ORDER ADDRESSING MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This personal injury suit stems from a collision between a truck and a motorcycle. Before the Court is Defendant USF Holland, Inc.’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment,
The Court, applying Tennessee substantive law, holds that a Tennessee court would'not find healthcare provider charges in excess of what an insúrer paid to a provider to be “necessary and reasonable” costs that may be recovered as damages in a personal injury suit, Therefore, the Defendant’s Motion is GRANTED. Plaintiffs are prohibited from introducing any undis-counted hospital charges as evidence of Plaintiffs’ alleged damages.
While driving a motorcycle on June 12, 2013, Plaintiff Theaudry Hall collided with a commercial tractor-trailer, allegedly operated by Defendant USF Holland, Inc. (ECF No. 1-2 at ¶¶5-7.) Mr. Hah incurred a number of injuries that required treatment. Plaintiffs’ medical bills totaled $90,641.85, which they assert as damages. (ECF No.-64-1 at ¶ 2.) However, Plaintiffs’ insurer, pursuant to negotiated contracts, paid $40,414.88 in full payment of the medical expenses incurred. (Id. at ¶ 6.) Defendant’s Motion seeks to prevent Plaintiffs from introducing evidence of medical expenses in excess of what Plaintiffs’ insurer actually paid.
ANALYSIS
There is no dispute 'of fact concerning the amount of medical expenses incurred by Plaintiffs and the amount actually paid by insurance.
The Court has jurisdiction over this case solely by virtue of the parties’ diversity, and thus must apply Tennessee substantive law as if it were a court of the-State of Tennessee. See Gasperini v. Ctr. for Humanities, Inc.,
Under Tennessee law, a plaintiff must prove that the medical expenses he or she seeks to recover as damages are both “necessary and reasonable.” Borner v. Autry,
The West court held' that only the amount actually paid (the discounted amount) could constitute the reasonable and necessary charges, focusing on the fact that the undiscounted hospital bills “did not reflect what was actually being paid in the market place.” Id, at 45 (internal quotation and alteration omitted). Therefore, the court found that those rates did not realistically reflect the actual cost of the services provided. Id. The court also noted that discounted charges negotiated between a hospital and insurer are inherently reasonable because the' agreement furthers the hospital’s economic interests. Id.
Although West addressed the definition of “reasonable and necessary” charges within the context of the. Hospital Lien Act, the same analysis applies within the context of a personal injury suit.
Plaintiffs fear that the collateral source rule would be violated by the introduction of discounted bills indicating the amounts paid by insurance. To Plaintiffs, the discount provided by a hospital or medical provider to an insurer is a third-party benefit protected by the collateral source rule, which holds that the benefit an injured party receives from a third party does not reduce the defendant’s liability. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A (1979). The purpose of the rule is to. force a tortfeasor to “ ‘compensate for all the harm he causes, not confined to the net loss that the injured party receives ....’” Fye v. Kennedy,
The Court has determined that the amounts paid by Plaintiffs’ insurer constitute the reasonable costs of the necessary services rendered to Plaintiff. Since Plaintiffs’ undiscounted hospital bills do not represent the reasonable cost of services provided, Plaintiffs would not be able to recover the amount stated on those bills. See Keltner v. United, States, No. 2:13-cv-2840-STA-dkv,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendant’s Motion (interpreted as a motion in li-mine) is hereby GRANTED. Plaintiffs are prohibited from introducing evidence of medical expenses beyond what Plaintiffs’ insurer actually paid to Plaintiffs’ healthcare providers.
IT IS SO ORDERED, this 12th day of January, 2016.
Notes
. As Defendant does not actually seek a judgment, but rather seeks an evidentiary ruling excluding certain types of evidence, the Court treats Defendant's Motion as a motion in li-mine rather than a'motion for partial summary judgment. '*
. Plaintiffs argue that the Court cannot take judicial notice of the contract- between Plaintiffs’ insurer and the healthcare provider because the contract is not before the Court as part of the record. Even without the contract in the record, the Court may still rule that, as a matter of law, Plaintiffs are prohibited generally from introducing undiscounted medical bills greater than $4,000.00 to prove their reasonable and necessary medical expenses where the actual amount paid is an agreed-upon discounted amount.
. The parties do contest liability, and liability is not an issue under consideration in this Order.
. Plaintiffs devote many words to their argument that West did not define "reasonable and necessary” for the purposes of personal injury suits, and Plaintiffs are not incorrect about West’s scope. However, West's analysis was clearly informed by personal injury case law. First, it noted that the definition of "necessary” medical expenses in the context of the Hospital Lien Act was analogous to that -of a personal injury suit. See West,
. Plaintiffs contend that such a holding conflicts with Tenn.Code Ann. § 24-5-113(a)(3), which attaches a presumption of reasonableness to a tort plaintiff’s medical bills under $4,000.00. Plaintiffs are mistaken. The Court's holding does nothing to disturb the presumption that medical bills under $4,000.00 are reasonable. Instead, the Court is subjecting medical bills beyond $4,000.00 to scrutiny to determine their reasonableness, as is required by Tennessee law. Applying such scrutiny, the Court has determined that any medical bills that are not presumptively reasonable, and that represent undiscounted charges greater than an amount actually paid, are unreasonable and unnecessary.
. Plaintiffs argue that Judge Anderson’s holding in Keltner, violates the Erie Doctrine. Nothing in the Erie Doctrine precludes a federal court from using another state court’s holding — especially one cited as persuasive authority by the Tennessee Supreme Court — ■ to inform its analysis.
