Court Opinion

ID: 9919539
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-18 18:03:43.968547+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:05:29.173933
License: Public Domain

Filed 1/18/24 Barnes v. Governing Bd. of John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital CA4/1
                 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS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
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                COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                                 DIVISION ONE

                                         STATE OF CALIFORNIA

 H. CHRISTOPHER BARNES,                                                     D081548

           Plaintiff and Respondent,                                        (Super. Ct. No. CVPS2201690)

           v.

 GOVERNING BOARD OF JOHN F.
 KENNEDY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, INC.,

           Defendant and Appellant;

 MEDICAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF
 JOHN F. KENNEDY MEMORIAL
 HOSPITAL, INC.,

          Real Party in Interest and
          Appellant.

         APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Riverside County,
Manuel Bustamante, Judge. Affirmed.
         Davis Wright Tremaine, Thomas R. Burke, Terri D. Keville, Anna R.
Buono and Miriam R. Swedlow for Defendant and Appellant Governing
Board of John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital, Inc. and Real Party in Interest
and Appellant Medical Executive Committee of John F. Kennedy Memorial
Hospital, Inc.
      Donald Aquinas Lancaster, Jr. for Plaintiff and Respondent.

      The Governing Board of John F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital, Inc. (the
Governing Board) and the Medical Executive Committee of John F. Kennedy
Memorial Hospital, Inc. (the Medical Executive Committee) appeal from an
order denying their special motion to strike brought under the anti-SLAPP

statute (Code Civ. Proc.,1 § 425.16). The special motion to strike targeted
portions of the combined writ petition and complaint for declaratory relief
brought by H. Christopher Barnes, M.D., in which Barnes challenges the
termination of his medical staff membership at John F. Kennedy Memorial
Hospital (JFK). We conclude that the trial court properly determined that
the special motion to strike lacked merit, and we accordingly affirm the trial
court’s order denying the motion.
                                       I.
              FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A.    The Hospital Peer Review Proceeding Involving Barnes
      Barnes is a surgeon who was an active member of the JFK medical

staff beginning in 2004.2 In 2014, JFK’s Medical Staff Office began to receive
reports that Barnes was engaging in unprofessional and disruptive behavior.

1      Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the
Code of Civil Procedure. “ ‘SLAPP’ is an acronym for ‘strategic lawsuit
against public participation.’ ” (Baral v. Schnitt (2016) 1 Cal.5th 376, 381,
fn. 1 (Baral).) The anti-SLAPP statute sets forth the standards and the
procedure for striking “meritless claims arising from protected activity.” (Id.
at p. 384, italics omitted.)
2      In setting out the basic background facts, we rely, in part, on the
Procedural History section of the decision of the Appeal Board of the
Governing Board, as that decision provides a useful summary of the basic
facts, and the parties have not disputed its factual accuracy.

                                       2
After unsuccessful informal attempts to address the matter with Barnes, the
Medical Executive Committee retained an external organization, EXTTI
Incorporated (EXTTI) to conduct an investigation into the credibility of the
reports and to assess Barnes’s assertions that the reports were
discriminatory and retaliatory. EXTTI issued a report in December 2016,
which described “strong personality conflicts that could impact patient care.”
      In response, the Medical Executive Committee voted to conduct a
formal corrective action investigation. In February 2017, the corrective
action investigation committee made a preliminary recommendation that
Barnes enter into a progressive discipline agreement and enroll in two anger
management courses. Barnes indicated that he would not enter into the
agreement or enroll in the courses. The Medical Executive Committee then
decided that it would terminate Barnes’s JFK medical staff membership if he
did not comply with its requests. Barnes refused to take the required actions,
and the Medical Executive Committee notified Barnes on April 14, 2017, that
his medical staff membership would be terminated, but that he had the right
to request a hearing with the Judicial Review Committee (JRC). Barnes
requested a JRC hearing.
      The Medical Executive Committee provided Barnes with a Notice of
Charges on May 23, 2017, and a First Amended Notice of Charges on
October 9, 2017. Those documents alleged that Barnes engaged in “an on-
going pattern of inappropriate, unacceptable interpersonal relations with
hospital personnel, medical staff members, patients and their families,” and
“abusive disruptive behavior.” The operative First Amended Notice of
Charges set forth 30 specific charges involving a range of conduct from 2014
to 2017.

                                      3
      The Medical Executive Committee appointed a JRC hearing officer, and
the parties then approved five physicians to serve as members of the JRC.
One of the five members served as an alternate, and one was subsequently
recused by the hearing officer.
      The JRC heard evidence during 19 hearing sessions from April 2018 to
April 2021. The parties submitted closing briefs, and the JRC then issued
findings and conclusions in July 2021. The JRC decided that the Medical
Executive Committee’s recommendation to terminate Barnes’s medical staff
membership was reasonable and warranted.
      Barnes requested appellate review of the JRC decision before an
Appeal Board appointed by the Governing Board. Barnes raised a range of
issues with the Appeal Board, most of which were focused on the alleged
failure of the Medical Executive Committee and the JRC to follow JFK’s
Medical Staff Bylaws (JFK Bylaws) and the applicable California laws in
conducting the peer review proceeding. Because many of the issues that
Barnes raised with the Appeal Board are the same issues that Barnes raises
in this litigation, we detail those issues here.
      First, Barnes contended in his arguments to the Appeal Board that one

of the physicians that served as a JRC member, Dr. S.C.,3 should not have
been on the JRC for several reasons. Barnes contended that Dr. S.C. was
dishonest when asked during voir dire whether he (i.e., Dr. S.C.) was the
subject of “any retention agreements.” Specifically, Barnes pointed out that
Dr. S.C. did not disclose that he was allegedly subject to a practice
monitoring agreement. Barnes also contended that Dr. S.C. did not qualify
under the JFK Bylaws to serve on the JRC.

3     We refer to the JRC member by the use of initials to preserve
confidentiality.

                                         4
      Second, Barnes argued that the JRC hearing officer should not have
appointed one of the JRC members as an alternate rather than an active
member because there was no provision for such a procedure in the JFK
Bylaws. Similarly, Barnes maintained that the JRC hearing officer did not
have authority to recuse one of the JRC members.
      Third, Barnes contended that the hearing officer improperly limited or
excluded certain evidence. The purportedly wrongfully excluded evidence
included the fact that, during the pendency of the proceeding before the JRC,
Dr. Barnes’s medical staff membership at JFK was automatically terminated
by the Medical Executive Committee for a reason independent of the charges
that were pending before the JRC. Specifically, Barnes’s medical staff
membership was automatically terminated in September 2018 by the Medical
Executive Committee pursuant to JFK Bylaws section 7.3-5 because Barnes
had failed to maintain professional liability insurance. With respect to the
automatic termination, Barnes argued to the Appeal Board both that (1) the
JRC should have considered evidence that his medical staff membership had
already been terminated, which would have made it improper for his medical
staff membership to be terminated based on the additional grounds alleged
in the First Amended Notice of Charges; and (2) the automatic termination
improperly occurred “without notice and a hearing.”
      Fourth, Barnes argued it was improper for the Medical Executive
Committee to rely on EXTTI to conduct its investigation because EXTTI was
composed of nonphysicians.

                                       5
      Fifth, Barnes contended that in presenting its case to the JRC, the
Medical Executive Committee “over-relied on hearsay evidence,” so that the

charges against him were not supported by substantial evidence.4
      Sixth, Barnes challenged the termination decision based on the fact
that in 2015 and 2017 he received positive practice evaluations and was

reappointed to the medical staff.5
      Finally, Barnes objected to some of the language of the “805 report”
that the Medical Executive Committee would be required by law to submit to
the Medical Board of California and the National Practitioner Data Bank in
the event that the termination of Barnes’s medical staff membership was

sustained.6 The JRC decision set forth proposed language for the 805 report,
but Barnes believed that some of it was inaccurate.

4      The JFK Bylaws provide that at a hearing before the JRC, “[a]ny
relevant evidence, including hearsay, shall be admitted if it is the sort of
evidence on which responsible persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct
of serious affairs, regardless of the admissibility of such evidence in a court of
law.”
5     Pursuant to applicable regulations (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 22, § 70701,
subd. (a)(7)) and the JFK Bylaws, physicians must seek reappointment to the
hospital medical staff at least once every two years.
6      The report to the Medical Board of California and the National
Practitioner Data Bank was required as a result of Business and Professions
Code section 805, subdivision (b)(2), which requires the filing of a report with
the Medical Board of California within 15 days after a peer review body
terminates or revokes “[a] licentiate’s membership, staff privileges, or
employment . . . for a medical disciplinary cause or reason.” (Bus. & Prof.
Code, § 805, subd. (b)(2).) The statute refers to such a report as an “805
report” (id., § 805), and we use that terminology here as well. In addition, “a
hospital usually is required to report disciplinary actions to the National
Practitioner Data Bank, established for the purpose of tracking the activities
of incompetent physicians. (42 U.S.C. § 11133(a).) A hospital’s decision to

                                        6
      The Appeal Board issued its decision in January 2022. The 42-page
decision extensively discussed each of the issues raised by Barnes, found
them to be without merit, and recommended that the Governing Board affirm
the JRC’s decision that the Medical Executive Committee’s termination of
Barnes’s medical staff membership was reasonable and warranted. The
Appeal Board also recommended that the language of the 805 report be
revised in certain respects. At a January 20, 2022 meeting, the Governing
Board adopted the Appeal Board’s decision.
B.    Barnes Files This Litigation to Challenge the Governing Board’s
      Decision
      On April 28, 2022, Barnes initiated this action by filing a combined
petition for a writ of mandate (§ 1085), petition for a writ of administrative
mandamus (§ 1094.5), and complaint for declaratory relief (the Petition). The
Petition names the Governing Board as the only respondent/defendant, and it
names the Medical Executive Committee solely as a real party in interest.
Specifically, Barnes alleges that the Medical Executive Committee is named
as a real party in interest because it would be “affected” by the lawsuit
“insofar as [it] grants privilege[s] to physician[s] practicing medicine at JFK
Memorial Hospital,” and if Barnes prevailed in his lawsuit, the Medical
Executive Committee “would be obligated to restore [his] privileges” and to
“retract” the 805 report.
      The Petition relies exclusively on the same allegations that Barnes
presented to the Appeal Board regarding the failure of the Medical Executive
Committee and the JRC to follow the JFK Bylaws and applicable California
law in conducting the peer review proceeding. The allegations mirroring the

deny staff privileges therefore may have the effect of ending the physician’s
career.” (Mileikowsky v. West Hills Hospital & Medical Center (2009)
45 Cal.4th 1259, 1268, fn. omitted (Mileikowsky).)

                                       7
claims presented to the Appeal Board are spread out over the Petition’s
“causes of action” (capitalization omitted) for a writ of traditional mandate,
writ of administrative mandamus and declaratory relief. Many of the
allegations are repeated in more than one of the Petition’s causes of action.
      Specifically, over the course of the Petition, Barnes alleges that the
following circumstances provide a ground for relief from the Governing
Board’s decision: (1) the participation of Dr. S.C. on the JRC because Dr. S.C.
did not answer honestly when asked if he was subject to “any retention
agreements,” in that he did not disclose he was subject to a practice
monitoring agreement and was on probation with the Medical Board of
California, which allegedly suggests that Dr. S.C. was biased in favor of the
Medical Executive Committee and was ineligible to serve on the JRC; (2) the
failure of the Medical Executive Committee to provide Barnes with a hearing
prior to the automatic termination of his medical staff privileges for failure to
maintain malpractice insurance; (3) the exclusion from the JRC proceeding of
certain evidence, including evidence related to the automatic termination of
Barnes’s medical staff privileges; (4) the continuation of the peer review
proceeding before the JRC even though Barnes’s medical staff membership
had already been automatically terminated; (5) the over-reliance on hearsay
evidence by the Medical Executive Committee during the JRC proceeding;
(6) the improper reliance by the Medical Executive Committee on EXTTI to
conduct an investigation even though EXTTI was not comprised of
physicians; (7) the fact that in 2015 and 2017, Barnes received positive
practice evaluations and was reappointed to the medical staff, which suggests
that the charges brought by the Medical Executive Committee were
“manufactured” as a “pretext”; and (8) the JRC hearing officer’s improper
decisions about the composition of the JRC.

                                        8
      In the Petition’s prayer for relief, the only specific remedy that Barnes
identifies is the issuance of a writ of mandate requiring the Governing Board
and the Medical Executive Committee “to withdraw its [805] report to the
Medical Board of the California [sic] and the National Practitioner Data

Bank.”7 To the extent the cause of action for declaratory relief seeks a
remedy different from the remedy sought in the prayer for relief, that cause
of action specifically seeks “a judicial determination . . . with regard to
whether [the Governing Board] and [the Medical Executive Committee]
ensured that [Barnes] received a fair procedure in peer review proceedings
and corrective actions proceedings” and whether the Medical Executive
Committee “was required, and failed, to afford Dr. Barnes notice and a right
to be heard pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 809.1 once his
privileges were [automatically] terminated on October 18, 2018.” The
introductory section of the Petition more generally states that Barnes is
seeking to have the court “reverse the decisions of the Governing Board and
the JRC.”
      The Governing Board and the Medical Executive Committee first
responded to the Petition by filing a demurrer. The demurrer argued that
(1) the Medical Executive Committee was not a proper party to the litigation;
and (2) the only viable way to challenge the decision of the Governing Board
was to seek a writ of administrative mandamus (§ 1094.5), not a traditional
writ of mandate (§ 1085) or declaratory relief. The trial court sustained the

7     We infer that because Barnes’s medical staff membership was
automatically terminated for the independent reason of his failure to
maintain his malpractice insurance, he does not seek the remedy of an order
reinstating his medical staff membership. Instead, the relief he seeks focuses
on the remaining adverse consequence from the Governing Board’s decision,
namely, the required filing of the 805 report.

                                        9
demurrer in part. It agreed that the Medical Executive Committee was
improperly named in this action, but it determined that although most of the
issues Barnes raised were cognizable only in a petition for a writ of
administrative mandamus, one of the issues he raised could be addressed

through a petition for a traditional writ of mandate.8
      While the demurrer was pending, the Governing Board and the Medical
Executive Committee filed a special motion to strike under the anti-SLAPP
statute. The special motion to strike argued that, with the exception of what
it described as Barnes’s “narrow challenge to the Governing Board’s final
decision” contained in the cause of action seeking a writ of administrative
mandamus, the remainder of the Petition’s allegations fell within the scope of
the anti-SLAPP because “they all arise from communications made in the
course of peer review, or statements made to government agencies as
mandated by law.” The special motion to strike acknowledged that our
Supreme Court has established that claims for relief based on the discipline
imposed as a result of a peer review proceeding are not protected by the
anti-SLAPP statute. (Bonni v. St. Joseph Health System (2021) 11 Cal.5th
995, 1004 (Bonni).) However, according to the special motion to strike, many
of the Petition’s claims for relief were not based on the Governing Board’s
final decision to terminate Barnes’s medical staff membership, but instead
they “challenge[d] speech and conduct in the course of the [Medical Executive
Committee’s] investigation and the recommendations that led up to the
Governing Board’s final decision, as well as rulings made by the [JRC]
Hearing Officer.”

8     Specifically, the trial court held that a proceeding in traditional
mandate was proper for Barnes’s claim that he was denied a hearing prior to
the automatic termination of his medical staff membership.

                                      10
      The trial court denied the special motion to strike. It ruled that the
Petition’s allegations did not fall under the scope of the anti-SLAPP statute
because “[t]he injurious conduct” targeted by the Petition “is the termination
itself.” (Underscoring omitted.) As the trial court explained, “While [Barnes]
alludes to improper conduct by the [Medical Executive Committee] and
hearing officer in violation of the [JFK] [B]ylaws, [Barnes] does not seek
damages for statements or writings made during the course of the hospital
peer review process. A request for judicial relief from an administrative
decision is distinguishable from requests for damages that are based on

alleged injury arising from hospital peer review activity.”9
      The Governing Board and the Medical Executive Committee appeal

from the order denying their special motion to strike.10

9      Somewhat inconsistently and confusingly, the trial court then went on
to discuss several specific items in the Petition that would fall within the
scope of the anti-SLAPP statute because they involved a statement or writing
in connection with an official proceeding. The allegations that the trial court
identified as meeting that description were Barnes’s claims concerning the
EXTTI report and the overreliance on hearsay during the JRC hearing, as
well as Barnes’s request for an order requiring the retraction of the 805
report. The trial court seems to have conducted a cursory second-prong
inquiry and concluded that there may be merit to the first two items to the
extent they were part of Barnes’s allegation of procedural deficiencies in the
peer review proceeding. Nevertheless, the trial court denied the special
motion to strike in its entirety.
10    For the first time on appeal, Barnes contends the issue of whether the
special motion to strike was properly granted as to the Medical Executive
Committee is “moot” because the Medical Executive Committee prevailed in
its demurrer and has been dismissed as a party. We reject the mootness
argument, as a live issue of entitlement to attorney fees as a result of the
special motion to strike still exists as to the Medical Executive Committee.
(§ 425.16, subd. (c); White v. Lieberman (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 210, 220 [an
order sustaining a defendant’s demurrer without leave to amend did not moot

                                      11
                                       II.
                                 DISCUSSION
A.    The Anti-SLAPP Statute
      We begin by setting out some general principles applicable to special
motions to strike brought under the anti-SLAPP statute. “The anti-SLAPP
statute is ‘designed to protect defendants from meritless lawsuits that might
chill the exercise of their rights to speak and petition on matters of public
concern. [Citations.] To that end, the statute authorizes a special motion to
strike a claim “arising from any act of that person in furtherance of the
person’s right of petition or free speech under the United States Constitution
or the California Constitution in connection with a public issue.” (§ 425.16,
subd. (b)(1).)’ [Citation.] [¶] Litigation of an anti-SLAPP motion involves a
two-step process. First, ‘the moving defendant bears the burden of
establishing that the challenged allegations or claims “aris[e] from” protected
activity in which the defendant has engaged.’ [Citation.] Second, for each
claim that does arise from protected activity, the plaintiff must show the
claim has ‘at least “minimal merit.” ’ [Citation.] If the plaintiff cannot make
this showing, the court will strike the claim.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at

pp. 1008–1009.)11

that defendant’s SLAPP motion, because a prevailing defendant in a special
motion to strike is generally entitled to award of attorney fees].)
11    We note that the anti-SLAPP statute refers to a “person” and a
“defendant” bringing a special motion to strike (§ 425.16, subds. (b)(1), (c)),
and it defines the term “defendant” to include “ ‘cross-defendant’ and
‘respondent.’ ” (Id., subd. (h).) Due to our disposition affirming the trial
court’s denial of the special motion to strike, we need not, and do not, address
whether a real party in interest, such as the Medical Executive Committee,
may also bring a special motion to strike. (See Rudisill v. California Coastal
Com. (2019) 35 Cal.App.5th 1062, 1072 & fn. 4 [noting that “whether a real

                                       12
      The anti-SLAPP statute identifies four categories of protected activity:
“(1) any written or oral statement or writing made before a legislative,
executive, or judicial proceeding, or any other official proceeding authorized
by law, (2) any written or oral statement or writing made in connection with
an issue under consideration or review by a legislative, executive, or judicial
body, or any other official proceeding authorized by law, (3) any written or
oral statement or writing made in a place open to the public or a public forum
in connection with an issue of public interest, or (4) any other conduct in
furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional right of petition or the
constitutional right of free speech in connection with a public issue or an
issue of public interest.” (§ 425.16, subd. (e)(1)–(4).) The Governing Board
and the Medical Executive Committee identify subdivision (e)(1), (2)

and (4) of section 425.16 as potentially applicable here.12

party in interest in a mandamus proceeding is a ‘person’ against whom a
claim is asserted for purposes of the anti-SLAPP statute has apparently not
been addressed in any reported decision,” but concluding that for the purpose
of deciding whether to award attorney fees to a plaintiff that prevailed in
defeating an anti-SLAPP motion, there was a “reasonable basis” for the
moving party in the anti-SLAPP motion to adopt that interpretation].) The
Medical Executive Committee contends on appeal that the trial court erred in
not separately addressing the claims against it when evaluating the special
motion to strike. However, since the Medical Executive Committee was sued
solely as a real party in interest to enable the court to order relief that
impacts the Medical Executive Committee, the substantive basis for Barnes’s
claims for relief as to that party are identical to the substantive basis for the
claims for relief against the Governing Board. No separate analysis is
required to determine whether the claims against the Medical Executive
Committee, as real party in interest, arise from speech protected by the
anti-SLAPP statute.
12    The Governing Board and the Medical Executive Committee contend
that subdivision (e)(1) and (2) of section 425.16 apply because Barnes’s peer
review proceeding was an “official proceeding authorized by law” (ibid.),

                                       13
      “Analysis of an anti-SLAPP motion is not confined to evaluating
whether an entire cause of action, as pleaded by the plaintiff, arises from
protected activity or has merit. Instead, courts should analyze each claim for
relief—each act or set of acts supplying a basis for relief, of which there may
be several in a single pleaded cause of action—to determine whether the acts
are protected and, if so, whether the claim they give rise to has the requisite
degree of merit to survive the motion.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 1010,
italics added.) Put another way, “particular alleged acts giving rise to a claim
for relief may be the object of an anti-SLAPP motion.” (Baral, supra,
1 Cal.5th at p. 395.) If a court strikes particular claims for relief within a
cause of action under the anti-SLAPP statute, the plaintiff “may no longer
seek to impose liability on defendants for having engaged in th[o]se protected
acts.” (Bonni, at p. 1019.) However, the underlying factual allegations for
the stricken claims will still be admissible to prove any claims for relief that
survive the special motion to strike. (Ibid.)
      A trial court’s order denying a special motion to strike is subject to a de
novo standard of review. (Monster Energy Co. v. Schechter (2019) 7 Cal.5th
781, 788.) “ ‘[O]ur job is to review the trial court’s ruling, not its reasoning.’ ”
(Trinity Risk Management, LLC v. Simplified Labor Staffing Solutions, Inc.
(2021) 59 Cal.App.5th 995, 1002.)

during which, or in connection with which, certain written or oral speech
occurred. They allege that subdivision (e)(4) of section 425.16 applies on the
ground that, during Barnes’s peer review proceeding, statements were made
about the “ ‘public issue’ of ‘the qualifications, competence, and professional
ethics of a licensed physician.’ ” (Quoting Yang v. Tenet Healthcare Inc.
(2020) 48 Cal.App.5th 939, 947.)

                                         14
B.    Hospital Peer Review Proceedings
      To better understand the context in which this action arose, we next
examine the nature of hospital peer review proceedings.
      “In California, hospitals are composed of an administrative governing
body that oversees hospital operations and a medical staff that provides
medical services and ensures its members provide adequate medical care to
patients. A physician who wishes to practice at a hospital must maintain
staff privileges. The termination of staff privileges can significantly limit the
physician’s ability to practice medicine. For that reason, before staff
privileges can be terminated, the physician must be afforded certain
procedural protections, including the opportunity for review of the
termination decision.” (Natarajan v. Dignity Health (2021) 11 Cal.5th 1095,
1102 (Natarajan).) That process is known as “peer review.” (Ibid.; see also
Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at pp. 1012–1013 [“medical peer review is the
process by which a hospital’s medical staff evaluates fellow physicians’
professional competence”].)
      “Though originally adopted by the profession as a purely private
process, peer review is now mandated by statute [citations] . . . .” (Bonni,
supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 1013.) Specifically, in 1989, “[t]he Legislature . . .
codified the common law fair procedure doctrine in the hospital peer review
context by enacting Business and Professions Code sections 809 to 809.8.”
(El-Attar v. Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center (2013) 56 Cal.4th 976,
988.) “The two primary goals of the peer review statute are ‘to protect the
health and welfare of the people of California by excluding through the peer
review mechanism “those healing arts practitioners who provide substandard
care or who engage in professional misconduct” ’ and ‘to protect competent
practitioners from being barred from practice for arbitrary or discriminatory

                                        15
reasons.’ ” (Natarajan, supra, 11 Cal.5th at p. 1103.) “A hospital’s decisions
resulting from peer review proceedings are subject to judicial review by
administrative mandate. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 809.8.) Thus, the Legislature
has accorded a hospital’s peer review decisions a status comparable to that of
quasi-judicial public agencies whose decisions likewise are reviewable by
administrative mandate.” (Kibler v. Northern Inyo County Local Hospital
Dist. (2006) 39 Cal.4th 192, 200 (Kibler).)
      Under applicable law, “[t]he medical staff must adopt written bylaws
‘which provide formal procedures for the evaluation of staff applications and
credentials, appointments, reappointments, assignment of clinical privileges,
appeals mechanisms and such other subjects or conditions which the medical
staff and governing body deem appropriate.’ ” (Mileikowsky, supra, 45
Cal.4th at p. 1267.) The JFK Bylaws specifically set forth the peer review
procedures that apply when the Medical Executive Committee considers
whether to take corrective action against a member of the medical staff.
Those procedures include the steps of (1) an investigation by the Medical
Executive Committee after receiving information about the “conduct,
performance, or competence of practitioners who hold privileges at JFK” to
decide whether to recommend adverse action; (2) the physician’s right to
request a hearing before the JRC to review the recommendation to take
adverse action, with the JRC composed of at least three members of the
medical staff, whom the physician has had “a reasonable opportunity to
question and challenge” with respect to impartiality; (3) the physician’s right
to appeal the JRC’s decision to the Appeal Board “composed of not less than 3
members of the Governing Board,” which decides “whether the Governing
Board should affirm, modify, or reverse the judicial review committee
decision”; and (4) the Governing Board’s issuance of a final decision on

                                       16
whether to affirm the JRC decision, based on a determination that the
decision “is supported by substantial evidence, following a fair procedure,”
and which “shall specify the reasons for the action taken” and “shall include
the text of the [805] report which shall be made to the National Practitioner
Data Bank and the Medical Board of California.”
      As relevant here, the JFK Bylaws also provide, “Failure to maintain
professional liability insurance shall be grounds for automatic suspension of
a practitioner’s clinical privileges. Following a written warning of the
delinquency, if the practitioner does not provide evidence of required
professional liability insurance within ten (10) days, the practitioner’s
membership and privileges shall be automatically terminated.” Further,
with respect to an automatic termination, “a hearing, if requested, shall be
limited to the question of whether the grounds for automatic suspension as
set forth below have occurred.”
C.    Application of the Anti-SLAPP Statute’s First Prong to Barnes’s Claims
      in the Petition
      We now turn to an analysis of whether, as the Governing Board and
the Medical Executive Committee contend, certain of the claims for relief in
the Petition fall within the scope of the anti-SLAPP statute. In conducting
our first-prong analysis, we consider “the pleadings, and supporting and
opposing affidavits stating the facts upon which the liability or defense is
based.” (§ 425.16, subd. (b)(2); see also Navellier v. Sletten (2002) 29 Cal.4th
82, 89.)
      Our Supreme Court has twice examined the extent to which claims for
relief based on hospital peer review proceedings are within the scope of the
anti-SLAPP statute. First, in Kibler, our Supreme Court held that “a
hospital’s peer review qualifies as ‘any other official proceeding authorized by
law’ under subparagraph (2) of subdivision (e) [of section 425.16] and thus a

                                       17
lawsuit arising out of a peer review proceeding is subject to a special motion
under section 425.16 to strike the SLAPP suit.” (Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th at
p. 198.) Kibler specifically examined whether the anti-SLAPP statute applied
to a doctor’s lawsuit against a hospital and certain physicians and nurses, in
which he sought “damages under a variety of theories including defamation,
abuse of process, and interference with [the doctor’s] practice of medicine”
after the hospital summarily terminated his medical staff privileges, which
were later reinstated after the doctor agreed to certain corrective measures.

(Id. at p. 196.)13 However, the issues reached in Kibler were limited. Kibler
“did not address whether every aspect of a hospital peer review proceeding
involves protected activity, but only whether statements in connection with
but outside the course of such a proceeding can qualify as ‘statement[s] . . . in
connection with an issue under consideration’ in an ‘official proceeding.’ ”
(Park v. Board of Trustees of California State University (2017) 2 Cal.5th
1057, 1070 (Park).)
      Next, in Bonni, our Supreme Court considered “the scope and limits” of
Kibler’s holding that the anti-SLAPP statute’s protections extend to speech
and petitioning in connection with hospital peer review. (Bonni, supra, 11
Cal.5th at p. 1004.) Specifically, Bonni concerned a lawsuit brought by a

13    The allegations in Kibler concerned only “oral or written statements or
writings made ‘in connection with’ (but not during the course of) the
hospital’s peer review proceeding,” and thus our Supreme Court analyzed
only the applicability of subdivision (e)(2) of section 425.16. (Kibler, supra, 39
Cal.4th at p. 198.) Kibler expressly declined to reach the question of whether
“hospital peer review proceedings qualify as ‘conduct in furtherance of the
exercise of the constitutional right of petition or the constitutional right of
free speech in connection with a public issue or an issue of public interest’ ”
within the meaning of subdivision (e)(4) of the anti-SLAPP statute. (Id. at
p. 203.)

                                       18
doctor who had been subject to peer review proceedings at two hospitals. He
sued those hospitals, affiliated entities and eight individual doctors who
participated in the peer review proceedings. (Id. at pp. 1004–1007.) The
doctor’s lawsuit did not seek relief from the outcome of the peer review
proceedings. Instead, the lawsuit primarily sought to impose liability based
on claims that the defendants had wrongfully retaliated against the doctor in
violation of the whistleblower protections of Health and Safety Code
section 1278.5 by “summarily suspending him, reporting his suspensions to
the state medical board, subjecting him to lengthy and humiliating peer
review proceedings, defaming him, and ultimately terminating his hospital
privileges.” (Id. at p. 1007.)
      Bonni, supra, 11 Cal. 5th 995 addressed the extent to which the
retaliatory conduct alleged by the doctor fell within the protection of the
anti-SLAPP statute. Bonni concluded that “[w]hile some of the forms of
retaliation alleged in the complaint—including statements made during and
in connection with peer review proceedings and disciplinary reports filed with
official bodies—do qualify as protected activity, the discipline imposed
through the peer review process does not.” (Id. at p. 1004.)
      In explaining this decision, our Supreme Court in Bonni relied upon its
recent decision in Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th 1057, which concerned a professor’s
lawsuit alleging that a university’s act of denying him tenure constituted
national-origin discrimination for which the university was liable under the
California Fair Employment and Housing Act (Gov. Code, § 12900 et seq.).
(Park, at pp. 1061, 1068.) As Bonni explained, Park established that “the
anti-SLAPP statute protects speech and petitioning activity taken in
connection with an official proceeding, but not necessarily the decisions made

                                       19
or actions taken as a result of those proceedings.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th
at p. 1014.)
      Applying this approach, Bonni concluded that “two of the alleged
retaliatory actions underlying [the doctor’s] complaint—defamation and
‘character assassination’—describe quintessential speech activities and thus
are protected under section 425.16, subdivision (e)(2) to the extent the speech
was made in connection with peer review.” (Bonni, supra, 11 Cal.5th at
p. 1016.) A long list of other alleged retaliatory activity also fell within the
scope of section 425.16, subdivision (e)(2): (1) the filing of 805 reports;
(2) making an argument to the peer review panel that the doctor’s suspension
should be upheld; (3) recommending the reversal of certain favorable
preliminary findings; and (4) subjecting the doctor to a “ ‘lengthy and
humiliating peer review process,’ ” which encompassed “essentially
everything any defendant said in the course of the peer review process in
support of limiting [the doctor’s] privileges.” (Bonni, at pp. 1017–1018.)
However, the actual disciplinary actions arrived at through the peer review
proceedings were not protected, either as speech made in connection with
peer review under subdivision (e)(2) of section 425.16 (Bonni, at p. 1020), or
as “ ‘any other conduct in furtherance of the exercise of the constitutional
right of petition or the constitutional right of free speech in connection with a
public issue or an issue of public interest’ ” under subdivision (e)(4) of
section 425.16. (Bonni, at pp. 1020–1022.)
      In their anti-SLAPP motion, the Governing Board and the Medical
Executive Committee rely on the distinction, identified in Bonni, between
speech occurring during the peer review proceedings, which fell within the
scope of the anti-SLAPP statute in Bonni’s analysis, and the disciplinary
decisions themselves, which did not. According to the Governing Board and

                                        20
the Medical Executive Committee, the same dichotomy should apply in this
case. They contend that all of the allegations in the Petition regarding
speech or communicative conduct that occurred during Barnes’s peer review
proceeding are protected by the anti-SLAPP statute, and only the Governing
Board’s decision to terminate Barnes’s medical staff membership is not
protected. They maintain that the “peer reviewers’ speech and conduct in the
course of the [Medical Executive Committee’s] investigation,
recommendations, and peer review hearing that led up to the Governing
Board’s final decision, as well as rulings made by the Hearing Officer in
Dr. Barnes’s lengthy hearing” fall within the scope of the anti-SLAPP law.
      However, as we will explain, there is a crucial difference between Bonni
and Barnes’s case that is dispositive here. Barnes seeks only to undo the
result of the peer review proceeding itself on the ground that it was, in
several respects, unfair and unlawful. That is why he seeks only writ relief
and a declaratory judgment. The evidence concerning the conduct and speech
engaged in by the Medical Executive Committee, the JRC, and the hearing
officer appear in the Petition only because they are evidence of the allegedly
unfair and unlawful nature of the peer review proceeding to support Barnes’s

contention that the result of the peer review proceeding should be reversed.14
The plaintiff in Bonni, in contrast, sought to impose liability on a range of
defendants because they allegedly used the peer review proceeding, and

14    Indeed, in his Petition, Barnes relies exclusively upon the identical
evidence and arguments about the unfairness and unlawfulness of the peer
review proceeding that he presented in his briefing to the Appeal Board. The
reliance on identical arguments and evidence in both forums shows that the
Petition’s allegations regarding the Medical Executive Committee, the JRC,
and the hearing officer serve merely as support for his attempt to reverse the
ultimate decision in the peer review proceeding.

                                       21
statements made in connection with that proceeding, as a means to retaliate
against him. Unlike in Bonni, the wrong that Barnes complains of is the lack
of fairness and lawfulness in the peer review proceeding itself, not any
independent injury that arose from speech or communicative conduct during
that proceeding.
      The central dispositive legal principle for our analysis is set forth in
Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th 1057. Specifically, “a claim may be struck only if the
speech or petitioning activity itself is the wrong complained of, and not just
evidence of liability or a step leading to some different act for which liability
is asserted.” (Id. at p. 1060.) “A claim arises from protected activity when
that activity underlies or forms the basis for the claim. [Citations.]
Critically, ‘the defendant’s act underlying the plaintiff’s cause of action must
itself have been an act in furtherance of the right of petition or free speech.’
[Citations.] ‘[T]he mere fact that an action was filed after protected activity
took place does not mean the action arose from that activity for the purposes
of the anti-SLAPP statute.’ [Citations.] Instead, the focus is on determining
what ‘the defendant's activity [is] that gives rise to his or her asserted
liability—and whether that activity constitutes protected speech or
petitioning.’ ” (Id. at pp. 1062–1063.) For the purpose of a first-prong
analysis under the anti-SLAPP statute, there is a “distinction between
activities that form the basis for a claim and those that merely lead to the
liability-creating activity or provide evidentiary support for the claim.” (Id.
at p. 1064.)
      In Young v. Tri-City Healthcare Dist. (2012) 210 Cal.App.4th 35
(Young), this court conducted a first-prong analysis under the anti-SLAPP
statute in a case concerning a petition for a writ of administrative mandamus
brought by a doctor challenging a decision made during a hospital peer

                                        22
review proceeding. Although Young was decided prior to our Supreme
Court’s Park opinion (Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th 1057), it applies legal principles
that are consistent with those set forth in Park for deciding whether a claim
arises from protected speech, and its analysis is instructive here.
      In Young, the doctor’s petition for administrative mandamus
challenged a series of decisions made by the hospital board in the course of a
peer review proceeding and sought an order entitling the doctor to
reinstatement of his medical staff privileges. (Young, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th
at p. 40.) The specific claim at issue in the hospital’s anti-SLAPP motion was
the doctor’s challenge to the summary suspension of his medical staff
privileges, which occurred while the peer review proceeding was ongoing. (Id.
at pp. 40, 43.) The doctor “sought an order determining that the . . .
summary suspension was unjustified, based on improper review of his
records, carried out by unqualified committees, and unsupported by
substantial evidence, so it should be vacated.” (Id. at p. 44.)
      In conducting a first-prong analysis, Young framed the inquiry as
“whether the plaintiff is seeking relief from the defendant for its protected
communicative acts.” (Young, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 55.) Applying
that standard, Young concluded that the doctor’s claim was not protected by
the anti-SLAPP statute. Young explained that “[n]othing in the anti-SLAPP
statute wholly exempts a writ petition against a public entity from its

potential coverage of protected speech.” (Id. at p. 42.)15 However, the

15     “[I]n an appropriate case, a petition for mandamus may be subject to a
special motion to strike just like any other form of action. (See, e.g., Moraga-
Orinda Fire Protection Dist. v. Weir (2004) 115 Cal.App.4th 477 [mandamus
petition seeking to strike or modify ballot argument constituted a SLAPP
suit].)” (San Ramon Valley Fire Protection Dist. v. Contra Costa County
Employees’ Retirement Assn. (2004) 125 Cal.App.4th 343, 353 (San Ramon).)

                                       23
doctor’s challenge to his summary suspension did not “ ‘arise’ from the
[hospital board’s] acts in furtherance of its rights of petition or free speech in
connection with peer review (a public issue), but rather, the substance of that
cause of action ar[ose] from the statutory provision giving a right to judicial
review of a governmental decision.” (Young, at p. 42, italics added.)
      Young emphasized that the doctor’s “request for judicial relief from an
administrative decision should be distinguished from requests for damages
that are fundamentally based on alleged injury arising from such peer review
activity.” (Young, supra, 210 Cal.App. 4th at p. 57, italics added.) As Young
explained, the case law applying the protections of the anti-SLAPP statute to
a hospital peer review proceeding were claims in which the doctor sought to
impose liability for speech or protected conduct that occurred in connection
with a proceeding. (Ibid., citing Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th 192, Smith v.
Adventist Health System/West (2010) 190 Cal.App.4th 40, Nesson v. Northern
Inyo County Local Hospital Dist. (2012) 204 Cal.App.4th 65, 80, disapproved
in Park, supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1070.) Young concluded that because the
plaintiff doctor in the case before it had filed a petition for a writ of
administrative mandamus challenging the procedures employed during his
summary suspension, the doctor’s claim for relief was “based on and arose out
of his statutory rights under section 1094.5, and [was] separate and different
from an action for damages that arose out of the content of the allegedly
wrongful peer review statements” in the cases such as Kibler and Smith.
(Young, at p. 58, italics added.) Put another way, the doctor’s claim for relief
was based on “avoidance of fair procedure or his judicial review hearing

Similarly, a claim for declaratory relief may also be the subject of an anti-
SLAPP motion. (South Sutter, LLC v. LJ Sutter Partners, L.P. (2011) 193
Cal.App.4th 634, 665–666.)

                                         24
rights” rather than on any protected speech occurring during the hospital
peer review proceedings. (Ibid.) Although the doctor’s claim for writ relief
may have been “ ‘triggered’ ” by certain protected speech in the context of a
peer review proceeding, it did not arise from that protected speech because
the doctor “principally [sought] judicial relief from actions of an
administrative body that denied him a hearing to which he was otherwise

entitled.” (Id. at p. 59.)16
      Here, as in Young, Barnes’s claims for relief arose from “statutory
provision[s] giving a right to judicial review of a governmental decision”
(Young, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th at p. 42), rather than from any protected
speech made in connection with the peer review proceeding. Barnes alleges a
string of reasons why the peer review proceeding was not fairly conducted or

16     The Governing Board and the Medical Executive Committee do not
mention Young, supra, 210 Cal.App.4th 35 in their appellate briefing. In
their trial court briefing for the special motion to strike, they acknowledged
Young in a footnote, but they contended that “Young has been implicitly
overruled” by subsequent case law from our Supreme Court, such as Bonni,
supra, 11 Cal.5th 995, which they described as holding that “events that
occur in the course of an administrative proceeding may be subject to the
anti-SLAPP statute.” We are not persuaded by the attempt to distinguish
Young. The significance of Young to the instant case is that Young discussed
the extent to which the anti-SLAPP statute applied to speech-related claims
of procedural unfairness and unlawfulness during a hospital peer review
proceeding that appear in a petition for a writ of administrative mandamus
challenging the result of the peer review proceeding itself. The distinction
that Young highlights between that type of writ petition and the type of claim
for damages discussed in Kibler, supra, 39 Cal.4th 192, and other case law
involving hospital peer review proceedings, is still relevant and persuasive,
even in light of subsequent Supreme Court case law. (Cf. City of Montebello
v. Vasquez (2016) 1 Cal.5th 409, 427 [noting a concern about “chilling
citizens’ exercise of their right to challenge government action by suing the
public entity itself” as opposed to suing individual members of a governing
body based on their protected speech or petitioning activity].)

                                       25
was conducted in violation of the applicable procedures. Some of those
reasons touch on speech or communicative conduct that occurred during the
peer review proceeding. For example, the Petition (1) cites Dr. S.C.’s
testimony that he was not subject to a retention agreement; (2) complains
about certain hearsay evidence or other testimony and about the propriety of
the EXTTI report; and (3) cites rulings communicated by the hearing officer.
However, as in Young, Barnes’s claims for relief are based on “avoidance of
fair procedure or his judicial review hearing rights” rather than on any
protected speech or conduct that might have occurred during the peer review
proceeding. (Id. at p. 58.) The fact that certain speech took place during the
peer review proceeding merely “provide[s] evidentiary support for the claim”
that the peer review proceeding was procedurally unfair and unlawful (Park,
supra, 2 Cal.5th at p. 1064), but that speech does not, itself, form the basis for
a claim of entitlement to relief in administrative mandamus, by a traditional
writ of mandate, or through declaratory relief. Because the fundamental
relief that Barnes seeks is an order that would undo the consequences of the
Governing Board’s decision to terminate his medical staff membership,
Barnes’s claims for relief arise from the Governing Board’s ultimate decision,

not any subsidiary procedural step involving speech.17

17    In their appellate briefing, the Governing Board and the Medical
Executive Committee separately discuss the Petition’s allegations that
Barnes was not afforded the allegedly required notice and a hearing prior to
the automatic termination of his medical staff membership due to his failure
to maintain professional liability insurance. They contend that the allegation
about the lack of notice “relates to speech” and thus brings the claim within
the protections of the anti-SLAPP law. We reject the argument. As with the
claims challenging the termination of his medical staff privileges for the
reasons set forth in the First Amended Notice of Charges, Barnes’s complaint
about the automatic termination arises from the alleged procedural

                                       26
      Moreover, if we were to accord anti-SLAPP protection to Barnes’s
attempt to obtain judicial review of the procedural fairness and lawfulness of
the peer review proceeding merely because that proceeding involved speech,
the result would be to needlessly discourage judicial review of hospital peer
review proceedings. As one court observed in a similar circumstance, “[m]any
of the public entity decisions reviewable by mandamus or administrative
mandamus are arrived at after discussion and a vote at a public meeting.
[Citations.] If mandamus petitions challenging decisions reached in this
manner were routinely subject to a special motion to strike . . . the petitioners
in every such case could be forced to make a prima facie showing of merit at
the pleading stage. While that result might not go so far as to impliedly
repeal the mandamus statutes . . . it would chill the resort to legitimate
judicial oversight over potential abuses of legislative and administrative
power, which is at the heart of those remedial statutes. It would also
ironically impose an undue burden upon the very right of petition for those
seeking mandamus review in a manner squarely contrary to the underlying
legislative intent behind section 425.16.” (San Ramon, supra, 125
Cal.App.4th at pp. 357–358.) As another court elaborated on the observation
made in San Ramon, “The same may be said of a declaratory relief action
that challenges the validity of governmental conduct. And the chilling effect
of requiring the plaintiff in an action for a writ of mandate or declaratory
relief to make a prima facie showing of merit at the pleading stage is of

unfairness and unlawfulness of that termination proceeding, not from any
speech that occurred during it. Any specific allegations about the nature of
the notice afforded in connection with that termination, to the extent it can
be characterized as protected speech, serves only as evidence of the alleged
procedural unfairness but does not constitute the basis for the claim for
relief.

                                       27
particular concern because a defendant who prevails on an anti-SLAPP
motion is entitled to an award of attorney fees. (See § 425.16, subd. (c).)”
(Graffiti Protective Coatings, Inc. v. City of Pico Rivera (2010) 181
Cal.App.4th 1207, 1225.) Identical observations can be made regarding the
approach advocated by the Governing Board and the Medical Executive
Committee in this case. Hospital peer review proceedings invariably involve
speech. If a doctor who seeks judicial review of the fairness and lawfulness of
a hospital peer review proceeding through a writ petition or a declaratory
relief action has to be concerned about a special motion to strike simply
because some of the allegedly unfair procedures involved speech, it would
chill the resort to judicial oversight of hospital peer review proceedings. That
result is disfavored because the Legislature has unequivocally intended to
provide for judicial review of hospital peer review proceedings. (Bus. & Prof.
Code, § 809.8.)
      We accordingly conclude that the trial court properly denied the special
motion to strike, as none of the claims targeted by that motion arise from
speech protected by the anti-SLAPP statute. Because we resolve this appeal
on a first-prong analysis, we need not, and do not, address whether Barnes
can establish a probability he would prevail on any of the Petition’s
allegations targeted by the special motion to strike.

                                       28
                              DISPOSITION
     The order denying the special motion to strike is affirmed.

                                                                   IRION, J.

WE CONCUR:

O'ROURKE, Acting P. J.

BUCHANAN, J.

                                     29