We granted certiorari to decide whether the 'Court of Appeals was correct in holding that a city is not obligated to pay a hospital for medical care rendered to the city’s pretrial detainees.
Myrtle Beach Hospital v. City of Myrtle Beach,
FACTS
Respondents (the City) operate a lock-up facility to house pre-trial detainees. Pursuant to the City’s policy, if a detainee needs medical attention, the facility contacts the Horry County Emergency Medical Services (EMS) to evaluate and treat the detainee. If EMS determines further treatment is required, it transports the detainee to petitioner Hospital, which operates the only hospital emergency room in Myrtle Beach. As a result of this policy, the Hospital has accrued approximately $300,000 in unpaid medical bills. 1 When the City refused to pay these bills, the Hospital brought this action.
The parties agree that the City is required by the Federal" Constitution to ensure that a detainee receives necessary medical care.
City of Revere v. Mass. Gen. Hosp.,
Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.
Quality Towing, Inc. v. City of Myrtle Beach,
ISSUES
(1) Is the City obligated to pay the medical bills of its detainees because this duty should be implied from statutes or regulations?;
(2) Do public policy considerations impose a duty upon the . City to pay the bills?;
(3) Is there an obligation to pay on the part of the City, arising from an implied-by-law contract or from quantum meruit?
ANALYSIS
A. Legislative Intent
The Hospital acknowledges, as it must, that no state statute requires the City to bear the medical expenses of the pretrial
Pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 24-9-20 (Supp.1999), every municipal lock-up facility such as the one operated by the City is subject to an annual inspection by a division of the DOC. The inspection “shall be based on standards established by the South Carolina Association of Counties and adopted by the [DOC]_” Id.
Pursuant to this mandate, the DOC promulgated a document entitled “Minimum Standards for Local Detention Facilities — Type I Facilities — Overnight Lockup” (the Minimum Standards). The Hospital refers to certain of the provisions of the Minimum Standards and especially relies on Section 2054:
2054 EMERGENCIES. Each facility shall provide twenty-four (24) hour emergency medical and dental care availability, as outlined in a written plan which includes arrangements for:
(a) Emergency evacuation of inmates from the facility
(b) Use of an emergency medical vehicle
(c) Use of one (1) or more designated hospital emergency rooms or other appropriate health facilities
(d) Emergency on-call physician and dentist services when the emergency health facility is not located in a nearby community.
According to the Hospital, this “regulation” evinces a legislative intent that the City bear the cost of medical services rendered to the detainees. We disagree.
These Minimum Standards have never been subject to the legislative scrutiny afforded regulations under the Administrative Procedures Act.
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Instead, they are merely the product of the County Association, adopted by the DOC, an executive
Looking at the actual legislative intent expressed in our statutes, we find that it undermines rather than support's the Hospital’s position. The Hospital points to statutes expressing the State’s policy to render “humane treatment” to persons serving a term in the State Penitentiary, S.C.Code Ann. § 24-1-20 (1989); to one instructing that the DOC director is responsible “for the proper care, treatment, feeding, clothing, and management of the prisoners confined therein”, S.C.Code Ann. § 24-1-130 (Supp.1999); a statute requiring certain entities using state convicts to reimburse the DOC for “moneys expended ... for medical attention.... ” S.C.Code Ann. § 24-1-160 (Supp.1999); and, to provisions made for the comfort and treatment of prisoners in county jail [§ 24-5-80 and § 24-7-70 (1985) ] and of convicts working on chain gangs. §§ 24-7-60; 24-7-80; 24-7-110 (1985).
In our view, these statutes express the legislative intent that jailers (whether county or state) are to bear the expenses, including those incurred in rendering health care, for persons incarcerated following their convictions. Applying the maxim of statutory interpretation expressio unius est exclusio alterius, the absolute silence of the Legislature on the subject of expense allocation, or even minimal living standards, for the pretrial detainees held in municipal facilities defeats any “legislative intent” claim. 5
We agree with the Court of Appeals that Hospital cannot prevail on its “legislative intent” theory.
B. Public Policy
The Hospital contends that “public policy” requires that the City pay the medical bills incurred by the detainees.
The Hospital relies heavily on opinions from other jurisdictions to support its argument that we should find a duty to pay arising from public policy. All these cases, except those decided by Arkansas 7 and Nebraska, 8 involve the construction of state statutes or regulations imposing certain duties upon jailers. 9 Our review of these decisions convinces us that whether to reallocate the financial burden of indigent predetainee medical care, and the method of any such reallocation, is one best left to the legislative process which is better equipped to allow input from all interested parties. We therefore affirm the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that public policy does not compel the City to reimburse the Hospital for these costs.
C. Implied by law contract or quantum meruit
The Hospital argues that, the Court of Appeals should have required respondents to pay the bills under either a theory of quantum meruit or contract implied by law. We disagree.
In
Piedmont Premium, supra,
we erroneously defined a contract implied by law as resting On “a duty imposed by law and treated as a contract for purposes of remedy only.”
Id.,
Further, we note this Court’s current test for quantum meruit differs from that used by the Court of Appeals, and further note a discrepancy between the two courts’ implied by law tests. Interestingly, the Court of Appeals’ implied by law test is the same as this Court’s quantum meruit analysis:
(1) benefit conferred by plaintiff upon the defendant;
(3) retention of the benefit by the defendant under circumstances that make it inequitable for him to retain it without paying its value.
Compare,
e.g.,
Columbia Wholesale Co. v. Scudder May, N.V.,
We adopt the Scudder May test as the sole test for a quantum meruit/quasi-eontract/implied by law claim. We therefore overrule the following cases to the extent they rely on this different quantum meruit test first announced by the Court of Appeals in Webb v. First Fed. Savings & Loan Ass’n, supra:
(1) valuable services or materials were furnished;
(2) to the defendant;
(3) who accepted, used and enjoyed them;
(4) under such circumstances as reasonably notified the defendant that the plaintiff was expecting to be paid by the defendant.
Bonaparte v. Bonaparte,
Applying the
Scudder May quantum meruit
test in this case, we hold that the Hospital cannot prevail on this equitable theory. The first two elements are that the City received and retained a benefit. Here, it is the detainee rather than the City that receives and retains the benefits conferred by the Hospital.
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Further, since the only duty on the City is that imposed by the Due Process Clause of the federal constitution, and since that duty is fulfilled “by seeing that [the
For the reasons given above, the decision of the Court of Appeals is
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
Notes
. The City's policy is to pay the bills if the treatment is required because of an injury occurring during the arrest or as the 'direct result’ of the incarceration.
. Although City of Revere involved the specific question of the duty owed to an individual injured by municipal police officers in the performance of their duties, we agree with the parties and other courts considering the issue that the reasoning in City of Revere applies with equal force to the duty owed to pretrial detainees.
.
Cf. Stuckey v. State Budget and Control Bd.,
. This is not to suggest that the DOC could not be held to its duty to adopt standards, or to conduct inspections of local facilities pursuant to § 24-9-20; or that the City would not be subject to sanctions for failure to abide by these regulations. See S.C.Code Ann. § 24-9-30 (Supp. 1999) “Enforcement of minimum standards.”
. The absence of specific legislation does not, however, mean that municipalities may treat pretrial detainees inhumanely or with deliberate indifference, or consciously disregard their rights.
. Compare 1899 Op. Atty. Gen, 204, stating that a county would be liable for the medical treatment afforded a prisoner wounded while being arrested, if the prisoner were in custody.
.
Union County v. Warner Brown Hosp.,
.
Lutheran Medical Center v. City of Omaha,
. Although the Court of Appeals concluded that North Carolina represented a minority view, we disagree. North Carolina imposes a duty on the governmental entity to pay medical expenses incurred by persons in its custody.
Spicer v. Williamson,
.
See Stanley Smith & Sons v. Limestone College,
. Now found at 17 C.J.S. Contracts § 6(b) (1999) following a 1999 revision. See section conversion chart at p. 398 of volume 17.
. To be sure, the City receives an incidental benefit in the sense that the existence of the Hospital facilitates the City's constitutional duty to ensure the detainee receives necessary medical care.
. The Hospital may seek to recover, as it now does, its expenses from the detainee, his private insurance, or from federal or state indigent medical care funds if available. We simply decide that, as between the City and the Hospital, equity , does not require the City to bear these costs.
