Supreme Court of Canada
Henderson v. Johnston et al., [1959] S.C.R. 655
Date 1959-06-25
Dr. Harold
Henderson, Dr. J.H. Spence and Dr. Donald B. Ferguson (Plaintiffs) Appellants;
and
Dr. David W.B.
Johnston Representing the Medical Staff of Victoria Hospital, London, and The Board of Hospital Trustees of the
City of London (Defendants) Respondents.
1959: May 11; 1959: June 25.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Hospitals—Hospital Board’s statutory power
of general management of public hospital—Validity of by-law excluding qualified
practitioners from attending patients in hospital—Validity of by-law
prohibiting fee-splitting among practitioners enjoying hospital privileges—The
City of London Act, 1954 (Ont.), c. 11—The Public Hospitals Act, R.S.O. 1950,
c. 307.
The plaintiffs, three medical practitioners
in London, Ontario, sued for a declaration that two by-laws passed by the defendant
Board were ultra vires. The first by-law had to do with the regulation
of the medical staff and the second, with the practice of fee-splitting. The
action was dismissed by the trial judge, and this judgment was affirmed by the
Court of Appeal.
Held: The
action should be dismissed.
The Board of Trustees of a public hospital
has authority to exclude qualified medical practitioners from the privileges of
the hospital and from attending their patients therein. The contrary claim
advanced by the plaintiffs, was unsupported by authority. There was no such
absolute right as the one asserted. No common law or statutory origin was
suggested and it could not come from any statutory or other recognition of
professional status. The right of entry into the hospital and the right to use
its facilities, in the exercise of the profession of these plaintiffs, must be
found in the hospital authority for, apart from them, it has no independent
existence.
[Page 656]
Section 10 of the statutory agreement between
the Board and the University of Western Ontario, providing that members of the medical profession of the City of London and vicinity who are not on the
active staff of the hospital shall have the privilege of attending patients as
members of the courtesy staff, was of no help to the plaintiffs. The
section was expressly made subject to the regulation of the trustees. The
selection of staff is an essential feature of regulation and management of the
hospital and the most that the statutory agreement could do for the plaintiffs
was to give them the status defined by its terms. Moreover, the agreement did
not vest any rights in the plaintiffs. They were not parties to it.
As to the by-law respecting fee-splitting, it
was within the power of management of the Board and was not an attempt at
general regulation of medical ethics. The Board was here concerned only with
the regulation of this hospital and the members of the profession who practise
there.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario, affirming a
judgment of LeBel J. Appeal dismissed.
W.B. Williston, Q.C., for the plaintiffs,
appellants.
J.J. Robinette, Q.C., for the defendants,
respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—The appellants are three qualified
medical practitioners of the city of London who are suing for a declaration that two by-laws passed by the
defendant, The Board of Hospital Trustees of the city of London, are ultra vires. The first
by-law has to do with the regulation of the medical staff of Victoria Hospital and the second, with the
practice of fee‑splitting. The action was dismissed; an appeal to the
Court of Appeal1 was dismissed, and, in my judgment, the appeal to
this Court fails and should also be dismissed.
The Board passed the Medical Staff By-Law on April 22, 1953, after consultation and discussion
with the medical staff and with its approval. The by-law was approved by the
Lieutenant-Governor in Council on July 22, 1953, as required by s. 9 of the Public
Hospitals Act. Authority to enact this by-law is ample. By s. 1 of the Act
respecting the General Hospital of the City of London (Statutes of Ontario
1887, c. 58), the general management of the hospital is given to the Board. In
addition, by the general regulations made under s. 4 of the Public Hospitals
Act,
[Page 657]
particularly regulations 2 and 6, the Board is
given power to govern and manage the hospital and to provide for the
appointment and functioning of a medical staff. These regulations were approved
by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council on May 29, 1952, and filed with the
Registrar of Regulations on June 4, 1952, pursuant to the Regulations Act and
I take these steps to be the departmental declaration pursuant to s. 5 of the Public
Hospitals Act that they are in force with respect to all hospitals in the
Province. One method of exercising the statutory power of government and
management is by by-law even though the statutes and regulations do not
expressly state that the powers may be so exercised. Such an express power did
not appear until the legislation of 1954, which was enacted a short time before
the second by-law under attack was passed. Nevertheless, if the regulation of
the medical staff as affected by the first by-law is within the power of
management, there is obviously no substance to the objection that it cannot be
done by by-law.
The Medical Staff By-law deals in great detail
with everything appropriate to this subject‑matter. It provides for six
divisions of the medical staff: 1. The Honorary staff; 2. The Consulting staff;
3. The Teaching staff (active staff); 4. The Out-Patients’ staff (active
staff); 5. The General Practice staff; 6. The Courtesy staff. The members
of these divisions are to be appointed annually by the Board. The appellants
are members of the “Courtesy staff” and their position is defined in part by
the following provisions of the by-law:
The General Practice Staff
(a) The General practice staff shall
consist of those members of the medical profession eligible as hereinafter
provided who wish to attend private and semi-private patients in the hospital.
The Courtesy Staff
(a) The courtesy staff members shall
have the privileges extended to the general practice staff members with the
exception of voting privileges…
(b) Courtesy staff membership shall
be restricted to those qualified physicians residing in London and within such distance from the
City of London as may from time
to time be determined by the Board of Trustees in collaboration with the
Medical Staff…
[Page 658]
The complaint of the plaintiffs is that the
Board of Trustees of the hospital in the exercise of its power of management,
cannot restrict them in the practice of their profession or determine who may
be members of the Courtesy Staff. They claim that as members of the medical
profession in good standing, they have an absolute right to attend their
patients in private or semi-private rooms in the hospital and that no power is
vested in the Board to limit this right. This is the substantial point of the
attack on the first by-law. The issues in this branch of the case are therefore
very narrow. They amount to no more than a bald assertion of a right and a
denial of the Board’s power to regulate in any way the matters in controversy
for it is undisputed that, beyond this, no practitioner has been denied
anything—whether right or privilege—in connection with his practice in the
hospital. The claim is unsupported by authority and I am satisfied that there
is no such absolute right as the one asserted. No common law or statutory
origin was suggested and it cannot come from any statutory or other recognition
of professional status. The right of entry into the hospital and the right to
use the facilities there provided, in the exercise of the profession of these
appellants, must be found in the regulations of the hospital authority for,
apart from them, it has no independent existence.
The appellants also claim to benefit from the
terms of an agreement dated January 1, 1946, between the Hospital Board and the
University of Western Ontario, which received statutory confirmation by the Victoria
Hospital, London, Act 1946 (Statutes of Ontario 1946, c. 105). It was
entered into because Victoria Hospital is the University’s major teaching hospital in the City of London. Sections 6 and 10 of the
agreement read as follows:
6. The Trustees shall make appointments to
the Active Staff of the Hospital annually on the recommendation of the Board of
Governors of the University and subject to the approval of the Joint Relations
Committee or a majority thereof. In making appointments to the Active Staff of
the Hospital regard shall be had to the previous training and record of the
appointee, his capacity to render service to the sick in the Hospital, his
scientific attainments, his teaching capacity and his likelihood of
professional development. No member of the Hospital Medical Staff may be
dismissed without the consent of the Trustees.
[Page 659]
10. Subject to the regulation of the
Trustees, members of the Medical Profession of the City of London and vicinity who are not on the
Active Staff of the Hospital shall have the privilege of attending patients in
private and semi-private rooms as members of the Courtesy Staff.
Section 10 is the only possible origin of any
right such as the one claimed by the appellants and it is expressly made
subject to the regulation of the Trustees. In spite of the argument that such
regulation does not give the power to exclude any duly qualified medical
practitioner, it seems to me that the selection of staff is an essential
feature of regulation and management of the hospital and that the most that
this statutory agreement can do for the appellants is to give them the status
defined by its terms. Moreover, I think it is clear that the agreement does not
vest any rights in the appellants. They are not parties to it. It is intended
to govern the relations between the Hospital Board and the University in
connection with a teaching hospital and the confirmation of this agreement by
the Legislature adds nothing to the rights of the appellants nor does it
detract from the power of management given to the Board by the Statutes and
Regulations previously mentioned.
With no right established as claimed by the
appellants, it is plain that the authorities relied upon by counsel for the
appellants, having to do with municipal by-laws which prohibit or give a right
of choice to a municipal official when they should be concerned with the
licensing, regulating or governing of a trade, have no application here. These
cases are all based upon the principle that there is a common-law right to
engage in any lawful occupation and that a municipal power to regulate such a
right does not authorize a prohibition of its exercise or a discriminatory use
of the power.
The second by-law under attack is aimed against
fee-splitting. It prohibits the practice among those physicians and surgeons
who are privileged to attend patients in Victoria Hospital. It compels such persons to submit to inspection of their
books and it provides for the denial of the privileges of the hospital to any
physician or surgeon who has not complied with the provisions of the by-law. It
is generally agreed, and the appellants do not question this principle, that
fee-splitting is a reprehensible practice but
[Page 660]
the appellants question the by-law because, they
say, it is not related to the management, operation or control of the hospital
but is an attempt to legislate on matters relating to the ethics of the medical
profession under the guise of regulating the use of the hospital. There is no
validity in either of these submissions. The By-law is within the power of
management. There is here no attempt at general regulation of medical ethics.
The Board is concerned only with the regulation of this hospital and the
members of the profession who practise there. Moreover, Victoria Hospital
as a teaching hospital of the University must have such a by-law to meet the
standards required by the Joint Commission of Accreditation of Hospitals of the
United States and Canada and it is of vital importance both
to hospital and university that these standards be met.
This second by-law was enacted January 26, 1955
and was approved by Order-in-Council dated February 17, 1955, as required by s. 9 of
the Public Hospitals Act. At the time of its enactment the powers of the
Board had been re-defined in an Act respecting the City of London (Statutes
of Ontario, 1954, c. 115, s. 5). The 1887 legislation had merely given the
Board the general management of the hospital. The 1954 legislation speaks of
the general management, operation, equipment and control of the hospital being
vested in and exercised by the Board, and gives express power to enact by-laws
and regulations for these purposes, subject to the Public Hospitals Act, This
is merely a re-definition of the power of the Board and nothing turns upon it.
I would have held that the by-law against fee-splitting was within the power of
the Board under the legislation of 1887 as well as that of 1954.
I agree with the reasons of Roach J.A. in the
Court of Appeal and would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the plaintiffs,
appellants: Thompson & Brown, London.
Solicitors for the defendants,
respondents: Mitchell & Hockin, London.