Gunther v. Blue Cross/Blue Shield

58 N.C. App. 341 | N.C. Ct. App. | 1982

MORRIS, Chief Judge.

Defendant brings forward 17 assignments of error, the first five of which question the admissibility of certain evidence adduced at trial.

Defendant contends that the trial court erred by denying defendant’s motion to strike testimony given by plaintiff on direct examination by which plaintiff indicated that Mr. Don Mclntire, a *344representative of defendant, told him in January of 1980 that Karl Gunther would receive benefits for one year’s hospitalization, to a maximum of $250,000. Defendant argues that no proper foundation establishing Mr. Mclntire’s actual, apparent, or implied authority to speak for defendant was laid and that plaintiff’s assertion as to what Mr. Mclntire told him was, therefore, inadmissible hearsay. The judge made no finding of fact based on the testimony. Indeed, the judgment granted benefits only through 30 May 1979, though Karl was hospitalized from July 1978 until July 1979. In a nonjury trial, it is presumed that if incompetent evidence was admitted, it was disregarded and did not influence the judge’s findings. Bizzell v. Bizzell, 247 N.C. 590, 101 S.E. 2d 668 (1958). Defendant has failed to rebut this presumption by showing that the judge acted upon incompetent evidence in finding the facts. The assignment is overruled.

Defendant, by his second assignment, maintains that the court erred in admitting into evidence the affirmative response of Dr. Darwin Dorr, a clinical psychologist, when asked on direct examination whether prolonged hospitalization was a recognized method of treating a borderline personality. Defendant argues that neither the question nor the answer elicited specified what group or individual endorsed that method of treatment.

He asserts by his third assignment that the court erred in admitting the testimony of Dr. Richard Selman, a psychiatrist, that certain treatment rendered by him was medically necessary without qualification as to the time periods involved, since a fundamental issue in dispute was whether the hospitalization of Karl Gunther subsequent to 12 December 1978 was medically necessary and whether the nature of the treatment he received was excluded under the terms of the policy. It is evident to us from the record, however, that the time to which the witness referred begins 5 February 1979, when Dr. Selman first made a diagnosis of borderline personality, and the period of hospitalization thereafter.

Defendant fails to bolster either assignment by citation of authority, and we are unaware of any supporting authority for the exceptions taken. These matters could easily have been addressed by defense counsel on cross examination. The court’s find*345ings are fully supported by the evidence adduced. Appellant’s assignments of error numbers 2 and 3 are, accordingly, overruled.

Defendant bases his next two assignments upon G.S. 8-40.1. He alleges that the court erred in admitting a reading by Dr. Selman from the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistic Manual III, plaintiff’s exhibit 3. He points to plaintiff’s failure to lay a foundation establishing the manual as a reliable authority, the lack of an agreement between counsel for the parties to receive the exhibit, and its substantive nature, and assigns error to its admission into evidence. G.S. 8-40.1 provides:

In all actions in the district and superior courts to the extent called to the attention of an expert witness upon cross-examination or relied upon by him in direct examination, the hearsay rule shall not exclude statements contained in published treatises, periodicals, or pamphlets on a subject of history, medicine, or other science or art, established as a reliable authority by the testimony or admission of the witness or by other expert testimony or by judicial notice, even though the declarant is available as a witness. If admitted, the statements may be read into evidence but may not be received as exhibits unless agreed to by counsel for the parties.

We hold that any error that may have been committed by the introduction of the evidence in question was not prejudicial. Defendant’s exhibits 3 and 4 were also taken from the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual, and his own psychiatric expert, Dr. Hans Lowenbach, described the manual as reliable and authoritative. It is unnecessary to attempt to gauge the impact of the attorneys’ failure to agree to receive the exhibit, or to classify the evidence as either illustrative or substantive, as there was plenary additional evidence upon which the court could have made its findings of fact. Assignments of error numbers 4 and 5 are overruled.

Defendant excepts to several of the court’s findings of fact, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support them. We have examined the record carefully, and find, on the contrary, that the questioned findings numbered 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 8 are supported by the pleadings, stipulations, and evidence. Defendant’s assignments of error numbers 6 through 11, based on exceptions to those findings, are therefore overruled.

*346Defendant next argues that the court erred in its findings of fact numbers 9 and 10, alleging that the evidence was insufficient to support them. We disagree. Section 502 of the policy states:

A. Except as may be otherwise specifically provided, no benefits are provided under this certificate for:
(2) Services or supplies ... (2) not reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of illness, injury, or restoration of physiological functions . . . (3) for custodial and domiciliary care.

We note that the policy language refers not to the “psychological” rehabilitation to which the court referred in its judgment, but to the restoration of “physiological” function. The judge’s mistake in this regard was not harmful to defendant, however. Since the phrase in question excludes services or supplies not reasonable and necessary for the diagnosis or treatment of “illness, injury, or restoration of physiological functions . . .” (emphasis added), the finding must be regarded as superfluous to the extent the court used the wrong word, the contested expenses having been incurred for the treatment of a mental illness, nevertheless. The finding is apposite, and we find this inaccuracy of syntax to be nonprejudicial.

Defendant submits that the court erred in its finding and conclusion of law based thereon when it chose to formulate its own definition of the terms “custodial” and “domiciliary” care, in the face of testimony from defendant’s expert, Dr. Lowenbach, that care is custodial if the patient’s condition is such that “in spite of adequate treatment for an adequate length of time, there is no reasonable likelihood to expect that a person can live outside of an institution giving such care without relapsing into the same symptomatology,” and his explanation that “domiciliary” care was the replacement of an unsuitable home with a suitable one. Moreover, defendant argues that the court erred in its findings and conclusion that Karl’s hospitalization did not come within the exclusion in the policy any time before 30 May 1979, as his treatment after 12 December should have been excluded pursuant to the definitions of custodial and domiciliary care espoused by Dr. Lowenbach, and that the court erred by its failure to render judgment for him on his counterclaim.

*347The defendant had the burden of proving that the expenses incurred for Karl’s hospitalization came within the stated exception of the policy. See Flintall v. Charlotte Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 259 N.C. 666, 131 S.E. 2d 312 (1963). Applying even the restrictive interpretations of the exclusionary language espoused by defendants, the evidence supports the judge’s finding that Karl’s hospitalization should not be excluded from coverage. Dr. Selman testified that he decided in February that Karl

needed to remain in the hospital for four or five more months, to be able to make the progress enough to be able to continue his treatment on an outpatient basis. We discussed the fact that he would need to be in treatment for a long period of time, and that the initial part of that would need to be in the hospital. The treatment plan I have initially conceived when he was admitted to the hospital, that is activity therapy, group therapy, and psychotherapy would be continued, throughout his hospitalization this initial plan remained intact.

Though there was some evidence that Karl’s continued hospitalization depended upon plaintiff’s resolution of certain personal and family problems, other evidence was sufficient to allow the judge to find that continued treatment in the hospital was medically necessary. Defendant’s assignments of error numbers 12 through 17 are without merit.

The judgment of the trial court is, based on the above,

Affirmed.

Judges Hedrick and Vaughn concur.
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