Case Information
*1 Filed 6/11/13
CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE D062550
INSURANCE CO.,
Plaintiff,
(Super. Ct. No. ECU06448) v.
MICHAEL HUFF,
Defendant and Appellant;
PIONEERS MEMORIAL HEALTHCARE
DISTRICT,
Defendant and Respondent. APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Imperial County, Donal B.
Donnelly, Judge. Reversed and remanded with directions.
Nordstrom, Steele, Nicolette and Blythe, Alan K. Nicolette; Guizot & Mouser, Damon Guizot and Marlena J. Mouser for Defendant and Appellant.
Franklin J. Love for Defendant and Respondent.
In this interpleader action, Michael Huff appeals the judgment awarding Pioneers Memorial Healthcare District (the District) a portion of the damages he recovered in a personal injury action against third parties arising out of a motor vehicle collision. The District provided collision-related medical services to Huff at one of its hospitals for which he did not pay. When Huff later obtained a judgment for damages against the third parties who caused his injuries, the District asserted a lien on Huff's damages recovery pursuant to the Hospital Lien Act (Civ. Code, §§ 3045.1-3045.6). Huff contends the District was not entitled to any of the damages because it did not prove the charges for its services were "reasonable and necessary." ( Id. , § 3045.1.) We agree and reverse.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Huff sustained serious injuries in a motor vehicle collision involving Steven and
Matthew Wilkins. (
Huff v. Wilkins
(2006)
Huff subsequently sued the Wilkinses for negligence. ( Huff , supra , 138 Cal.App.4th at p. 737.) After a jury trial, he obtained a judgment on special verdict against them for $356,587.92 in damages. The jury found that Huff's past medical expenses totaled $232,708.80.
Shortly after entry of judgment, a collection agency acting on behalf of the District sent the Wilkinses' insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State *3 Farm), a written notice pursuant to the Hospital Lien Act that the District was claiming a lien in the amount of $34,320.86 on any damages State Farm might pay Huff. Huff disputed the amount of the lien and demanded that State Farm pay the entire judgment amount to him and his attorneys.
Faced with conflicting claims to a portion of the funds to be paid to satisfy Huff's judgment against the Wilkinses, State Farm filed an interpleader action against Huff and the District, and deposited the amount of the District's claimed lien with the trial court. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 386, subd. (b).)1 The conflicting claims of Huff and the District then proceeded to a bench trial.
At the trial, four witnesses testified and several documents were introduced as evidence:
(1) The District's director of patient accounting authenticated a copy of Huff's hospital bill, which the court admitted into evidence. He testified the bill remains unpaid and the itemized charges listed on the bill were based on standard rates applicable to all patients. The director admitted he is not a doctor or a nurse and never met or talked to Huff.
(2) The District's former patient financial counselor testified she spoke to Huff while he was in the hospital to discuss why he was there, whether he had insurance, and what programs might be available for payment of his medical expenses. Huff told her 1 Initially, State Farm included two other hospitals as defendants in the interpleader action. Those hospitals later withdrew their lien claims and were dismissed from the action, leaving only the District's lien claim for resolution.
"he didn't have any insurance and [she] should be billing the person responsible for the accident."
(3) The general manager of the collection agency acting on behalf of the District testified that he served State Farm by certified mail with a notice of hospital lien concerning Huff's unpaid bill. The court admitted a copy of the notice into evidence. The general manager also testified the current balance due on Huff's bill was $34,320.86. He admitted he had no personal knowledge about the actual services the District furnished Huff.
(4) An attorney who represented Huff in his negligence action against the Wilkinses testified that at the trial of that action he introduced evidence of all of the medical expenses Huff incurred during his hospitalization at the District's hospital. The attorney also authenticated a copy of the judgment on special verdict in Huff's negligence action against the Wilkinses, which the court admitted into evidence.
After hearing argument from counsel and taking the matter under submission, the trial court ruled the District "met its burden to establish a valid and enforceable claim of lien for emergency medical care and services under the [Hospital Lien Act]." Specifically, the court found: (1) the testimony of the District's patient financial counselor established that Huff had received medical services at the District for injuries caused by a third party; (2) the testimony of the District's director of patient accounting established that the District has not been paid for those services; and (3) the testimony of the District's director of patient accounting and the general manager of the collection agency retained by the District established that the District gave State Farm valid notice *5 of its lien. The trial court also ruled the District was "not required under the [Act] to present expert testimony or otherwise affirmatively prove that the amounts it claims in the lien are for 'reasonable and necessary charges.' " According to the court:
"[T]he authenticated hospital statement of charges serves as prima facie evidence that services were rendered and billed for. . . . [The Act] does not require a detailed description of the services, much less an expert declaration of reasonableness and necessity. That would gravely impair the utility of the statutory lien as a low[-]cost, simpler, and speedier alternative to litigation. In addition, the requirement that medical services be proven to have been 'reasonable and necessary' traditionally only applies for the purpose of proving causation and damages in contested tort cases. It need not be proved in collections cases on 'common counts' and should have no application to the alternative statutory enforcement of a lien on a debt. Had the legislature intended to impose such additional requirement, it would have so specified in the statutory language."
Based on these rulings, the trial court entered judgment in favor of the District for $34,320.86, less its pro rata share of the costs and attorney fees incurred by State Farm. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 386.6, subd. (a).)
DISCUSSION
Huff contends the judgment must be reversed because the trial court erroneously relieved the District of its burden under the Hospital Lien Act to prove the charges for the services it provided Huff were reasonable and necessary, and the District submitted no evidence to establish the reasonableness or necessity of those charges. The District counters that the judgment must be affirmed because sufficient circumstantial evidence established the charges were reasonable and necessary, and Huff did not prove otherwise. As we shall explain, we agree with Huff.
A. Standard of Review
We review the trial court's construction of the Hospital Lien Act de novo. (
Weston
Reid, LLC v. American Ins. Group, Inc.
(2009)
B. Legal Analysis
To resolve this appeal, we must answer two related questions. First, must a hospital asserting a right under the Hospital Lien Act to a portion of judgment proceeds payable to an injured person treated by the hospital prove that its claimed charges were reasonable and necessary? Second, did the District meet its burden of proof in this case? As we shall explain, the answers to these questions are, respectively, yes and no.
We look first to the language of the Hospital Lien Act to determine what a hospital
must prove to enforce its lien rights, because a lien under the Act is statutory and thus
subject to definition and limitation by the Legislature. (
Parnell v. Adventist Health
System/West
(2005)
Together, the provisions of the Hospital Lien Act create "a statutory
nonpossessory lien" that "compensates a hospital for providing medical services to an
injured person by giving the hospital a direct right to a certain percentage of specific
property, i.e., a judgment, compromise, or settlement, otherwise accruing to that person."
(
Mercy Hospital & Medical Center v. Farmers Ins. Group of Companies
(1997) 15
Cal.4th 213, 217 (
Mercy Hospital
).) The Act expressly places two limitations on the
amount the hospital has a direct right to recover based on its lien: (1) the lien is limited
to "the amount of the reasonable and necessary charges of the hospital" for the services
*8
provided to the injured person on account of the third party's negligent or other wrongful
act; and (2) recovery on the lien is limited to 50 percent of the settlement or judgment
proceeds recovered by the injured person from the third party, after payment of prior
liens. (Civ. Code, §§ 3045.1, 3045.4;
Mercy Hospital
, at pp. 215-216;
Newton v.
Clemons
(2003)
We therefore must look to the default rules regarding burden of proof. "Except as
otherwise provided by statute," (1) "a party has the burden of proof as to each fact the
existence or nonexistence of which is essential to the claim for relief or defense that he is
asserting" (Evid. Code, § 500), and (2) "the burden of proof requires proof by a
preponderance of the evidence" (
id.
, § 115). Courts have applied these rules to claimants
in interpleader actions. (See, e.g.,
Division Labor Law Enfmt. v. Brooks
(1964) 226
Cal.App.2d 631, 633 [interpleaded funds "must be disposed of, but only to a claimant
who establishes his own affirmative right"];
Marine Indem. Ins. Co. v. Lockwood
Warehouse & Storage
(5th Cir. 1997)
We do not believe that imposing this burden on a hospital will, as the trial court
feared, impair the utility of the statutory lien remedy. The Hospital Lien Act "was
originally enacted in 1961 to allow hospitals to recoup losses suffered when a patient
'failed to discharge
any
portion of the hospital bill' even though that patient had 'collected
upon a cause of action against another.' " (
Parnell
,
supra
, 35 Cal.4th at pp. 603-604.) At
the same time, the Act was intended to "ensur[e] that the patient retained sufficient funds
to address other losses resulting from the tortious injury." (
Mercy Hospital
,
supra
, 15
Cal.4th at p. 217.) In balancing these competing interests, the Legislature limited the
amount of a hospital's lien on the settlement or judgment proceeds that a tortfeasor pays
an injured person to "the reasonable and necessary charges of the hospital" for treating
the injury (Civ. Code, § 3045.1) — the same amount of medical expenses the injured
person may recover as damages from the tortfeasor (see
Melone v. Sierra Railway Co.
*10
(1907)
Here, however, the District failed to sustain its burden of proof at trial. The only
evidence concerning the amount of its lien the District introduced was an authenticated
copy of Huff's hospital bill, which totaled $34,320.86, and related testimony that the bill
remains unpaid and was based on the District's standard charges for the services itemized
in the bill. But "the full amount billed by medical providers is not an accurate measure of
the value of medical services" (
Corenbaum v. Lampkin
(2013)
At trial, the District introduced no evidence the charges in Huff's hospital bill were
reasonable or were for necessary treatment attributable to the motor vehicle collision. To
be sure, the testimony of the District's former patient financial counselor that Huff told
her he was in an accident, the testimony of the attorney who represented Huff in his
negligence action against the Wilkinses that he introduced evidence of the expenses Huff
incurred at the District's hospital, and the judgment in that action awarding him past
medical expenses, constituted circumstantial evidence that Huff needed
some
medical
treatment as a result of the motor vehicle collision. But there was no testimony or other
evidence that any of the
specific
services itemized in Huff's bill were reasonably required
as a result of the collision. (See Civ. Code, § 3045.1 [limiting lien to amount of
"necessary" charges for treatment of person injured by tortfeasor];
McAllister
,
supra
, 73
Cal.App.3d at pp. 264, 264-265 [when "plaintiff introduced no medical testimony that the
dental work was reasonably required as a result of the battery," "no dental costs were
recoverable"].) The District also introduced no evidence of the reasonable value of any
of the services itemized in Huff's bill. (See Civ. Code, § 3045.1 [limiting lien to amount
*12
of "reasonable" charges for treatment of person injured by tortfeasor];
Guerra v.
Balestrieri
(1954)
In sum, we conclude the judgment must be reversed because the District did not
present sufficient evidence of the amount of its lien, as it was required to do to recover
under the Hospital Lien Act. We also conclude that because the District had a full and
fair opportunity at trial to prove it was entitled to the interpleaded funds but did not do so,
and because Huff's judgment against the Wilkinses shows he is entitled to those funds,
*13
Huff is entitled to judgment in his favor. (See
Cassista v. Community Foods, Inc.
(1993)
DISPOSITION
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded to the superior court with directions to enter judgment in favor of Huff. In the interests of justice, the parties are to bear their own costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(5).) IRION, J. WE CONCUR:
BENKE, Acting P. J.
O'ROURKE, J.
