Thomas CARTER and Colleen Carter, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. UNITED STATES of America, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 92-1940.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued Nov. 30, 1992. Decided Dec. 29, 1992.
1141
AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part and REMANDED.
Barry D. Rooth, Theodoros, Theodoros & Rooth, Merrillville, IN, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Before COFFEY and EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judges, and LAY, Senior Circuit Judge.*
EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.
Indiana has set limits on damages in cases of medical malpractice. A person injured by poor medical care may not recover more than $100,000 from a health care provider that has established its financial responsibility and paid an annual fee; the victim may recover an additional sum from the pool funded by these fees.
Thomas Carter had a 10% disability rating as a result of a wound during his tour of duty in Vietnam. In search of relief from pain this injury continued to cause him, Carter underwent an operation during December 1987 in one of the Veterans’ Administration‘s hospitals in Indiana. Things got worse. Today the Department of Veterans’ Affairs considers Carter 100% disabled and has increased his benefits accordingly. After making the necessary administrative claim, Carter and his wife filed this suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act, contending that negligence by the VA‘s physicians, rather than the risks inherent in all surgical procedures, is to blame for the unhappy outcome. After determining that the present value of the payment stream attributable to the difference between 10% and 100% disability exceeds $500,000, the United States asked the district judge to dismiss the action. First the district court decided that the United States is not liable to pay more than $500,000 even though it is not a “qualified provider” under Indiana law. 768 F.Supp. 670 (N.D.Ind.1991). Later the court dismissed the suit outright, finding that the Carters could not recover a positive amount because the value of the veterans’ benefits must be subtracted from the maximum exposure rather than from the total harm caused by the injury. 785 F.Supp. 797 (1992).
Indiana limits recoverable damages only if the defendant is a “qualified provider” of medical care, which entails furnishing proof of financial responsibility plus chipping in to the pool. The United States is not a “qualified provider.” The charge used to finance the pool is a tax, from which the national government is immune. Because it will never be called on to make a payment on behalf of the United States, Indiana did not request the federal government to make voluntary contributions to the fund. The VA also did not use any of the three devices to establish “financial responsibility“: filing proof that it is insured at a specified level, posting a bond, or providing a financial statement showing to the satisfaction of state officers that the entity can pay judgments entered against it.
Whether the United States is itself a “qualified provider” is not, however, the question posed by the Federal Tort Claims Act. “The United States shall be liable ... in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances“.
“Like circumstances“—not “identical circumstances.” The national government is never situated identically to private parties. Our task is to find a fitting analog under private law. Thus the United States may be liable for negligence in carrying out acts that no private person performs, because there are “like” circumstances that lead to private liability. Indian Towing Co. v. United States, 350 U.S. 61, 76 S.Ct. 122, 100 L.Ed. 48 (1955) (operation of a lighthouse). This gate swings both ways. The United States receives the benefit of rules ordinarily applicable to private persons, even though some private defendants (in Indiana, those who neglect to establish their financial responsibility and pay the surcharge for the pool) may be treated differently. We therefore agree with Owen v. United States, 935 F.2d 734 (5th Cir.1991), and Lozada v. United States, 974 F.2d 986 (8th Cir.1992), which hold that limitations on private liability under similar statutes apply to the United States. It follows, as the district judge held, that the cap for the United States must be derived from the victim‘s maximum entitlement rather than the $100,000 that a private tortfeasor pays. Private providers of medical care pay $100,000 directly and another $400,000 (today, $650,000) indirectly through compulsory public insurance. Having saved the expense of contributing to the state‘s pool, the United States must pay the whole amount in order to come as close as possible to the treatment of “a private person under like circumstances“.
Plaintiffs concede that the additional benefits the United States is paying because of Carter‘s iatrogenic injury should be deducted from their recovery in tort. They contend, however, that the court should offset damages and benefits before applying the statutory cap. Assume that the Carters can establish injury of $1.5 million and that the present value of the incremental benefits is $600,000. Using the plaintiffs’ methodology, the court would start with the $1.5 million, subtract the value of the benefits, and apply the cap to the resulting $900,000. That implies an award of $500,000 in the FTCA action. Using the VA‘s methodology, the court would start with a maximum exposure of $500,000 and subtract the $600,000 value of the benefits. The difference, a negative $100,000, would not require the victim to pay anything to the United States; it simply means that the suit must be dismissed. If, however, the benefits’ value were only $400,000, the case must go to trial, because they would not exhaust the cap. The district judge concluded that Indiana uses the VA‘s suggested approach of deducting the payments from the cap rather than from the actual injury. Because the Carters accept the VA‘s submission that the present value of the incremental benefits exceeds $500,000, the judge dismissed the action.
Fundamentally, the question is: who receives the benefit of “advance payments“? If the court deducts the payments before applying the cap, then their full value goes to the victim, who receives his full damages (subject to the cap) plus all “advance payments.” If the court deducts the payments after applying the cap, then their full value goes to the defendant. Indiana law speaks directly to this question:
Evidence of an advance payment is not admissible until there is a final judgment in favor of the plaintiff, in which event the court shall reduce the judgment of the plaintiff to the extent of the advance payment. The advance payment shall inure to the exclusive benefit of the defendant or his insurer making the payment.
Ind.Code § 16-9.5-2-4 .
If victims received the benefit of the advance payments, the maximum liability would be exceeded, and injurers would have little reason to make voluntary payments. Because the judicial process takes a long time to resolve tort litigation, interim payments are on the whole highly beneficial to victims. Injurers that can recoup the value of these payments are more likely to make them.
Although the Carters protest that letting the United States keep the benefit of veterans’ benefits is inconsistent with
Readers of this opinion should guard against the conclusion that we have passed on the question whether the projected value of ongoing veterans’ benefits is an “advance” payment for purposes of Indiana‘s law. Today‘s value of tomorrow‘s benefits is a prophesy, not a fact. Congress could change the law, reducing or even eliminating the payments the Carters now receive month by month. Or the Carters might renounce receipt of these benefits.
AFFIRMED.
LAY, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I must respectfully dissent.
Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, the statutory requirement is that “the United States shall be liable ... in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances.”
Assuming the United States, under Indiana law, comes “as close as possible” to a “qualified provider,” a proposition which in itself I find to be extremely dubious,1 there exists an even more compelling
The issue here, however, is whether the plaintiffs must deduct the disability benefits from the overall damages or whether the plaintiffs are required to deduct those benefits from the “judgment” (with the artificial cap of $500,000) as an “advance payment” under Indiana law. In my opinion, the former approach is required. Federal law does not require a pro tanto deduction to be made from the $500,000 cap; more importantly, Indiana law does not require a private party, in like circumstances, to make a pro tanto deduction from the $500,000 cap. Under the FTCA, the government should be treated the same as a private party in like circumstances. Thus, if plaintiffs recover $900,000 and the disability payments are $300,000, the cap, if applicable, should be applied to the remaining $600,000.
I would agree the deduction must come from the artificial cap of $500,000 if VA disability benefits were advance payments or even analogous to advance payments received by a private party under Indiana law. The statute clearly says the “judgment” shall be reduced to the extent of the advance payment.
Under Indiana law, disability benefits received by a plaintiff are deemed a collateral source not otherwise admissible into evidence.2 The record demonstrates, as the district court found, that the disability benefits received by the Carters do not depend on the United States’ liability to them. However, an advance payment under the Indiana Act protects only those private parties who have paid against their tort liability. This is demonstrated by the plain
Under Chapter 34, the disability payments are considered collateral source payments, which are not admissible as evidence. See
In the present case, it is federal law, not Indiana law, that requires plaintiffs to offset their disability payments against the total damages incurred. See Brooks v. United States, 337 U.S. 49, 69 S.Ct. 918, 93 L.Ed. 1200 (1949). The FTCA requires us to look at how private parties are treated in like circumstances. Here, the Carters are in like circumstances to a private party in Indiana who is not required to offset his pension as an advance payment under
EASTERBROOK
CIRCUIT JUDGE
