PERVAIZ CHAUDHRY, ET AL V. TOMAS ARAGON, ET AL, No. 21-16873 (9th Cir. 2023)
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Plaintiffs filed a 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 lawsuit against Defendants—each present or former employees of the California Department of Public Health—on the grounds that Defendants acted under color of state law to deprive Plaintiffs of certain rights secured by the United States Constitution. Specifically, Plaintiffs alleged a “stigma-plus” due process claim under Section 1983 on the grounds that Defendants violated their Fourteenth Amendment rights by denying Plaintiff an opportunity to be heard before publishing a purportedly erroneous investigative report on an unsuccessful cardiac surgery. They contend that the publication of this report caused Plaintiffs to be deprived of protected employment-related interests. The district court concluded that Plaintiffs failed to establish several necessary elements of their claim and, thus, dismissed the action in its entirety; Plaintiffs challenged each of the district court’s negative elemental findings.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed. The panel held that the district court’s negative causation finding was plausible in light of record evidence establishing; the timing and conclusions of the hospital’s internal investigations, the independent actions of a hospital employee to alert the family to potential malfeasance by Plaintiff, the family and estate’s pursuit of legal action; the accounts of key percipient witnesses to the surgery as part of the malpractice case; and the sizable malpractice judgment awarded against Plaintiff. The panel thus sustained the district court’s determination that Plaintiffs failed to prove that Defendants’ conduct was the actionable cause of the claimed injury and concluded that, at a minimum, Plaintiffs failed to establish the requisite causation element of their “stigma-plus” due process claim under Section 1983.
Court Description: Civil Rights The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal, following a five-day bench trial, of an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against present or former employees of the California Department of Public Health alleging a “stigma-plus” due process claim on the grounds that defendants violated Dr. Chaudry’s and Valley Cardiac Surgery Medical Group’s Fourteenth Amendment rights by denying Dr. Chaudhry an opportunity to be heard before publishing a purportedly erroneous investigative report on an unsuccessful cardiac surgery.
Following an investigation of the surgery, the Department published on its website a combined Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction. The district court concluded, among other things, that plaintiffs Dr. Chaudhry and Valley Cardiac Surgery Medical Group failed to ** The Honorable Gary S. Katzmann, Judge for the United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation.
establish the requisite causation element for a “stigma-plus” due process claim under § 1983. The district court assessed that it was the tragic events surrounding patient Silvino Perez’s surgery and Dr. Chaudhry’s violations of certain hospital policies—and not the ostensibly stigmatizing Statement of Deficiencies—that were the causes of plaintiffs’ alleged deprivations.
The panel held that the district court’s negative causation finding was plausible in light of record evidence establishing, inter alia: the timing and conclusions of the hospital’s internal investigations; the independent actions of a hospital employee to alert the Perez family to potential malfeasance by Dr. Chaudhry; the Perez family and estate’s pursuit of legal action; the accounts of key percipient witnesses to the Perez surgery as part of the Perez malpractice case; and the sizable malpractice judgment awarded against Dr. Chaudhry. The panel thus sustained the district court’s determination that plaintiffs failed to prove that defendants’ conduct was the actionable cause of the claimed injury and concluded that, at a minimum, plaintiffs failed to establish the requisite causation element of their “stigma-plus” due process claim under § 1983.