Bram NAGER, Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant and Respondent.
Court of Appeal, Fourth District, Division Three.
*349 Glickman & Glickman and Steven C. Glickman, Beverly Hills, for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps, Charles A. Bird, Peter H. Klee and Ronald D. Getchey, San Diego, for Defendant and Respondent.
OPINION
CROSBY, J.
The trial court properly granted an insurer's summary judgment motion in an insured's bad faith claim arising out of $2,000 in disputed no-fault medical payment benefits to a chiropractor lien claimant. The insurer promptly paid what appeared to be the chiropractor's reasonable and necessary bills, and the remainder of *350 the lien was satisfied from the proceeds of the insured's settlement with the drunk driver.
I
Plaintiff Bram Nager was the named insured under an automobile policy with defendant Allstate Insurance Company for his 1984 500 SEC Mercedes Benz. In addition to third party liability coverage, the policy provided no-fault medical payments (med-pay) coverage for up to $10,000 for expenses "actually incurred" by an insured for "necessary" medical treatment for bodily injury arising out of an automobile accident.[1] The drunk driver was insured by Farmers Insurance Company (Farmers). Nager sued the driver and an adjacent property owner for damages arising out of the accident.
While Nager did not seek medical treatment at the accident scene, he went to Michael Weinstein, an orthopedist, three days later, complaining of stiffness and pain in his neck, stabbing pains in his low back and numbness in his right leg. Weinstein suggested physical therapy and chiropractic treatment. Nager was first seen by a chiropractor, John Vostmyer, in late October 1994.
Vostmyer frequently testified as an expert in personal injury matters, having done so in over 100 cases. Nager signed a contractual lien against the proceeds of any settlement, judgment or verdict he might obtain. In November 1994, Vostmyer prepared an initial evaluation report for Nager's trial counsel.
Allstate initially paid some $470 to Vostmyer for his services. In January 1995, he billed Allstate an additional $705. Allstate cut this charge by $400 because the treatments "exceed[ed] frequency guidelines from the initial date of service" and because "physical therapy exceed[ed] expected duration for the diagnosis indicated."
In April 1995, Allstate paid $500 of a new bill for $775, declining to pay for the attorney report. Vostmyer sent Allstate new statements for an additional $1,400 for treatments from January through May 1995, which the carrier did not pay. The combined contested balance totaled approximately $2,000.
Nager sued Allstate for bad faith in September 1995. His expert, Frank Orma, an insurance claims consultant, opined that Allstate's claims handling practices were unreasonable because it relied upon standardized expectations of the duration of treatment, based on a diagnosis code. He criticized Allstate for not obtaining "an independent medical (or in this case, chiropractic) review of the bills and records."
In February 1996, Vostmyer was paid in full from the proceeds of Nager's settlement with Farmers, acting on the other motorist's behalf. Farmers paid a total of $21,000 to settle Nager's personal injury claim and had earlier entered into a settlement of $20,000 for the property damage claim.
II
We consider the totality of the circumstances involving Allstate's handling of Nager's med-pay claim. Not every first party insurance claim is transmogrified into a bad faith suit simply because an insurer questions the amount of a bill before paying it. To give rise to tort liability for bad faith, the insurer's conduct not only must be erroneous but "unreasonable" or "without proper cause" as well (Dalrymple v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1995)
The reasonableness of an insurer's claims handling conduct in a first-party coverage case becomes a question of law, properly determined on summary judgment, where the evidence is undisputed and but one inference can be drawn. (Lee v. Crusader Ins. Co. (1996)
In Lee v. Crusader Ins. Co., supra,
In like fashion, in Carlton v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., supra,
In Globe Indemnity Co. v. Superior Court, supra,
Finally, in Waters v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1996)
The principles articulated in Lee, Carlton, Globe Indemnity, and Waters apply with equal force here. We look to the nature of the coverage provided, the reasonably justified expectations of the parties, and the particular conduct in question to determine whether there is a triable issue of material disputed fact that Allstate consciously and deliberately failed to discharge *352 its contractual responsibilities. (Careau & Co. v. Security Pac. Business Credit, Inc. (1990)
III
Automobile med-pay insurance provides first party coverage on a no-fault basis for relatively low policy limits (generally ranging from $5,000 to $10,000) at relatively low premiums. (Jones v. California Casualty Indem. Exch. (1970)
Allstate's med-pay coverage followed these general parameters, although (as Nager himself pointed out) there were notable differences in its policy language from other carriers' forms. Allstate's policy extended coverage only for medical expenses that were "actually incurred" by an insured. (Italics added.) It imposed a further requirement that such medical expenses be both "reasonable" and "necessary." "Unreasonable" med-pay expenses were defined as fees "which are substantially higher than the usual and customary charges for those services." "Unnecessary" med-pay expenses were defined as an "excessive number, amount or duration" of medical services.
Equally important, Allstate expressly reserved the right to contest med-pay expenses pending documentation regarding their reasonableness and necessity. The med-pay coverage provided as follows: "If the insured person incurs medical expenses which we deem to be unreasonable or unnecessary, we may refuse to pay those expenses and contest them.... If the insured person is sued by a medical services provider because we refuse to pay contested medical expenses, we will pay all defense costs and any resulting judgment against the insured person." These policy provisions made it clear that med-pay coverage was not the same as health insurance policies in terms of providing medical benefits to the general public.[2]
Given this policy structure, there are compelling public policy reasons why insurers should not provide medical lien holders with a blank check for automatic payment of all outstanding *353 bills. Personal injury litigation places a central focus upon medical specials, litigation-oriented medical reports, and depositions and testimony by treating physicians and medical experts. Simple economics preclude such costs from being incurred on a pay-as-you-go basis; rather attorneys, litigants and medical providers rely upon such devices as hens against anticipated judgments or settlements to secure payment, and medical liens are frequently reduced during the process. As the court stated in Lovett v. Carrasco (1998)
Here, Allstate did not stonewall Nager's med-pay claim or take the position that soft tissue injuries or chiropractic treatments were not covered. To the contrary, Allstate promptly paid Vostmyer's first bill and only questioned subsequent billings when the treatment charges appeared to exceed both his original treatment plan and the amount it determined was customary and reasonable for Nager's diagnosis. Allstate indicated its willingness to continue its investigation and reevaluate the payments upon further information from the medical providers. (See, e.g., Austere v. National Cos. Co. (1978)
Nothing in the record shows that Nager sustained a tangible economic loss sufficient to support a bad faith claim. (Appleman v. National-Ben Franklin Ins. Co. (1978)
There is nothing tortious in Allstate's preliminary use of computerized billing programs as a yardstick to measure the reasonableness of chiropractic bills provided to a litigant by medical lien claimants. Allstate explains that its "knowledge of the reasonable and customary services resides in its computer application for analyzing medical provider bills, which is based on diagnostic codes and *354 standardized treatments established by the American Medical Association and surgeons' colleges.... [I]n the case of a serious injury an insured is likely to obtain substantially more medical services for a tightly managed $10,000 than if Allstate acted like an old-style indemnity-type health insurer and paid the provider's rate for whatever the doctor ordered." It would be unrealistic to require insurers to hire outside medical experts to manually review any medical bills before red-flagging them for further analysis or explanation. In such circumstances, the costs of review could far exceed any potential savings.[4]
We stress that such computerized billing analyses cannot be used as a subterfuge to chisel med-pay benefits or to engage in a game of chicken with insureds by holding out on paying undisputed medpay benefits in the hope that another source of payment will be found. (Waller v. Truck Ins. Exch. (1995)
But, as we have indicated, no such evidence of bad faith was proffered here. Allstate legitimately asked Vostmyer to substantiate the medical necessity for his treatments and the reasonableness of their costs. Nager was not denied any treatment, and Vostmyer was paid.
Judgment affirmed. Allstate is entitled to costs on appeal.
SILLS, P.J., and RYLAARSDAM, J., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The med-pay coverage is provided in Coverage "CC" of the Allstate automobile policy. The insuring agreement provides, in pertinent part: "Allstate will pay to or on behalf of an insured person all reasonable expenses actually incurred by an insured person for necessary medical treatment ... actually provided to the insured person."
[2] By comparison, health insurance policies provide less flexibility to the insurer to question a treating physician's determination that treatment was "medically necessary." Ultimately, the question whether treatment was "medically necessary" for purposes of health care coverage may be determined by the trier of fact. (Sarchett v. Blue Shield of Calif. (1987)
[3] Because Nager only sued Allstate for bad faith, we need not decide whether he could have successfully sued in contract for benefits due under the policy. Unlike other carriers' med-pay coverages, the Allstate policy did not contain a reimbursement clause barring double recoveries for an insured's medical expenses. (Contrast Zubia v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (1993)
[4] Our analysis is not altered by the conclusory declaration of Nager's insurance claims consultant Frank Orma that it was an "absolute breach" of the duties of a claims adjuster to rely upon computer-generated duration-of-treatment reports. The fact that another insurance adjuster might have handled the claim differently does not of itself establish bad faith. (Benavidez v. San Jose Police Dept. (1999)
In this regard, the Allstate manual for its "Medical Management" program provided that the information from its computer database "will be used to guide our investigations and assist our decisions and negotiations on a case-by-case basis. It will not replace the independent judgement [sic] and decision making of our claim representatives. Final decisions regarding how to resolve the questions raised will remain the claim rep's responsibility."
