BURDETTE TOMLIN HOSP. v. Estate of Malone

845 A.2d 615, 368 N.J. Super. 66
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 10, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 845 A.2d 615 (BURDETTE TOMLIN HOSP. v. Estate of Malone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BURDETTE TOMLIN HOSP. v. Estate of Malone, 845 A.2d 615, 368 N.J. Super. 66 (N.J. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

845 A.2d 615 (2003)
368 N.J. Super. 66

BURDETTE TOMLIN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
ESTATE OF Mary R. MALONE, Estate of Thomas Malone, and John Malone, Defendants-Appellants.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted May 21, 2003.
Decided June 10, 2003.

*616 Chance & McCann, Bridgeton, for appellants (Tyler James Larsen, on the brief).

Gary Dinenberg, Northfield, for respondent.

Before Judges KING and WECKER.

KING, P.J.A.D.

This is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiff Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital (the Hospital) on a bill for unpaid medical expenses in the amount of $18,472.76. Medicare had originally been billed for these services in the amount of $5,659.72. Medicare refused to pay the Hospital's bill because defendant's Medicare life-time-care coverage had expired. See Vencor, Inc. v. Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co., 317 F.3d 629 (6th Cir.2003) (explaining limits of Medicare Part A coverage, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1395; 42 C.F.R. § 413). The Hospital then sought payment of more than triple the Medicare rate from the decedent-patient's estate. The Law Division judge granted the Hospital's motion for summary judgment in the amount of $18,472.76. We conclude that the judge erred and that the Hospital was only entitled to recover the Medicare rate from the estate, the sum of $5,659.72, in these particular circumstances.

The decedent, Mrs. Malone, was admitted as a Medicare patient "on numerous occasions prior to her receiving treatment that relates to this final bill." As noted, Medicare refused to pay the bill after Mrs. Malone died. The bill then was revised and she was sent a new statement for $18,472.76 "almost a year after her death."

Lynn Riley, the Hospital's credit supervisor, testified in discovery that if the $5,659.72 amount had been paid by Medicare, the bill would have been satisfied in full. William Zauner, Vice President of Finance, certified that the $18,472.76 charges finally billed to Mrs. Malone and the estate were "the usual and customary charges for the services involved" and "were fair and reasonable." The Hospital rejected the estate's offer to pay the Medicare bill as "full and final settlement" of the claim.

At argument on rehearing, counsel for the estate urged his position this way:

MR. MCCANN: I'm not sure if it was clear from the original argument presented that this lady was accepted on this particular occasion into the hospital as a Medicare/Medicaid patient. She's been in the hospital a number of times. That was the condition on which she was accepted into the hospital. They accepted her under the current [sic] conditions and expected to render a bill for whatever their usual and customary charges were.
*617 After some period of time, they determined—well, Medicare determined that she didn't have any more money that they would pay out, so the hospital tripled the bill. This is—there's no statutory scheme that gives them the right to do that. They don't have—they didn't come to Mrs. Malone and say, oh, Mrs. Malone, your Medicaid ran out. You have an option of moving out of the hospital now, but if you don't, I want you to know that the room is going from two hundred dollars a day to six hundred dollars a day, or something to that effect.
This woman was in the hospital for a number of days. They thought they were billing fifty-six hundred dollars. They billed fifty-six hundred dollars. They didn't get it. They must be thrilled to death that she ran out of payments—that she ran out of money through Medicaid. There is no conscionable way they can just take and triple the bill and say that's our usual customary fee. That's like someone coming into my office for a pro bono case and you say, oh, I now discover you got money, I'm going to charge you whatever I please.
There's no—nothing submitted on behalf of the plaintiff that says they have any right to do that. So my position is the usual and customary fee is what they anticipated they would be able to bill, not what they choose to bill after they find out that some provider is not paying. And I don't believe that was particularly and completely articulated in a prior argument.

In this particular circumstance, we agree with the estate's position. There is no evidence that the hospital alerted the decedent or her next-of-kin, her son John Malone, of any new billing practice or expectations if Mrs. Malone's Medicare benefits ran out before she died. The son's certification stated, in full:

1. I am the son of the deceased Mary Malone.

2. My mother received medical treatment at Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital at various times up and through December 5, 1999.

3. Her bills were all sent to medicaid.

4. No bills were ever sent to me or my mother and they were all handled in that fashion.
5. The last bill sent to medicaid requested payment in the amount of $5,659.72 as full and final payment for all services rendered to Mary Malone.
6. When medicaid denied said payment and advised that Mary Malone's medical benefits were exhausted, the hospital then billed the Estate and me individually the sum of $18,472.76 for the same services.
7. Through my attorney, I offered to pay the initial bill as full and final settlement of all claims Burdette Tomlin may have against the Estate of Mary Malone or myself. That request has been denied.

We are inclined to adopt the view of the federal courts in a similar case, Vencor, Inc. v. Standard Life and Accident Ins. Co., 65 F.Supp.2d 573 (W.D.Ky.1999), aff'd, 317 F.3d 629 (6th Cir.2003). In Vencor, the "Medigap" carrier, Standard Life, successfully made a similar argument to the contention advanced here by the estate, based on its contract language. The Sixth Circuit affirmed the District Court judge's ruling that Standard Life had to pay the unreimbursed amount only at "per diem rates allowed by Medicare, even after Medicare coverage ha[d] been exhausted," 317 F.3d at 631, not at the hospital's so-called "reasonable and customary rate" or "standard rates." *618 Judge Heyburn's language in his District Court opinion points to the problem precisely:

Allowing health care providers to charge any amount would create an apparent inconsistency. Such a ruling would expose many elderly or their estates to liability for the amount that the provider's rate exceeded the Medicare rate. Such a result runs counter to the whole purpose of supplemental Medicare insurance regulations. The goal of Medigap policies is to prevent the elderly from facing uncertain and possibly cost prohibitive medical expenses. If providers can charge any amount after the elderly exhaust Medicare benefits and supplemental insurers are not liable, this goal is thwarted and the implicit promise of Medigap policy is made illusory.
Legislation requiring Medigap insurers to write policies covering any amount charged by providers for eligible care could solve this problem. However, neither Congress nor the Tennessee state legislature has chosen to mandate this. One reason may be that to do so would cause the cost of supplemental insurance policies to increase dramatically, likely pricing many elderly out of the supplemental insurance market altogether.

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