Dillione v. Deborah Hospital
This text of 274 A.2d 597 (Dillione v. Deborah Hospital) 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.
Opinion
ALFRED DILLIONE, PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,
v.
DEBORAH HOSPITAL, THE TRAVELERS INSURANCE COMPANY, AND HOSPITAL SERVICE PLAN OF NEW JERSEY, DEFENDANTS-RESPONDENTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*550 Before Judges CONFORD, KOLOVSKY and CARTON.
Mr. John W. Devine argued the cause for appellant (Messrs. Pellettieri and Rabstein, attorneys).
*551 Mr. George H. Hohweiler argued the cause for defendant Deborah Hospital (Messrs. Orlando & Orlando, attorneys).
Mr. Martin P. Devlin, Jr. argued the cause for defendant The Travelers Insurance Company (Messrs. Lenox, Giordano, Devlin & Barlow, attorneys).
The opinion of the court was delivered by CONFORD, P.J.A.D.
Plaintiff had open-heart surgery and attendant hospitalization at the defendant Deborah Hospital in Browns Mills from October 9, 1967 to November 11, 1967. Through his employer he was covered for certain medical benefits on a group policy issued by defendant The Travelers Insurance Company. He was also a subscriber for "Blue-Cross" hospitalization benefits with the defendant Hospital Service Plan of New Jersey.
Plaintiff sued all three defendants on theories which, as to Travelers and Deborah, will be explained below. They, as well as Hospital Service, were granted summary judgment in the Law Division, but plaintiff appeals only as to the first two defendants mentioned.
Plaintiff's action against Travelers is based upon the group policy aforementioned. The company at one time paid Deborah $2,523.60 for hospital services rendered plaintiff, but later demanded and received the money back from Deborah on the representation that its policy did not cover plaintiff's treatment at that institution. The position of Travelers was that its policy excluded coverage for these services by reason of a provision therein reading:
"Exclusions * * *
4. In no event will the employee's benefit be payable * * * (d) for any confinements, treatments, services or supplies * * * for which the employee incurred no expense."
It is Travelers' contention that plaintiff "incurred no expense" in connection with his stay and treatment at the hospital as he paid nothing therefor and the hospital is *552 asserting no claim against him in connection therewith. The trial court found this position to be well taken.
Plaintiff's claim against Deborah is based on the assertion that it wrongfully returned to Travelers the $2,523.60 which that company had paid the hospital as aforesaid and also that the hospital has been "overpaid."
The factual picture emerging from the pleadings, pre-trial contentions, affidavits on the motions for judgment and data supplied this court on and after oral argument at our request leaves some factual uncertainty. We have concluded that this is at least in part, legally material to the question of the liability of Travelers and precludes sustaining summary judgment in favor of that defendant.
Before plaintiff was admitted to the hospital, Deborah's administrator wrote to the medical director of the New Jersey Rehabilitation Commission on September 9, 1967 enclosing medical data on plaintiff's case, stressing the importance of treating him "as soon as possible," and requesting notification whether "this application is acceptable under the Rehabilitation Program." As the Commission ultimately did make substantial payments to Deborah in relation to this case, it is inferable that the letter related to a request that the Commission agree to defray either in whole or in part the expense of plaintiff's anticipated treatment as a "vocational rehabilitation service" pursuant to the Commission's statutory authority under N.J.S.A. 34:16-27. We are informed that the Commission verbally assented to the application before the plaintiff entered the hospital. The precise extent of the obligation assumed, however, is not known to us (and is not reflected by the record). The Commission is not a party to this appeal.
When plaintiff entered the hospital he signed a writing reading as follows:
ASSIGNMENT OF INSURANCE BENEFITS: I hereby authorize payment directly to Deborah Hospital of the Hospital Benefits herein specified and otherwise payable to me but not to exceed the hospital's regular charges for this period of hospitalization. I understand *553 I am financially responsible to the hospital for charges not covered by this assignment.
There was apparently no specification of the particular "hospital benefits" on the writing, but no one contends that any proceeds payable under the Travelers' policy were not intended to be included. Whether this was a standard form or a writing specifically prepared to cover this plaintiff's relationship with the hospital is not known. There is no affidavit by plaintiff in the record.
An affidavit by Deborah's administrator states that its charge for plaintiff's hospitalization (apparently not inclusive of physicians' charges) was $2,767 its "standard charge" for such services. Bills for that amount were rendered both to Hospital Service and to Travelers. Hospital Service paid the hospital $660, the limit of its subscription liability, on November 27, 1967. Travelers paid it $2,523.60 on December 8, 1967. In January 1968 Travelers informed Deborah that its payment had been made in error because the policy "did not provide coverage" in the matter. On September 13, 1968 Travelers wrote the hospital stating that effective July 1, 1968 it would "consider for reimbursement, under our policy coverages, the charges made by Deborah Hospital for medical and surgical treatment provided such charges are not made because of the existence of insurance coverage * * * We have advised our offices of the recognition of your hospital. * * *." On September 20, 1968 Deborah returned to Travelers the $2,523.60 aforesaid and the amount of two other "erroneous payments" theretofore made to it by Travelers in other cases.
Deborah's statement of factual and legal contentions filed in the cause states that its total "hospital charges" were $2,767 and its total "doctors' charges" were $2,575. It received from the Rehabilitation Commission a total of $4,085, but how this was intended to be applied as between hospital and doctors' charges is not specified. The hospital asserts that, crediting plaintiff's account for all moneys received *554 from Hospital Service and the Rehabilitation Commission, a balance is due it on account of hospital and doctors' charges of $597. It asserts no claim therefor against plaintiff, but avers that if any recovery is allowed plaintiff against it in this action it should be allowed a set-off of that sum.
The central issue argued below and on this appeal is whether Travelers is liable to plaintiff for the amount of the hospital charges. That depends on the construction of the policy exclusion: "services" etc., "for which the employee incurred no expense." We need not cite the many cases which hold that an insurance policy must be read to afford the insured that coverage which the average purchaser would fairly expect from an ordinary reading of the language of the contract. Moreover, exclusionary clauses are strictly construed against the insurer if doubtful or ambiguous in meaning. See Hunt v. Hospital Service Plan of N.J., 33 N.J. 98, 102 (1960).
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274 A.2d 597, 113 N.J. Super. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillione-v-deborah-hospital-njsuperctappdiv-1971.