Hospital Service Corp. v. Pennsylvania Insurance

227 A.2d 105, 101 R.I. 708, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 825
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 3, 1967
Docket33
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 227 A.2d 105 (Hospital Service Corp. v. Pennsylvania Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hospital Service Corp. v. Pennsylvania Insurance, 227 A.2d 105, 101 R.I. 708, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 825 (R.I. 1967).

Opinion

*710 Kelleher, J.

This action has been certified to' us by the .superior court pursuant to the provisions of G. L. I960, §9-24-27, as amended, after it had concluded that a question of “doubt and importance” existed which so affected, the merits of the controversy that it ought to be determined by this court before any further proceeding® were taken. At issue is the validity of a certain portion of an agreement entered into by the plaintiff Hospital Service Corporation of Rhode Island, better known and hereinafter referred to as Blue Cross, and the defendant Mary Oherlin, hereinafter referred to as the subscriber.

Blue Cross is a nonprofit corporation organized under the pertinent provisions of G. L. 1956, chap. 19 of title 27. By statute, its purpose is to provide to. its subscribers a plan of specific hospital care which has been formulated between Blue ’Cross and certain hospitals. The subscriber to this plan entered into an agreement with Blue Gross. Part VI (h) thereof reads as follows:

. “In the event any hospital service or benefit is provided for, or any payment is made or credit extended to, a subscriber under this agreement, the Corporation shall be subrogated and shall succeed to the subscriber’s right of recovery therefor against any person or .organization, except insurers on policies of insurance issued to and in the name of 'the subscriber. The subscriber .shall pay over to the Corporation all sums recovered by suit, settlement o,r otherwise, on account of such hospital service or benefit. The subscriber shall take such action, furnish such information and assistance, and execute such assignments -and other instruments as the Corporation may require to- facilitate enforcement of its rights hereunder, and shall take no action prejudicing the rights and interests of the Corporation hereunder.”

*711 In 1963 the subscriber was injured as the result of the •negligence of one Mary MoGonniok and was hospitalized for some time whereby she incurred a hospital bill in the amount of $605. Blue Cross, thereupon in compliance with its contract, paid the hospital ithe sum of $521.50 and then notified the alleged tort-feasor and her insurer of this payment and of its subrogation right under the subscription contract. Thereafter the tort-feasor and her insurer entered into a settlement with the subscriber of all her claims whereby the subscriber received a sum of money in excess of the entire 'hospital bill. Its demand for the reimbursement of money it paid to the hospital not being honored by its subscriber, the tort-feasor or her insurer, Blue Cross commenced this action joining all three as defendants.

Based upon these facts the superior court certified the following question© for our determination:

“1. Is the Hospital Service Corporation of Rhode Island to the extent it has paid out funds in payment of a claim made under its hospitalization contract and arising out of the action of a tortfeasor subrogated in equity .or at law to the right of recovery of a subscriber of its hospitalization contract against said tortfeasor?
“2. Must a tortfeasor and his insurance company, after notice of the provisions of the Hospital Service Corporation of Rhode Island contract concerning subrogation and payments made thereunder, recognize ©aid right of subrogation and will either or both of them be liable to the Hospital Service Corporation of Rhode Island if payment -in settlement of the tort claim is made by either of them after such notice to the injured party without a release of said subrogation rights?
“3. Does the Hospital Service Corporation of Rhode Island have a right of action in contract or otherwise •against its subscriber for sums paid out under its hospitalization contract on subscriber’s behalf as set forth in the Bill of Complaint and, if so, to what proportion of the settlement amount?”

*712 In urging an affirmative reply to- the questions, plaintiff contends the provisions of Part VI (h) of the subscription agreement entitle it to subrogation rights against defendant tort-feasor and her insurer. All the defendants, however, argue emphatically that this1 portion of the agreement is unenforceable because it not only permits a purported assignment of a -claim for personal injuries but, if approved, would allow a cause in action to be split. The defendant insurer further alleges that- even if this provision of the agreement is uph-el-d a© the creation of a right of s-ubroga-tio-n, it cannot be bound as it is not a party to the agreement which gives this- right.

It is well settled and conceded by all the parties- hereto-that the -common law forbids the -assignment of one’s cause of action -to -recover for personal injuries. In 1909 this- court set -forth this -precept in Tyler v. Superior Court, 30 R. I. 107. The court’s action was primarily based on the grounds of -public -policy so- that evils of champerty and maintenance would be avoided. It was pointed out that to hold otherwise would permit the pernicious and somewhat profitable practice of allowing -a person to -purchase these claims with the consequent 'harrassment and annoyance o-f others. What we ©aid then is equally applicable today. However, we believe that Part VI (h) of the contract is a provision calling for subrogation. It differs from an assignment o-f a tort -claim in several respects -and should be given effect for the purposes for which it was included -in this agreement.

Subrogation 'is- -either “legal” or “conventional.” Legal .subrogation has -its source -in equity and arises by operation o-f the law. 83 C.J.S., Subrogation, §3, p. 583. Conventional suib-rogation arises by acts of the parties- and re-si© on contract. 83 C.J.S., -Subrogation, §4, p. 586. The plaintiff relies u-p-o-n both -species o-f this doctrine-. It .points to Part VI (h) of -the subscription agreement as being an example of conventional subrogation .and further states as¡ a matter of law it is entitled to- -invoke the doctrine o-f legal subrogation. *713 We, ¡however, will go no further than to declare that plaintiff can (be granted relief based on the specific .provision of the contract.

In their contention that the disputed portion of the instant agreement is an assignment of a personal injury claim, defendants fail to distinguish the differences' which exist between assignment and “conventional” subrogation. Though both are voluntary transfers, ’an assignment is a transfer of a much more specific nature than is subrogation. Assignment involves dangers of champerty and maintenance. Subrogation .does not. Assignment generally involves some (Consideration moving from the1 assignee to the assignor. In subrogation the consideration (here being the .change made to the subscriber) moves in the opposite direction. It goes from the sulbrogor to the subrogee. An assignment is made after a loss .to a volunteer who was under no obligation to the assignor. Here Blue Gross assumed a liability which matured into a cause of action against it whenever the loss occurs and is not asserting a right, derived from an attempted assignment after the mishap. City of New York Ins. Co. v. Tice, 159 Kan.

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Bluebook (online)
227 A.2d 105, 101 R.I. 708, 1967 R.I. LEXIS 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hospital-service-corp-v-pennsylvania-insurance-ri-1967.