Tuesday, April 8, 2014

MEDICAL BILLS AS DAMAGES IN A PERSONAL INJURY CLAIM

The subject of what you can claim in personal injury cases as damages for medical bills has received a lot of attention in the CA appellate courts over the past several years.  There have been hotly contested issues wherein the concept of the Collateral Source Rule, and which generally holds that the defendant does not get credit for payment of the plaintiff's medical bills by the plaintiff's own medical insurance, has been at odds with situations wherein a given healthcare provider has accepted payment in full from the plaintiff's medical insurance for less than the full amount of its bill, a not uncommon occurrence in the age of managed healthcare.

The appellate decisions have moved to a point where the plaintiff now cannot recover an amount greater than what the healthcare provider accepted from the medical insurance as payment in full, as opposed to recovering the full amount of the bill.

I authored an article on this subject entitled "Biting The Bullet -- Medical Bills In A Post Howell-Corenbaum World" that was published by the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association in the Spring 2014 of its journal The Gavel, as follows hereafter:

BITING THE BULLET: MEDICAL BILLS IN A POST
HOWELL-CORENBAUM WORLD

NOTE: This article was authored by Lawrence A. Strid and was published in the Spring 2014 edition of the Orange County Trial Lawyer’s publication “THE GAVEL”.  The article is copyrighted to the OCTLA but is being republished with their permission.

    Any prudent personal injury practitioner is aware of the groundbreaking precedent established in
Howell v. Hamilton Meats & Provisions, Inc. (2011) 52 Cal.4th 541, holding that a plaintiff in a personal injury claim cannot claim more for past economic damages for medical expenses than what the healthcare provider accepted from a collateral source as payment in full, be the collateral source the patient’s own medical insurance company or a co-payment directly paid or owed by the patient themself.
    The ruling in Howell was an extension of a similar ruling in the equally ground-breaking case of Hanif v. Housing Authority (1988) 200 Cal.App.3d 635, and which dealt with a plaintiff’s medical expenses being adjusted and then paid by Medi-Cal.  Despite Hanif being limited on its facts to a Medi-Cal beneficiary, many liability carriers in evaluating bodily injury claims post-Hanif would only consider the adjusted medical expenses, regardless of the nature of the collateral source provider, to the general consternation of the plaintiffs’ bar thereafter.
    Similar to Hanif, the case of Nishihama v. City & County of San Francisco (2001) 93 Cal.App.4th 298, was usually cited in conjunction with Hanif by the defense in attempting to limit claims for medical bills to what the provider received and accepted as payment in full, prior to the Supreme Court ruling in Howell.
    Howell did not directly address the admissibility at trial of the full amount of the medical charges as billed, and inferred that such evidence might still be admissible in order to prove whether the claimed medical expenses were reasonable and necessary.  See Howell, supra, at 52 Cal.4th 577-578.
    Accordingly, in a post-Howell era, most plaintiffs’ attorneys attempted to submit evidence at trial of the full amount of the medical charges as billed, and then dealt with the pertinent Howell reduction by stipulation or a motion post-verdict.
    Attorneys who took this approach would rely on pre-Howell case authority, with some cases holding that the full amount of medical charges as billed were still relevant as to an assessment of non-economic damages.  For example, see Greer v. Buzgheia (2006) 141 Cal.App. 4th 1150, 1157; and Nishihama, supra, at 93 Cal.App..4th 309.
    That approach was dealt a death-blow by the subsequent ruling in Corenbaum v. Lampkin (2013) 215 Cal.App.4th 1308.  Further clarifying the ruling in Howell, the court in Corenbaum held that evidence of the full amount of the medical charges as billed is simply not relevant to the determination of the plaintiff’s economic damages at trial, and that evidence of the adjusted amount accepted by the healthcare providers from a collateral source is not made inadmissible by the collateral source rule so long as the source of the payment is not disclosed.
    Corenbaum further held that evidence of the full amount of billed charges vs. the adjusted charges after receiving payment from a collateral source would only serve to confuse the jury, and was not relevant to proving non-economic damages or future medical expenses.  Corenbaum, supra, at 215 Cal.App.4th 1329.
    Historically in personal injury practice, the amount of a plaintiff’s medical expenses has usually been the “barometer” of the value of any given personal injury case – the greater the amount of the bills, then arguably the greater the severity of the injury; and the greater the severity of the injury, then the more the case was theoretically worth.  While it may have been an urban legend to some degree, surely every personal injury attorney (and even some non-lawyers) have heard the old adage about any injury case being worth at least “three times the meds”.
    When collateral insurance adjusts a provider’s bills, the results can often be dramatic in the reduction of the medical charges that would be admissible at trial – reductions of 50% or greater are not uncommon, and if a public benefit collateral source is involved, such as Medicare or Medi-Cal, then the amount of admissible medical charges may end up being ten cents on the dollar.  Worst of all are those patients who belong to certain HMOs, where the charges incurred with their primary physician may be “capitated” down to zero or a nominal co-pay.
    The law is therefore clear on the limits of what the plaintiff can claim for medical expenses.  The bigger question that this article intends to address is whether this application of the law is being followed by the plaintiffs’ bar.
    In the personal experience of this practitioner as derived from being an arbitrator at court ordered arbitrations, as a designated neutral in mediation sessions, and as a settlement officer at settlement conferences conducted at Orange County Superior Court, most plaintiffs’ attorneys still present evidence of the full amount of medical charges billed, and ignore any adjustments called for by Howell and Corenbaum.
    Many of these plaintiffs’ attorneys do not even have the amounts of the adjusted medical bills set forth in their briefs or settlement statements, much less being able to relay what that adjusted number is when confronted with that question.  Rest assured that defense counsel and the adjuster have this information calculated down to the near penny. 
    The only reasons that this practitioner can envision as to why a plaintiff’s attorney would not have the adjusted medical expenses itemized at their disposal would be that (1) they are hoping that the defense carrier and their counsel have never heard of the holdings in Hanif, Howell, and Corenbaum; (2) it is too much work to review the bills and explanation of benefits and calculate the adjusted medical expenses yourself; and/or (3) it is easier to rely on the defense to provide the adjusted medical expenses and hope that their figures are correct.
    None of these reasons make any sense, and the failure of the plaintiff’s attorney to directly deal with the adjusted medical expenses will mean that a critical aspect of the value of the case is being ignored, and it can also leave a less than favorable impression with the defense carrier’s perspective on the expertise of the plaintiff’s attorney.
    If there is a bright side to this development in the law for the plaintiff’s bar, it might be that it is now easier to argue that the medical expenses are reasonable and necessary, after they have been adjusted.  Moreover, some defense attorneys will stipulate at trial as to the amount of the adjusted figure so that the custodians of record of the various providers don’t have to come to trial to testify, and the evidence for the total adjusted expenses can then be reduced to a written summary that the plaintiff’s testifying physician can lay a foundation for, so that just the summary alone can come into evidence.
    Notwithstanding the writing on the wall as to the admissible amount of past medical expenses, some plaintiff’s practitioners have been creative in attempting to circumvent it, in one of two methods: (1) counseling the client not to utilize their medical insurance to defray their past medical bills; and (2) utilizing a “factoring” company to assume legal title to the bills.  Both of these approaches leave much to be desired and a lot to risk for both the plaintiff and their attorney.
    Insofar as not billing the client’s medical insurance, this issue would probably not arise to the extent that a client requires emergency medical treatment, and at which time they are more interested in seeing a physician on an emergency care basis versus immediately consulting with an attorney.  Most emergency care providers collect the patient’s medical insurance information as a condition of admission, and automatically bill the carrier thereafter.  Few clients, if any, would be aware of the consequences of Howell and Corenbaum until after they have consulted with counsel.
    As to non-emergency care providers that the client may see thereafter, if the client has applicable medical insurance that would defray all or part of such expenses, it is the opinion of this practitioner that an attorney who advises their client not to utilize their insurance is most likely doing their client a disservice, and may be setting themselves up for a legal malpractice case down the road.
    As the saying goes, there are only two things in life that are certain, and the end result of a legal claim or a personal injury lawsuit do not fall into either of those two categories.  Most policies of medical insurance require that the bills be submitted to the insurer in a set window of time to qualify for benefits, and the majority of most mainstream healthcare providers will not take a lien.  Many healthcare providers that will not take a lien will send the account out to collection if no payment is forthcoming in a fixed period of time, and which may lead to a negative credit history report, collection agency activity with inflated interest charges being tacked onto the bill, or even a collection lawsuit being filed against the client.
    Meanwhile, the client’s claim or legal case grinds on, with the eventual monetary outcome never a certainty until it occurs.  As any attorney knows, there are any number of myriad reasons as to why cases are lost or under-compensated for in the claims and litigation arena.  If the end monetary result is less than sufficient to satisfy outstanding medical bills that the attorney has advised their client not to submit to their insurance, and then it is too late to do so thereafter, then the attorney will be a natural target of blame by the client, had timely billed charges to their medical insurance been counseled and then satisfied in whole or in part by their medical insurance.
    In addition, the personal injury victim has an obligation to mitigate their damages, and a failure to submit medical expenses to an insurance carrier that may have satisfied such expenses may leave the client’s case vulnerable to this argument. 
    The other mode that may be used to avoid the ramifications of the adjusted medical billing is to have the full amount of the bills assigned to a factoring company, and then the attorney negotiates with the factoring company after the settlement to try and reach some sort of compromise on what it will take to satisfy same.
    This latter approach was recently addressed in the recent case of Dodd v. Cruz (Second Appellate District, February 5, 2014) __Cal.Rptr.3d __, WL 461158, LEXIS 118.
    In Dodd, a plaintiff involved in a motor vehicle accident had shoulder surgery performed on a lien at a surgery center.  This provider then sold the lien to a factoring company.  The defendant attempted to subpoena the records from the factoring company to determine what was paid on the assignment of the lien.  The factoring company refused to comply, objecting on the basis of confidentiality, proprietary concerns, and relevance.
    The trial court granted its motion to quash, but on appeal the appellate court reversed, citing both Howell and Corenbaum, in holding that the amount paid for the provider’s account receivable was reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence as to the reasonable value of the medical services provided.  Whether or not such evidence would be admissible, it could be relied on by expert witnesses to opine what the reasonable charges should be.
    In Dodd , the president of the factoring company was the plaintiff’s own attorney, and which adds another interesting hair in the ointment insofar as a potential conflict of interest may be concerned.  Furthermore, one of the surgical center’s limited partners was the brother of the factoring company’s vice-president.
    From this practitioner’s perspective, attorneys  counseling clients not to use their medical insurance or for the attorney to be directly (or even indirectly) involved in assignments of medical liens, just to avoid the ramifications of Howell and Corenbaum, are creating liability scenarios for themselves and pitfalls for their client’s case.
    There have been other changes in the law over the passage of time that have not been plaintiff friendly: the passage of MICRA; the Fair Responsibility Act codified in Civil Code secs. 1431.1 and 1431.2; the demise of Becker v. IRM Corp.; and other changes in codes and case law have sometimes curtailed the ability of some injured parties to obtain full or certain types of compensation, given the fact situation of any given case.
    Notwithstanding this, injured parties can still obtain compensation given the facts and coverage applicable to any injury incident, and the plaintiff personal injury bar shows no immediate sign of dropping personal injury cases and trying to practice family law or immigration law as a fall-back practice after the rulings enunciated in Hanif, Howell, and Corenbaum.
    From the perspective of this practitioner, it is best to “bite the bullet”: calculate and present the adjustment on the medical bills to the defense carrier and defense attorney (including any calculation thereof in response to a defendant’s form interrogatories), to any neutral presiding over a settlement conference or mediation, and to the ultimate trier of fact.  Put the best slant possible on your client’s case given the other factors in the case that would be an argument for greater value being placed on the matter – it is all any self-respecting plaintiff’s attorney can do.
    

Friday, March 14, 2014

CONTAMINATED FOOD PRODUCT CASES:  BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU EAT

Some of the more interesting cases that my offices have been involved in have concerned food products or dishes that contained contaminants that should not have been there.  Because this is an unavoidable risk of eating food, but is something that nobody would want to encounter, these types of cases tend to be somewhat unforgettable even with the passage of time from having handled such matters.

The law imposes strict liability for certain injuries as a matter of public policy, in certain types of cases.  If a food product has a contaminant in it that is not natural to the preparation or nature of the particular product, then the law will impose strict liability for all resultant injuries, regardless of whether or not the purveyor or vendor of the food product was negligent in the preparation of same.

Under what has come to be known as the "consumer expectation test", if the contaminant in question is not natural to that food product, then strict liability will apply.  On the other hand, if the contaminant in question is natural to that food product (ie., a bone fragment in a meat or fish dish), then strict liability will not apply, and the injured consumer can only assert negligence as the basis of a legal claim.  This may be difficult or impossible to do given the circumstances of any particular case, as the law only requires that a person owing a duty of care to another act "reasonably", not "extraordinarily reasonably".

Some of the non-natural contaminant cases that I have been involved in over the years have included broken glass in a dinner salad, worms in a candy bar, a piece of clear plastic in a container of mashed potatoes, a band-aid in a deli sandwich, and pieces of metal in fast food burgers (the latter situations were nearly always the result of the metal ring used to secure the ends of  commercially prepared plastic rolls of ground round somehow ending up in the patty, although I had one case wherein the piece of metal was a heavy gauge staple on a hamburger patty (this is not an advisable way to secure the cheese to the patty).

Much more difficult are cases wherein the consumer alleges to have contracted food poisoning due to ingesting a certain food product.  Proving that a specific food item caused food poisoning when the consumer most likely had several meals over the past 24 hours from other sources can be an uphill battle.  Moreover, many "food poisoning" claims are based solely on various subjective symptoms that cannot be medically correlated to a true situation of food poisoning.  The cases that I have been successful with in this area have all involved situations wherein there were multiple victims who had all consumed the same product from the same source.  There is strength in numbers.

In many food contaminant cases, the potential damages are somewhat nominal.  While anyone would probably have revulsion or distress at finding certain contaminants in their meal, those cases are not worth as much as those wherein the consumer requires medical or dental care to treat an actual physical injury arising out of the experience.

As might be expected, some food contaminant claims are looked at askance by the defendant, as they can be easy to fake by a dishonest person.

If you are the actual victim of a food contamination incident, it is important to remember the following:  (1)  make an immediate report or complaint to the vendor of the product or dish; (2)  save the contaminated object -- many restaurants or retailers will want to take immediate possession of whatever you may have found, but do not surrender what is now "Exhibit A" -- they can look at it later in a controlled setting after a formal claim is made; and (3)  seek medical or dental care immediately if a physical injury or significant distress is involved.

Lastly, I must share my favorite "food" contaminant case of all time.  This one was not a case that I handled, but I remember it from law school, and even then it was only a footnote in a products liability treatise that I was required to read.  The footnote referred to an actual case where a consumer bit into a plug of chewing tobacco and encountered a severed human toe.  While some may view this as an object lesson as to why you shouldn't  be using "chaw", my question was how this unfortunate soul was able to tell the difference between the "chaw" and the toe.  And that is why I don't use chewing tobacco.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Civility In Law Practice

Many clients in adversarial matters view their party adversary as the enemy, and by association, have a similar feeling about their adversary's attorney.  This is especially true in family law, probate proceedings involving opposing family members, and in business litigation wherein the parties had a working or personal relationship in place before a dispute arose.  These clients often have a problem understanding how their respective attorneys can communicate in an amicable fashion, given the emotional baggage that they may be bringing to the fore.  An attorney can always accomplish more for their client by having an open line of friendly communication with the opposing attorney, although depending upon the client it is not necessarily something that should be openly advertised in the client's presence, like a courtroom hallway.  A working relationship can help to avoid motions (and which are expensive for the client) and achieve stipulations to certain issues (and which again are usually a cost-saving procedure for the client) that are in the client's best interest.  In those situations wherein opposing counsel do not get along, an effort should still be made to do so, as it is the professional high-road to take.  Letting opposing counsel know what you really think about them in a negative way will cloud a lawyer's objectivity and open the door for eating a big dose of humble pie if things don't go the way you want them to at court.  The legal community can be a relatively small one, and you may encounter a former opposing attorney in a new case one day, and wherein you need a favor.  Don't burn your bridges.