Lead Opinion
Plaintiff Dr. Lad Santiago provided health care to three patients injured in an automobile collision. Defendant Safeway Insurance Company was the no-fault carrier for the three injured parties. Safeway received notification that all three executed an agreement assigning their rights to insurance proceeds to Dr. Santiago. However, benefits were paid directly to the injured parties and Dr. Santiago was not paid. He filed suit against Safeway for the value of health care services provided to the insureds plus interest, and for punitive damages and expenses of litigation and attorney fees. The trial court granted summary judgment to Safeway and denied Dr. Santiago’s motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of whether the assignments of benefits entitled him to payment plus interest. Plaintiff Santiago appeals.
1. “[An insurance] policy may be assignable or not assignable, as provided by its terms.” OCGA § 33-24-17. In this case, the policy providing coverage contained language stating that the insured’s “rights and duties under this policy may not be assigned without our written consent.” Safeway did not consent to the assignments of benefits by the insureds to Dr. Santiago. However, the assignments did not assign the policy itself but only the benefits due the insureds after the loss had already occurred. The assignments did not in any way affect the risk insured by the policy. Cf. James v. Pa. Gen. Ins. Co.,
“After [a] loss, the claim of the insured, like any other chose in action, could be assigned without in any way affecting the insurer’s liability. It has been held, rightly we think, that a condition in a policy of . . . insurance prohibiting an assignment or transfer of the same after loss, without the consent of the insurer, is null and void, as inconsistent with the covenant of indemnity and contrary to public policy. . . . No right of the insurer being affected by the assignments of the policies, it would be a mere act of caprice or bad faith for it to
The law of other jurisdictions appears to recognize the right of an assignee of insurance benefits to bring an action to recover payment. “An assignment of the policy after loss, or in other words an assignment of the claim for the loss, is valid, and transfers to the assignee the right to the proceeds of the insurance. . . . Such an assignment is valid, even though the policy provides that it shall be void if assigned, either before or after the loss, without the consent of insurer, for such an assignment relates to the cause of action and not to the policy.. . . If insurer has notice of the assignment . . . and, if insurer thereafter pays the proceeds to insured or his creditors, it does not discharge itself from liability to the assignee.” 46 CJS, Insurance, § 1152 (1946). Interpreting Georgia law, the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia has held that a hospital, as assignee of benefits due under a policy of insurance, is entitled to maintain an action against a health insurance company for benefits due. See Hospital Auth. of Fulton County v. State Mut. Life Assur. Co. &c., No. 1:87-CV-2305-MHS, unpublished slip op. (N.D. Ga. Aug. 14, 1989). We agree that where the insurance company had notice of the assignment, the health care provider may maintain an action for benefits due under the policy.
In both Reserve Life Ins. Co. v. Peavy,
2. “[A] debtor of the assignor, who has notice of the assignment, [pays] the debt to the assignor ... at his own peril. ‘It is the established rule in the United States that an assignment for a valuable consideration, with notice to the debtor, imposes on him an equitable and moral obligation to pay the assignee.’ [Cit.]” Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Morrow,
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially.
1. In this case, the insured’s assignee, who provided health care, sued to enforce his right to proceeds of the insured’s coverage. In Vulcan Life Ins. Co. v. Davenport,
Davenport allowed the action to be maintained by the insured, who had assigned some of the benefits under the policy to the health care provider, for the “use” of the assignee under the authority of Reserve Life Ins. Co. v. Peavy,
2. I cannot adopt as the law of Georgia the entire statement quoted from CJS, insofar as it equates an assignment of the policy with an assignment of the claim for loss. The two are distinct and different. Davenport and Santiago both involve only assignments of the right to benefits, that is the claim, not the policy contract itself.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Deen, Presiding Judge Banke, and Judge Birdsong join in this special concurrence.
