Lead Opinion
The facts are essentially undisputed in this case. The record reveals that Henry L. Clark was treated at North Carolina Baptist Hospitals, Inc. (hereinafter “the hospital”) for injuries he sustained in an automobile accident. Total charges for the medical services he received from the hospital amounted to $27,579.69. Clark executed an assignment
Clark retained the defendant, Beverly R. Mitchell, Esq., as counsel to represent him in his personal injury claim against the driver of the other automobile involved in the accident which caused his injury. The defendant Mitchell received copies of Clark’s assignment in favor of the hospital. Thereafter, she settled Clark’s claim for $25,000.00, the limit of the other driver’s liability insurance policy.
Pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 44-50,
The only issue before us is whether an attorney who follows the disbursement provisions of N.C.G.S. § 44-50 when disbursing a client’s funds from a personal injury settlement can be held liable for the client’s unpaid debt to a medical service provider whom the attorney knew had obtained the client’s assignment of all such funds up to the full amount of the client’s debt for medical services. Although the dissenters discuss other interesting questions, we consider that issue only and conclude that an attorney cannot be held liable for following the statute in such situations. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
Noting that a purported assignment of a claim for relief for personal injury is invalid as contrary to public policy, the Court of Appeals focused on the question of whether there is a difference between the assignment of such a claim and the assignment of proceeds resulting from the claim. That court concluded that any distinction drawn between the assignment of a claim and the assignment of the proceeds of the claim is a mere fiction; therefore, such an assignment of proceeds is a violation of public policy and invalid. After concluding that the assignment was invalid, the Court of Appeals went on to hold that the defendant had complied with the provisions of N.C.G.S. § 44-50 in disbursing the funds she received in settlement of her client’s personal injury claim and could not be held liable to the plaintiff hospital. We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals, but for different reasons.
The plaintiff contends that the Court of Appeals erred in concluding that Clark’s assignment of the proceeds of his personal injury claim was invalid. The plaintiff maintains that neither N.C.G.S. § 44-50 nor its companion, N.C.G.S. § 44-49, contains any language which suggests that they provide the exclusive means of recovery of medical expenses where a personal injury claim is involved. Furthermore, argues the plaintiff, these statutes do not contain any language which suggests the invalidity of an assignment made independently of the statutes.
We conclude that in this case Clark’s attorney cannot be held liable to the hospital for failing to honor the assignment. The intent of the legislature controls the interpretation of a statute. State v. Hart,
A pertinent part of N.C.G.S. § 44-50 reads as follows:
[I]t shall be the duty of any person receiving . . . [funds paid for another as satisfaction of a claim for personal injuries] before disbursement thereof to retain out of any recovery or any compensation so received a sufficient amount to pay the just and bona fide claims for such drugs, medical supplies, ambulance service and medical attention and/or hospital service, after having received and accepted notice thereof . . . Provided, further, that the lien hereinbefore provided for shall in no case, exclusive of attorneys’ fees, exceed fifty percent (50%) of the amount of damages recovered.
(Emphasis added.) This portion of the statute defines the duty of “any person receiving” the funds paid in settlement or compensation of a personal injury claim of another. Although the statute does not make it clear, we conclude that by directing third parties as to how to disburse funds received for personal injury claims and limiting the percentage of the balance of the recovery — after
Our interpretation of the statute comports with the well established public policy of this state favoring settlements of claims. See Fisher v. Lumber Co.,
The plaintiffs argument that the plain language of N.C.G.S. § 44-50 does not prevent an assignment of proceeds of a personal injury claim received by a third party is not unreasonable. When read quite literally, the statute may be so construed. However, where a literal interpretation of the language of a statute would contravene the manifest purpose of the statute, the reason and purpose of the law will be given effect and the strict letter of the statute disregarded. In Re Banks,
The defendant in this case received the funds from the settlement on behalf of her client Clark and disbursed them according to the statute. Therefore, she is not liable to the plaintiff hospital for failing to pay the hospital in accord with the terms of her
For the foregoing reasons, which differ from those given by the Court of Appeals, we conclude that the Court of Appeals was correct in affirming the trial court’s judgment dismissing the plaintiffs claim. The decision of the Court of Appeals is, therefore, affirmed, tí
Affirmed.
Notes
. The assignment read as follows:
In consideration of services 'rendered and/or services to be rendered by North Carolina Baptist Hospitals, Inc. (“Hospital”) to Henry Clark (“Patient”), the undersigned hereby assign to the Hospital all right, title and interest in and to any compensation or payment in any form that (I, -we-) have received or shall receive as a result of or arising out of the injuries sustained by the Patient resulting in (his, -her-) hospitalization, up to the amount necessary to discharge all indebtedness to the Hospital for medical services rendered to the Patient, whenever and wherever rendered. (I, -We-) agree that this Assignment shall not relieve (me, -us-) of any such indebtedness until actually paid. This Assignment is irrevocable and made without prejudice to any rights that (I, -we-) might have to compensation for injuries incurred by the Patient, but (I, -we-) hereby authorize and direct*530 any person or corporation having notice of this Assignment to pay to the Hospital directly the amount of the indebtedness owed to the Hospital in connection with services rendered to the Patient. (I, -We-) further authorize and direct any person or corporation making such payments to the Hospital to accept and rely upon a written statement from the Hospital as to the amount of such indebtedness.
. N.C.G.S. § 44-50 states:
Such a lien as provided for in G.S. 44-49 shall also attach upon all funds paid to any person in compensation for or settlement of the said injuries, whether in litigation or otherwise: and it shall be the duty of any person receiving the same before disbursement thereof to retain out of any recovery or any compensation so received a sufficient amount to pay the just and bona fide claims for such drugs, medical supplies, ambulance service and medical attention and/or hospital service, after having received and accepted notice thereof: Provided, that evidence as to the amount of such charges shall be competent in the trial of any such action: Provided, further, that nothing herein contained shall be construed so as to interfere with any amount due for attorney’s services: Provided further, that the lien hereinbefore provided for shall in no case, exclusive of attorneys’ fees, exceed fifty percent (50%) of the amount of damages recovered.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
While it is clear that we have done so implicitly, this Court should very explicitly disavow the holding of the Court of Appeals in this case to the effect that any distinction drawn between the assignment of a claim of personal injuries and the assignment of the proceeds of such a claim is a “mere fiction,” and therefore an assignment of proceeds is a violation of public policy and thus invalid.
The Court of Appeals was quite correct in holding that a raw claim or the cause of action itself is not assignable. “It seems that few legal principles are as well settled, and as universally agreed upon, as the rule that the common law does not permit assignments of causes of action to recover for personal injuries.” Annot. “Assignability of claim for personal injury or death,”
There are very substantial differences between an assignment of a raw claim or cause of action for a personal injury action and the assignment of the proceeds which might be derived from the claim by settlement or by judgment. In an assignment of a raw claim or cause of action for personal injuries, the claimant loses all control of the conduct of settlement negotiations, the right to bring an action against the tort-feasor in his own name, the right to control the litigation, and the right to control the settlement of the lawsuit. This is not true if only the proceeds of a claim are assigned.
We should particularly disavow the statement of the panel below to the effect that the “more reasoned view is that [proceeds of a personal injury claim] are not assignable before judgment,”
The majority also errs in concluding that the manifest purpose of the statute is to provide that the claimant shall receive at least a part of any recovery for his injuries. The manifest purpose of the statute in question is to create a lien on the proceeds of the personal injury recovery in the hands of a third person. The statute in no way addresses the public policy question of the right of a person to contract for the disposition of proceeds for the purpose of securing (or reimbursing for) badly needed medical care. Had the legislature chosen to address this public policy question, it would no doubt have specifically authorized such an assignment of proceeds in order to assist injured people in obtaining immediate medical treatment for their personal injuries. If the law did not permit such assignments, we would no doubt see injured parties turned away or at least shuttled out to other treatment facilities, as we now see in the case of indigents. Public policy favors the assignment of proceeds to medical care providers. For a review of numerous cases approving assignments of proceeds to pay hospitals and doctors for medical services, see Annot. “Assignability of proceeds of claim for personal injury or death,”
The United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia, applying Virginia law, examined and upheld as valid an assignment virtually identical to the one in this case. In re Musser, 24 Bankr. 913 (W.D. Va. 1982), involved an assignment to a hospital of proceeds which might arise resulting from personal injuries leading to the hospitalization. The court held that this constituted an equitable assignment of a future right which was fully enforceable. In determining that the proceeds of a personal injury action were assignable (at least to the medical care provider), the court relied heavily on the reasoning in Collins v. Blue Cross of Virginia,
Block v. California Physicians ’ Service,
The law should encourage such assignments rather than discourage them, as the majority has done.
In Goldwater v. Fisch,
In Brinkman v. Moskowitz,
Another case addressing the identical issues as in the case sub judice is Bonanza Motors, Inc. v. Webb,
In the case sub judice, copies of the assignment were mailed to the defendant on two different occasions, long before the defendant disbursed any funds. The defendant admitted receiving the two packages containing the assignment and admitted having a copy of the assignment in her files. She was thus charged with the duty of paying funds of her client, up to the amount of the hospital charges, to the hospital-assignee according to the terms of the assignment.
Neither N.C.G.S. § 44-50 nor its companion, N.C.G.S. § 44-49, contains any language which suggests that they provide the ex-
Had the legislature intended to limit recovery of a medical care provider, as opposed to simply providing a limited lien, it could have done so. There is no doubt that the legislature knows how to draft such language when it chooses to do so. For example, just such a limitation has been imposed upon recovery by a medical care provider out of wrongful death proceeds. That statute unambiguously states that a wrongful death recovery “is not liable to be applied as assets . . . except as to . . . reasonable hospital and medical expenses not exceeding one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) incident to the injury resulting in death.” N.C.G.S. § 28A-18-2(a) (Cum. Supp. 1988). The statutory sections at issue in this case provide no such limitations nor any basis for the inference of such a limitation.
The majority opinion impacts upon governmental programs as well as medical service suppliers in the private sector. The amici, North Carolina Memorial Hospital, the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation Services, and the Division of Medical Assistance (Medicare), will be very severely hampered in their attempts to recoup funds expended from the public treasury. In any personal injury case involving medical expenses, the amount of the bills is taken into account in both settlements and jury verdicts. Because of the collateral source rule, whether or not the bill has been paid is irrelevant in determining the patient’s damages. It is patently inequitable for a patient-plaintiff to collect all or a portion of his medical expenses in a personal injury claim and not be required to pay that money to the medical use provider. While the Court of Appeals in the case sub judice found a violation of public policy in assigning proceeds of a cause of action, the court failed to note competing public policy considerations regarding a patient’s paying his bill or having the rest of society pay it for him. When the patient has money to pay, it is the better public policy to require the patient to do so. Assignment to a health care provider of the proceeds of a personal injury claim prior to recovery is a good and rational public policy to ensure payment of the medical costs and, in the case of a public medical care provider, to
I believe the majority also errs in its conclusion that being able to retain a part of the settlement for himself is the claimant’s only incentive to pursue his claim against the tort-feasor. The overwhelming majority of our citizens want to pay their debts for medical care. Even those who do not are motivated to escape lawsuits and judgments against themselves and the subsequent adverse effect on their credit ratings. It is only a small percentage of our citizens who absolutely do not care that have no incentive other than the lien statute to pursue the tort-feasor, even though all the proceeds would go to pay medical bills.
If an attorney for a patient-plaintiff cannot disburse his client’s funds by agreement of the parties and does not wish to choose between the lien statute and his client’s valid assignment to the medical care provider, he or she can simply deduct his fees and pay the balance into the court or clerk’s office.
Admittedly, the attorney in this case acted completely innocently and in good faith. This Court should not, however, permit these “bad facts” to lure it into making “bad law.” I vote to find the assignment valid and enforceable against the defendant-attorney who disbursed the funds with full notice and knowledge of the assignment.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Under the common law governing assignments, a litigant may, while an action is pending, assign any recovery he may obtain. The assignee becomes the equitable owner of the claim and is entitled to an assignment of the judgment when it is entered. Fertilizer Works v. Newbern,
A valid assignment may be made by any contract between the assignor and the assignee which manifests an intention to make the assignee the present owner of the debt. . . . The*540 assignment operates as a binding transfer of the title to the debt as between the assignor and the assignee regardless of whether notice of the transfer is given to the debtor. . . . Notice to the debtor is necessary, however, to charge him with the duty of making payments to the assignee. . . . This duty arises whenever the debtor receives notice of the assignment, irrespective of who gives it.
Id. (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
The record here establishes the following undisputed facts:
For a valuable consideration recited in the document, defendant’s client assigned to plaintiff, a health care provider, all sums he might receive as a result of the injuries that caused his hospitalization, up to the full amount necessary to discharge his indebtedness. The assignment “authorize[d] and directe[df any person with notice of it to pay such sums directly to plaintiff. (Emphasis added.) When defendant received proceeds from her client’s claim for personal injuries that were less than the client’s indebtedness to plaintiff, she had notice of the assignment.
Applying the foregoing common law principles governing assignments to these undisputed facts, defendant had a duty to pay the funds in question to plaintiff, and plaintiff is entitled to recover from defendant any loss it has incurred on account of plaintiffs breach of this duty. See Brinkman v. Moskowitz,
The Court of Appeals opinion, in effect, subordinates the foregoing common law principles governing assignments to the principle that rights of action for torts causing personal injuries are not assignable. See 6 Am. Jur. 2d Assignments § 37 (1963). The Court of Appeals “believe[d] that the more reasoned view is that such proceeds are not assignable before judgment.” N.C. Baptist Hospitals, Inc. v. Mitchell,
The majority here affirms the Court of Appeals, not on the basis of the common law principle against assignment of tort claims, but on the basis of N.C.G.S. § 44-50. This statute limits the lien established for health care providers in N.C.G.S. § 44-49 to fifty percent of the damages recovered in the settlement of a claim for personal injuries, exclusive of attorneys’ fees. N.C.G.S. § 44-50 (1984). The majority bases its decision on the speculative assumption that the manifest purpose of this statute is to insure consumers of health care services a sufficient portion of tort claim recoveries that they will retain the incentive to pursue their claims. I again disagree.
“[N.C.G.S. § 44-49, 50] provide rather extraordinary remedies in derogation of the common law, and, therefore, they must be strictly construed.” Ellington v. Bradford,
Further, while the majority correctly asserts that “[t]he intent of the legislature controls the interpretation of a statute,” I am convinced that its interpretation of N.C.G.S. § 44-50 is contrary to the actual legislative intent. “In seeking to discover [legislative] intent, the courts should consider the language of the statute, the spirit of the act, and what the act seeks to accomplish.” Stevenson v. City of Durham,
I thus am unpersuaded by the reasoning of either the Court of Appeals or the majority here. Because the statute does not expressly abrogate' the common law principles governing assignments, I would hold that those principles apply. Those principles, applied to the undisputed facts here, entitle plaintiff to a judgment against defendant as a matter of law. N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 56 (1983). I thus would reverse the Court of Appeals and remand the case to that court for further remand to the District Court, Forsyth County, for entry of judgment for plaintiff.
I am not unsympathetic with the plight of an attorney caught between the conflicting demands of a client and the client’s creditor. When a holder of funds is in doubt as to the validity of con
For the reasons expressed, I respectfully dissent.
