a 1990 case involving the potential liability of a franchisor
for a franchisee’s negligence, Little v Howard Johnson Co, 183 Mich App 675; 455 NW2d 390
(1990), and a 2007 criminal case in which the defendant sought to suppress a witness’s testimony
on the grounds that a private individual should be considered an agent of the police, People v
Jordan, 275 Mich App 659; 739 NW2d 706 (2007). A footnote in the majority opinion cites a
fourth commercial case, this one from 1913, but fails to recognize that the Supreme Court
concluded the existence of agency by estoppel was a question for the jury. Pettinger v Alpena
Cedar, 175 Mich 162, 167; 141 NW 535 (1913).
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representation of agency by the hospital, there can be no ostensible agency. In sum, rather than
adhering to the remand order and applying the Grewe standard as defined in that order, the majority
chooses instead to follow the standard advocated in Justice VIVIANO’S dissent. Notably, the
remand order makes no reference to “agency by estoppel.”
I recognize that the majority does cite to Grewe and points out that Grewe used the term
“agency by estoppel.” However, in the entire Grewe opinion, the word “estoppel” appears only
once, immediately following which it states:
In our view, the critical question is whether the plaintiff, at the time of his
admission to the hospital, was looking to the hospital for treatment of his physical
ailments or merely viewed the hospital as the situs where his physician would treat
him for his problems. A relevant factor in this determination involves resolution
of the question of whether the hospital provided the plaintiff with Dr. Katzowitz or
whether the plaintiff and Dr. Katzowitz had a patient-physician relationship
independent of the hospital setting. [Grewe, 404 Mich at 251.]
Grewe further clarified that “[t]he relationship between a given physician and a hospital
may well be that of an independent contractor performing services for, but not subject to, the direct
control of the hospital. However, that is not of critical importance to the patient who is the ultimate
victim of that physician’s malpractice[,]” id. at 252, and noted the lack of evidence that the hospital
put the plaintiff on notice of the physician’s status as an independent contractor. Id. at 253-255.4
4
The hospital argues that ostensible agency may not be found because the attending physician was
part of a hospitalist group that contracted with plaintiff’s primary care physician to act as attending
physician to any of the group’s patients should they be hospitalized. As noted, Dr. Lonappan
offered two different versions of what she told plaintiff, one of which included a statement that
she was seeing plaintiff in lieu of her primary care physician, but another in which she simply
introduced herself to plaintiff as her attending physician. In any event, as noted in Johnson v
Kolachalam, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued July 21, 2016
(Docket No. 326615):
Defendants contend that the hospital did not identify Sabir as its agent. Defendants
presented plaintiff’s signed consent form, in which she acknowledged that “some
of the physicians who manage the care are independent physicians and not agents,
representatives, or employees of the facility.” Plaintiff contends that the hospital
neglected to inform her that Sabir was not a staff doctor, which was sufficient to
establish ostensible agency. Plaintiff explained that she presented to the hospital
as an emergency case and she did not present to a specific physician. Plaintiff said
she believed she was being treated by the hospital, and by admitting her, the
hospital represented that she would be treated. Given her pain and distress when
she arrived, plaintiff did not unreasonably fail to ask whether the individual doctor
who treated her was an employee of the hospital or an independent contractor. See
Grewe, 404 Mich at 253. Under the circumstances, plaintiff could have reasonably
believed that defendant Sabir was an employee of the hospital. Accordingly, the
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The majority asserts that there is no evidence of “reliance.” However, if affirmative assertions of
reliance are required, it is difficult to see how Grewe could have been routinely applied to
emergency room cases. The fact that the physician’s practice takes place solely in the hospital is
adequate to create reliance by the patient.5
It is not our role to weigh the facts for or against a showing of ostensible agency. So long
as there is evidence to support a finding of ostensible agency, the question is for the fact-finder.
As Grewe noted: “Agency is always a question of fact for the jury.” Id. at 253, citing with approval
Stanhope v Los Angeles College of Chiropractic, 54 Cal App 141, 146 (1942).
In sum, when a person enters a hospital through the emergency room and is assigned an
attending physician by the hospital, those actions alone are sufficient to create reliance by the
patient and to create a question of fact as to ostensible agency unless it is shown that the patient
was advised and understood that the physician was not the hospital’s agent. Put in the language
favored by the majority, admission through the emergency room, the hospital’s assignment of an
attending physician, and permitting that physician to wear hospital identification are all affirmative
acts giving rise to a reasonable belief that the physician is an agent of the hospital.6 At a minimum,
trial court did not err by denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition on
plaintiff's ostensible agency claim. [Johnson, unpub op at 10.]
5
The nature of a patient’s reliance on a hospital was discussed at length in Popovich v Allina
Health Sys, 946 NW2d 885 (Minn, 2020). In Popovich, the parties disagreed on the nature of the
“reliance” that the plaintiff patient was required to show. According to the hospital in Popovich,
“a plaintiff’s claim fails unless the plaintiff can show that the patient would not have accepted care
had the patient known that the personnel in the emergency were not actually agents or employees
of the hospital.” Id. at 895. The Minnesota Supreme Court rejected this argument, concluding
that the issue of reliance does not require explicit affirmative reliance:
The second element, “reliance,” focuses on the beliefs of patients and
considers whether the patient looked to the hospital, rather than to a particular
doctor, to provide care. Specifically, the fact-finder should determine if the plaintiff
relied on the hospital to select the physician and other medical professionals to
provide the necessary services. This reliance standard reflects the reality that most
people who go to the emergency room do not know which medical professionals
will treat them once they arrive. Instead, they rely on the hospital to select the
professionals for them. [Id. at 898 (citations omitted).]
6
As noted in Smith v Saginaw S&L Ass’n, 94 Mich App 263, 271-271; 288 NW2d 613 (1979), the
focus should not be on whether the principal has affirmatively identified the alleged wrongdoer as
its agent. In Smith, this Court held:
Whenever a principal has placed an agent in such a situation that a person
of ordinary prudence, conversant with business usages and the nature of the
particular business, is justified in assuming that such agent is authorized to perform
in behalf of the principal the particular act, and such particular act has been
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in the absence of providing clear information to the contrary, the hospital has “generated [that
belief] by some act or neglect[.]” Grewe, 404 Mich at 253. Indeed, imposing the requirements
sought by defendant would result in the end of ostensible agency even for emergency room
physicians, a radical alteration in the law since Grewe.7 If an affirmative act beyond those just
mentioned is required to establish even a question of fact regarding agency, it is difficult to see
why the hospital should even be deemed the principal of the physicians who work in their
emergency rooms, but are actually independent contractors. In other words, the majority’s
approach is to wholly undo the standard defined in Grewe and referenced in Markel II.
For these reasons, I would reverse the trial court’s grant of summary disposition and
remand for trial. Accordingly, I dissent.
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
performed, the principal is estopped from denying the agent's authority to perform
it. [Id. at 271-272 (quotation marks and citation omitted).]
7
Justice VIVIANO’S dissent makes a policy argument that patients who are victims of malpractice
need not seek compensation from the hospital. Markel II, 982 NW2d at 161 (VIVIANO, J,
dissenting) (“Physicians staffing the hospital can be sued directly and will likely have sufficient
resources or insurance to make the plaintiff whole.”) (emphasis added). However, Justice
VIVIANO does not cite to any actual statistics or evidence regarding physician liability coverage in
Michigan. In fact, “[i]n the State of Michigan, medical malpractice insurance coverage is not
required of physicians by law[,]” and “[t]he most common minimum limits of coverage are
$200,000/$600,000.” Nexus Insurance Services, Michigan Medical Malpractice Insurance
Coverage, (accessed December 21, 2023).
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