This is a tort case in which the issue concerns application of the collateral-source rule. The Trial Court held that the rule required exclusion of evidence of the partial forgiveness of a debt for medical services rendered to the plaintiff. The defendant moved for a new trial pursuant to Ark. R. Civ. P. 59(a)(8), arguing that the ruling was an error of law that prevented it from having a fair trial. The Trial Court denied the motion, and we affirm.
On November 14, 1994, appellee Shirley Anderson was badly injured in a fall while shopping in appellant’s Montgomery Ward store in Little Rock. Montgomery Ward personnel sent her to the hospital at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (“UAMS”) to be treated. Ms. Anderson had surgical and other medical-services expenses at UAMS totaling $24,512.45. Montgomery Ward moved in limine to prohibit Ms. Anderson from presenting the total amount billed by UAMS as proof of her medical expenses and asked that her evidence be limited to the actual amount for which she would be responsible to pay. In response, Ms. Anderson stated that, through her attorney, she had reached an agreement with UAMS that UAMS would discount the bill by fifty per cent. Ms. Anderson asserted that the collateral-source rule would prohibit Montgomery Ward from introducing evidence of the discount.
The Trial Court denied the motion in limine, ruling that the negotiated discount with UAMS was a collateral source, and allowed evidence of the entire amount billed by UAMS. Montgomery Ward urges that the ruling and the denial of the motion for new trial made on the same basis were erroneous.
The decision to grant or deny a new trial under Rule 59(a)(8) is within the discretion of the trial court, and that decision is not reversed absent a manifest abuse of discretion, that is, discretion exercised thoughtlessly and without due consideration. Nazarenko v. CTI Trucking Co., Inc.,
We have held that the collateral-source rule applies unless the evidence of the benefits from the collateral source is relevant for a purpose other than the mitigation of damages. Parrish v. Newton,
The Trial Court relied on Green Forest Public Schools v. Herrington,
Although those cases do not directly answer the question in this case, they deal with analogous situations and explain the policy behind the collateral-source rule. A trial court must “exclude evidence of payments received by an injured party from sources ‘collateral’ to . . . the wrongdoer, such as private insurance or government benefits . . . .” Bell v. Estate of Bell,
In the Bell case, we recognized that commentators had criticized the rule as being “incongruous with the compensatory goal of the tort system” and that some jurisdictions had modified or abrogated the rule. Bell,
But in these cases the courts measure “compensation” by the total amount of the harm done, even though some of it has been repaired by the collateral source, not by what it would take to make the plaintiff whole. It is “compensation” in a purely Pickwickian sense that only half conceals an emphasis on what defendant should pay rather than on what plaintiff should get.
We also noted that the rule had been extended to cases in other areas of the law, such as unemployment compensation received during a period later held to have resulted from a wrongful discharge under the Teacher Fair Dismissal Act. Green Forest v. Herrington,
Whether she received the money from her employer or from an insurance policy, she, rather than the alleged tortfeasor, is entitled to the benefit of the collateral source, even though in one sense a double recovery occurs. Vermillion v. Peterson,275 Ark. 37 ,630 S.W.2d 30 (1982). The law rationalizes that the claimant should benefit from the collateral source recovery rather than the tortfeasor, since the claimant has usually paid an insurance premium or lost sick leave, whereas to the tortfeasor it would be a total windfall.
Id. at 548,
Montgomery Ward cites Auto Transports, Inc. V. May,
We recognize four situations in which the rule does not apply, as explained in Evans v. Wilson,
The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A(2) provides guidance on this issue and explains that the general rule is that “[p]ayments made to or benefits conferred on the injured party from other sources are not credited against the tortfeasor’s liability, although they cover all or a part of the harm for which the tortfeasor is liable.” Comment b to that Restatement section explains that, if the plaintiff is responsible for the benefit received, the law allows the plaintiff to keep it. Further, if the benefit was a gift to the plaintiff from a third party or established for the plaintiff by law, the plaintiff should not be deprived of the advantage that it confers. Another way to state the rule is to say that “it is the tortfeasor’s responsibility to compensate for all harm that he [or she] causes, not confined to the net loss that the injured party receives.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 920A cmt. b. Comment c(3) indicates that gratuities of cash or services are collateral sources that are not subtracted from a plaintiff’s recovery. The comment gives the example of a doctor who does not charge for medical services.
Other authority indicates that a substantial number of jurisdictions addressing the issue have held that the plaintiff may recover the reasonable value of nursing care or services rendered gratuitously for the plaintiff s benefit. See J.A. Connelly, Annotation, Damages for Personal Injury or Death as Including Value of Care and Nursing Gratuitously Rendered,
Montgomery Ward cites cases from Massachusetts, New York, and Illinois for the proposition that gratuitous medical services may not be an item of recovery because the policy behind the collateral-source rule does not apply where the plaintiff has incurred no expense or obligation for the services needed. Peterson v. Lou Bachrodt Chev. Co.,
We choose to adopt the rule that gratuitous or discounted medical services are a collateral source not to be considered in assessing the damages due a personal-injury plaintiff. It is the rule recommended by the Restatement (Second) of Torts, and it is consistent with our oft-stated policy of allowing the innocent plaintiff, instead of the tortfeasor defendant, to receive any windfall associated with the cause of action. Accordingly, we hold that the Trial Court did not err by excluding evidence of the UAMS discount as a collateral source.
Affirmed.
