Accident & Injury Medical Specialists, P.C. v. Mintz

2012 CO 50, 279 P.3d 658, 2012 WL 2393080, 2012 Colo. LEXIS 461
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 25, 2012
DocketNo. 11SC210
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 2012 CO 50 (Accident & Injury Medical Specialists, P.C. v. Mintz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Accident & Injury Medical Specialists, P.C. v. Mintz, 2012 CO 50, 279 P.3d 658, 2012 WL 2393080, 2012 Colo. LEXIS 461 (Colo. 2012).

Opinion

Justice HOBBS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

1 We granted certiorari in Mintz v. Accident & Injury Medical Specialists, PC, - P.3d --, 2010 WL 4492222 (Colo.App.2010) (selected for official publication) to determine, "Whether an attorney owes fiduciary duties to third parties who are entitled to funds from Colorado Lawyer Trust Account Foundation (COLTAF) trust accounts." The court of appeals reversed a judgment of the trial court and held that an attorney did not owe fiduciary duties to a group of medical service providers 1 who were owed funds held in the attorney's COLTAF account.

2 The Providers and the attorney, David J. Mintz, had an extensive and often contentious personal and business relationship over several years. Typically, Mintz would refer an uninsured victim of a motor vehicle accident to the Providers for medical services, paying himself and his clients' medical costs out of proceeds he secured after negotiating insurance settlements for the clients. The relationship turned sour due to a dispute about costs of a joint advertising arrangement, and, for reasons disputed by the parties, Mintz began withholding funds owed to the Providers for his clients' medical costs. Mintz eventually initiated an interpleader action for the withheld funds, naming as defendants his clients and the Providers. The Providers answered with several counterclaims, including breach of fiduciary duty.

[660]*660T8 The trial court bifurcated the action and first determined that the Providers were entitled to the specific amount withheld in Mintz's COLTAF account but no more. In the second trial, the trial court found for the Providers on their abuse of process and breach of fiduciary duty counterclaims. The court of appeals reversed the trial court's holdings for the Providers in the second trial.

T 4 We agree with the court of appeals and affirm its judgment. We hold that the Providers may not maintain a breach of fiduciary duty tort action against Mintz based on his obligations as trustee of his COLTAF account. The attorney-client relationship creates fiduciary obligations with corresponding liabilities on the part of the attorney to the client, not to third parties such as the medical providers in this case. Although Mintz may have had ethical or contractual obligations to disburse money that clients owed to the Providers out of insurance settlement proceeds placed into his COLTAF account, Mintz did not owe the Providers the duties of a fiduciary that give rise to tort lability.

I.

115 This case concerns settlement proceeds recovered by personal injury attorney David J. Mintz on behalf of thirty-seven motor vehicle accident victims without health insurance. After these clients contacted Mintz for help recovering for their injuries, he referred them to the Providers. There, his clients' injuries were treated by one or more medical service entities located under one roof and primarily owned by a medical management company controlled by two individuals.2 Although the details are disputed, Mintz and the Providers had a pre-existing arrangement whereby the Providers would pay Mintz a fee, Mintz would use the money to buy advertising space for his law firm in a publication owned by his wife called The Lawyer Conmection, and he would refer injured clients who called the listed phone number, 1-800-4INJURY, to the Providers' medical offices for treatment.

T6 The Providers often treated Mintz's clients on a lien basis. The client and Mintz would sign a "doctor's lien" form, granting the Providers a lien against any insurance settlement that Mintz would recover for the client. The dispute in this case concerns money owed to the Providers by clients treated under such a lien arrangement.

" 7 One of the disputes between the parties began in 2008. At the eventual trial, Mintz asserted that the Providers had not paid him enough under the advertising agreement. The Providers asserted that Mintz demanded extra referral fees for clients he referred to the Providers outside of The Lawyer Connection advertising. The Providers eventually paid Mintz $41,000 to resolve the issue. However, according to the Providers, Mintz continued to demand additional fees for referrals. According to Mintz, the $41,000 only covered past overdue fees and the Providers owed additional amounts for ongoing advertising.

18 Despite this dispute, the two parties continued to work together for mutual benefit: the joint marketing arrangement was revised and renewed, Mintz continued to send clients to the Providers for treatment, and the parties jointly purchased a building to house both Mintz's law office and the various medical provider offices.

T9 Mintz began withholding a portion of his clients' settlement proceeds from the Providers in 2003. From 2008 to 2004, Mintz continued to negotiate with insurance compa[661]*661nies on behalf of his clients, using his clients' medical bills as documented costs of treatment. However, after settling with insurance companies and receiving authorization from his clients to pay the clients' medical bills, Mintz retained the money in his COL-TAF account.3 According to Mintz, he had concerns about the Providers' billing practices and thought his clients may be getting "scammed." After he informed the clients that he was investigating the Providers, many clients approved his continued withholding of funds. Some, however, did not. One filed a disciplinary action against him.4 According to the Providers, Mintz withheld funds because he wanted more money for referrals, and the billing dispute was a pretext to avoid liability.

T10 Mintz eventually hired a lawyer to represent the clients and filed an interpleader action with the Jefferson County District Court in 2005, placing $130,186.79 into the registry of the court. The total was the amount withheld from the Providers by Mintz in his COLTAF accounts under his clients' names. Mintz named as defendants the clients and the nine Providers and asserted that he was concerned about the potential for conflicting claims to the money. He alleged in his complaint that the liens were unenforceable, the Providers had overcharged clients for treatments, and the Providers had engaged in unnecessary and excessive treatments.

T11 In response, the Providers asserted crossclaims against the thirty-seven clients for failing to pay medical bills and counterclaims against Mintz, alleging that Mintz acted as a fiduciary of the Providers with respect to the funds held in his COLTAF account and breached his fiduciary duties by withholding the money.

T12 The trial court bifurcated the case. After the first bench trial, in late 2007, the court found serious improprieties on both sides. The court found that the lien forms guaranteeing the Providers a share of settlement proceeds were invalid and unenforceable,5 but determined the Providers were owed the interpled $180,186.79 as quantum meruit for medical services provided to the clients. However, the court refused to award the Providers amounts they claimed and billed above the $130,186.79 "based on the fact that ... there is some serious doubt about the accuracy of the amounts that [were] billed." The interpled funds were ordered disbursed to the Providers' law firm from Mintz's COLTAF account.

{13 The second bench trial was held in early 2008 on the Providers' counterclaims against Mintz.

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Bluebook (online)
2012 CO 50, 279 P.3d 658, 2012 WL 2393080, 2012 Colo. LEXIS 461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/accident-injury-medical-specialists-pc-v-mintz-colo-2012.