Deocampo v. Ahn

125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 79, 101 Cal. App. 4th 758
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 30, 2002
DocketB147135
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 79 (Deocampo v. Ahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deocampo v. Ahn, 125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 79, 101 Cal. App. 4th 758 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*766 Opinion

CROSKEY, J.

In this suit for personal injury based on allegations of medical malpractice, plaintiff Joe Deocampo (plaintiff) appeals from an amended judgment. Defendants Richard S. Ahn, M.D. and Melvin Belafsky, M.D. (Ahn, Belafsky, collectively defendants) have cross-appealed from the same amended judgment. 1

The judgment was amended to include the court’s decisions on certain postjudgment matters, and it is these that are the subject of this appeal. They relate to (1) the proper calculation of the credit due to nonsettling defendants for a plaintiffs prior settlement with the settling defendants, (2) the payment of the plaintiffs attorney’s fees entirely out of the nonperiodized portion of the judgment, (3) the scope and extent of a plaintiffs right to prejudgment interest on the periodized portion of a judgment relating to future losses, (4) the proper analysis of a multiple plaintiffs’ statutory offer to compromise and the effectiveness of such offer when it is conditioned upon the accuracy of a defendant’s discovery representations regarding insurance coverage, (5) the impact of a settlement with some defendants on the calculation of prejudgment interest against the nonsettling defendants, and (6) the trial court’s discretionary authority over the manner in which the damages for a plaintiffs future losses are periodized.

Our resolution of these issues requires only an amendment to the judgment. We therefore will amend the judgment and, as so amended, affirm it.

Background of the Case

In October 1995, plaintiff filed this medical malpractice suit, alleging that the medical treatment he received after he sustained a heart attack was negligent, and such negligence caused him to become a paraplegic. The paralyzing injury occurred in July 1995. Estela Deocampo, plaintiffs wife, also sued, alleging damages for loss of consortium. Ahn and St. Joseph Medical Center were named and served as defendants.

*767 In April 1996, plaintiff and his wife (plaintiffs), served defendant Ahn with a Code of Civil Procedure section 998 offer to compromise. 2 The offer was not accepted. 3

In June of 1997, plaintiff and his wife entered into a $1.5 million settlement with St. Joseph Medical Center, the hospital where he was being treated when he sustained his paralyzing injuries. That same month the trial court determined the settlement was made in good faith. The settlement did not specifically apportion the $1.5 million between plaintiffs past and future damages, nor between his economic and noneconomic damages. Nor was the settlement apportioned between plaintiffs claims and those of his wife.

By an unpublished opinion filed on February 10, 2000, this court reversed a judgment that had been entered in favor of Ahn after a jury concluded that while his treatment of plaintiff had fallen below the standard of care, such treatment was not a cause of any injury to plaintiff. Our review of the evidence convinced us that the jury’s finding of no causation was not supported by substantial evidence, and therefore could not stand. 4 The evidence had established, to a reasonable medical probability, that had Ahn’s treatment of plaintiff not fallen below the standard of care, plaintiff would *768 have obtained a better result. Thus, we returned the case for a new trial on the limited issue of the damages to be paid by defendants. 5

Following remand, and in response to a preretrial motion filed by defendants concerning Civil Code section 1431.2’s provisions precluding joint liability among defendants for a plaintiffs noneconomic damages in personal injury, wrongful death and property damages cases, plaintiff and his wife stated that if such motion were granted, they would waive their pursuit of noneconomic damages. Despite their opposition, the motion was granted, and, on August 7, 2000, plaintiffs wife dismissed her portion of this suit, which had sought only noneconomic damages. Thereafter, plaintiff did not pursue any claim for noneconomic damages from defendants. 6

Upon retrial, the jury returned a special verdict on September 22, 2000, on the issues of past and future expenses, including medical expenses, and past and future lost wages. A judgment on the special verdict was signed and filed on October 18, 2000. 7

The parties then made a series of postjudgment motions. The motions relevant to this appeal were (1) Ahn’s motion to determine the validity of the section 998 offer to compromise which plaintiffs had made to him in April 1996; (2) defendants’ motion for (a) a section 877 setoff for plaintiffs pretrial settlement with St. Joseph Medical Center, 8 and (b) section 667.7 periodic payments of the jury’s award; (3) plaintiffs motion to fix prejudgment interest pursuant to Civil Code section 3291; 9 and (4) plaintiffs motion for section 667.7 periodic payments of the jury’s award.

*769 The trial court ruled with respect to these motions as follows: (1) plaintiffs section 998 offer of compromise on April 12, 1996, was valid and it was not accepted by Ahn; therefore, plaintiff was entitled to prejudgment interest from that date as provided in Civil Code section 3291; (2) the defendants were granted a setoff for the amount of plaintiff s settlement with St. Joseph Medical Center ($1.5 million) and such settlement was set off first against plaintiffs past economic damages and then against the prejudgment interest due to plaintiff; (3) the total amount of prejudgment interest was determined to be $1,745,211.17; this amount was calculated by determining the present value of the entire judgment ($4,968,175), computing interest at 10 percent from April 12, 1996 (the date of the section 998 offer), to June 20, 1997 (the date of the settlement with St. Joseph Medical Center), and adding that number ($590,736.48) to the interest due on the judgment (less the settlement amount), for the period from June 21, 1997, until October 18, 2000 ($1,154,474.69); (4) the portion of the judgment that reflected plaintiffs future economic damages would be periodized pursuant to section 667.7; the future medical damages found by the jury ($9,312,335) were to be paid in equal monthly installments for a total period of 336 months (the period of plaintiffs life expectancy) and the future lost earnings found by the jury ($650,900) were to be paid in equal monthly installments over a total period of 240 months (the estimated remaining work life of a 45-year-old man). 10

*770

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Bluebook (online)
125 Cal. Rptr. 2d 79, 101 Cal. App. 4th 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deocampo-v-ahn-calctapp-2002.