Hassen Elmi v. Neuro-Ortho Associates

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 14, 2021
Docket2019 CA 000782
StatusUnknown

This text of Hassen Elmi v. Neuro-Ortho Associates (Hassen Elmi v. Neuro-Ortho Associates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hassen Elmi v. Neuro-Ortho Associates, (Ky. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

RENDERED: JANUARY 15, 2021; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2019-CA-0782-MR

HASSEN ELMI; ABDULAHI APPELLANTS HUSSEIN, A MINOR, BY HASSEN ELMI AS NATURAL FATHER AND NEXT FRIEND; FADUMO MOHAMED; HALIMO HUSSEIN; NADER GEORGE SHUNNARAH; RUWEDYN HUSSEIN; AND SOKOREY HUSSEIN

APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE OLU A. STEVENS, JUDGE ACTION NO. 17-CI-000385

NEURO-ORTHO ASSOCIATES APPELLEE

OPINION REVERSING AND REMANDING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; COMBS AND JONES, JUDGES.

COMBS, JUDGE: Nader George Shunnarah, a Louisville attorney, appeals a

judgment on the pleadings granted on May 1, 2019, by the Jefferson Circuit Court to Neuro-Ortho Associates (Neuro-Ortho). Shunnarah appeals the circuit court’s

award to Neuro-Ortho of its attorney’s fees in the amount of $13,500.00 and

interest on the judgment at 6% from April 9, 2015, through November 5, 2018.

After our review, we reverse and remand.

This matter is essentially a medical services billing dispute. However,

Neuro-Ortho’s decision to bring a civil action against its patients’ attorney has

complicated the matter.

Shunnarah represented Hassen Elmi, Fadumo Mohamed, Halimo

Hussein, Sokorey Hussein, Ruwedyn Hussein, and Abdulahi Hussein (referred to

collectively as “the insureds”) in a personal injury action against Asho Omar and

State Farm Fire and Casualty Insurance Company (“State Farm”). The action was

filed after a car driven by Omar on January 23, 2015, struck an apartment building

causing the insureds to suffer personal injuries.

Neuro-Ortho provided medical care and treatment to Hassen Elmi,

Halimo Hussein, and Sokorey Hussein from January 26 through April 9, 2015,

resulting in fees of $8,763.00; $7,100.00; and $7,130.00, respectively; to Fadumo

Mohamed from January 26 through April 21, 2015, resulting in a fee of $9,703.00;

and to Ruwedyn Hussein and Abdulahi Hussein from January 26, through April

23, 2015, resulting in fees of $5,075.00 and $5,215.00, respectively. Together, the

-2- medical bills totalled nearly $43,000.00. Neuro-Ortho submitted its billing

statements for the treatment of the insureds to State Farm for payment.

In mid-February 2015, Neuro-Ortho was made aware by State Farm

that payment for its services had been directed to the insureds’ attorney.

Consequently, State Farm made no payments to Neuro-Ortho for the medical care

and treatment provided to the insureds.

On July 6, 2016, Shunnarah filed a personal injury action against

Omar and State Farm on behalf of the insureds. Shortly thereafter, Neuro-Ortho

received correspondence from Shunnarah indicating that the insureds were

challenging Neuro-Ortho’s billing statements. Shunnarah explained that the care

and treatment provided by Neuro-Ortho “may not have been medically necessary”

and may have been provided “in violation of chiropractic standards.” Shunnarah

indicated that the “procedure you follow having a potential criminal [sic] make the

referral to your company through an attorney, picking upon the patients,

recommending treatment to exhaust the PIP coverage is in question.” He

explained that other medical providers needed to be paid, and Elmi had lost wages

which had to come from the no-fault coverage as well. Finally, Shunnarah

indicated that he would “mostly likely” depose the medical providers so that they

could “explain these issues.”

-3- Neuro-Ortho responded immediately. It rejected Shunnarah’s

insinuations and stated that it was not “interested in collecting anything on these

cases, if criminal nexus is established between the attorney that referred these cases

to us, his referral source, and ultimately your procurement of these clients.” A

series of unpleasant exchanges continued, and in correspondence dated July 12,

2016, Shunnarah indicated to Neuro-Ortho that he could no longer engage in

verbal communication. The insureds’ claims against Omar and State Farm were

settled.

In October 2016, Neuro-Ortho corresponded again with Shunnarah

“welcom[ing] any contact you may want to establish to negotiate balances without

disparaging our practice. . . .” Neuro-Ortho requested that Shunnarah release to it

the non-fault benefits received from State Farm for the insureds’ benefit or explain

the basis upon which they were being withheld.

In November 2016, Neuro-Ortho’s counsel corresponded with

Shunnarah warning that if payment were not forthcoming, it would pursue a debt

collection action against the insureds. Shunnarah responded days later. He

explained that State Farm had provided to him “a statement Neural(sic)-Ortho

overcharged my client over $12,000.00 dollars.” Records indicate that State Farm

declined to reimburse the insureds for approximately $13,400.00 in medical bills

submitted by Neuro-Ortho on various grounds, including: nonspecific coding

-4- entries; submission of duplicate coded entries; and entries for services provided

where the treating physician had reduced or eliminated the need for the care or

treatment. As a result, Shunnarah intended to “submit his bills and medical records

for peer review.” He anticipated having a response in 60 to 90 days.

When the medical bills were not paid by January 23, 2017, Neuro-

Ortho filed the civil action underlying this appeal against Shunnarah and State

Farm. It did not file a collections action against the insureds.

In its complaint, Neuro-Ortho provided an account of each patient’s

medical bills and alleged that Shunnarah had converted the insureds’ no-fault

benefits received from State Farm to his own use. It also alleged that Shunnarah

had committed fraud and misrepresentation by assuring State Farm that payment

would be made for the medical care and treatment afforded the insureds; by

assigning the insureds’ no-fault benefits to himself with no intention of paying

their medical bills; and by using his position as a lawyer to direct State Farm to

send the insureds’ no-fault benefits to himself. Neuro-Ortho alleged that despite its

legal obligation to pay no-fault benefits to the care providers, State Farm had

negligently made the benefits payable to Shunnarah, who wrongfully withheld

them.

Sunnarah answered the complaint. In his answer, Sunnarah explained

that State Farm had paid approximately $30,000.00 (actually $32,562.19) in basic

-5- reparation benefits based upon the medical bills submitted by Neuro-Ortho

(totaling $42,986.00) and that Neuro-Ortho had “refused to accept payment for the

amount that State Farm provided.” Sunnarah filed a counterclaim alleging that

Neuro-Ortho had attempted to extort money from him by threatening to file a

complaint against him with the Kentucky Bar Association; attempted to practice a

theft by deception by trying to collect the outstanding medical bills; engaged in

insurance fraud and wrongful use of civil proceedings; and negligently breached its

duty of good faith and fair dealing with respect to his clients.

Based upon State Farm’s payout of the disputed no-fault benefits,

State Farm was dismissed from the action by way of an agreed order filed on June

22, 2017. Neuro-Ortho filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings.

The insureds filed a motion to intervene. In their 50-page complaint,

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