Houghton v. Department of Health

962 P.2d 58, 347 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 1998 Utah LEXIS 61, 1998 WL 397343
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1998
Docket960349
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 962 P.2d 58 (Houghton v. Department of Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houghton v. Department of Health, 962 P.2d 58, 347 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 1998 Utah LEXIS 61, 1998 WL 397343 (Utah 1998).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice.

The plaintiffs appeal the trial court’s order disqualifying their attorneys, Robert B. Sykes, James D. Vilos, and Matthew H. Raty, and the law firm of Sykes and Vilos, P.C. (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Sykes and Vilos”), on the ground that they had a conflict of interest. The complaint challenged the State’s authority to impose Medicaid liens on damages for personal injuries that Medicaid recipients recovered in lawsuits they brought against third parties. The trial court held that Sykes and Vilos had a conflict of interest under Rule 1.9 of the Utah Rules of Professional Conduct by their representation of the plaintiffs against the State. The court ruled Sykes and Vilos had a conflict of interest because they had previously represented the defendant, the State, in prior personal injury actions brought by Medicaid recipients against third persons, in which Sykes and Vilos agreed to preserve the State’s statutory Medicaid reimbursement liens against recoveries obtained on behalf of the Medicaid recipients.

I. THE TRIAL COURT’S DISQUALIFICATION OF SYKES AND VILOS AND THE PLAINTIFFS’ APPEAL

The plaintiffs are recipients of Medicaid assistance. Their complaint against the State (and various state agencies and officials) challenges the legality of liens imposed by Utah Code Ann. § 26-19-5 (1997), on funds they obtained in prior personal injury actions against third persons. The plaintiffs alleged only one claim, that § 26-19-5, on its face, violates federal Medicaid law. The complaint raises no issue of fact, and it does not attack any particular Medicaid reimbursement lien as applied in a particular ease.

Prior to undertaking the representation of the plaintiffs in this ease, Sykes and Vilos represented a number of Medicaid recipients in tort actions against third parties for personal injuries suffered by those recipients. In those lawsuits, Sykes and Vilos complied *60 with Utah Code Ann. § 26-19-7(l)(a), which states that “[a] recipient may not file a claim, commence an action, or settle, compromise, release, or waive a claim against a third party for recovery of medical costs for an injury, disease, or disability for which the department has provided or has become obligated to provide medical assistance without the department’s written consent.”

Pursuant to this provision, Sykes and Vilos were required to enter into written agreements with the State’s Office of Recovery Services (“ORS”) to protect the State’s interest in obtaining reimbursement from damages awarded against third party defendants and in favor of a plaintiff who had received medicaid payments. Utah Code Ann. § 26-19-7(3) (1997) states: “The department’s written consent ... shall state under what terms the interests of the department may be represented in an action commenced by the recipient.” Those agreements, in pertinent part, provided:

ORS ... is charged with enforcing the statutory priority lien granted pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 26-19-5. Attorney is representing the recipient in the incident described above to recover damages of the recipient and is desirous of representing ORS in its claim for recovery of medical expenses in the same incident.
Wherefore, in consideration of the mutual promises of the parties it is agreed that:
1. Attorney and Recipient acknowledge the State’s Medicaid lien and its direct right of recovery against any liable third party for the total medical expenses paid or to be paid on behalf of the Recipient, as defined in the Utah Code Ann. § 26-19-5(1)
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5. Attorney agrees to zealously represent the interests of the State, acknowledge an attorney/client relationship with ORS, and agrees to keep ORS informed of the progress of the case....
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9. ORS will assist Attorney with medical information reports in its files and will at all times cooperate in the best mutual interest of Recipient and ORS.

Notwithstanding the language implying a voluntary contractual relationship between Sykes and Vilos and ORS, Sykes and Vilos were legally obligated under § 26-19-7(3) to sign the agreements if they wished to represent Medicaid recipients in actions against third parties.

After the plaintiffs commenced this lawsuit, the State moved for the disqualification of Sykes and Vilos on the ground that Sykes and Vilos’s representation of plaintiffs against the State resulted in a conflict of interest prohibited by Utah R. Prof. Conduct 1.9. The State asserted that Sykes and Vilos’s representation of the plaintiffs was adverse to the State, which the firm had formerly represented in the “same or [] substantially factually related matter[s].” Id.

The State concedes that the degree of consultation between the State and Sykes and Vilos in the prior cases was limited to discussions of the amounts of the Medicaid liens that the State asserted and the conditions under which the State would be willing to waive or reduce its lien if a recovery were obtained. The State did not give Sykes and Vilos any litigation related documents except copies of the medical records of their injured clients.

The trial court ruled that “[t]he present representation of Plaintiffs’ counsel presents a conflict arising from the former representation of the interests of the Office of Recovery Services, State of Utah in the same or a substantially factually-related matter.” The court stated that “[i]t would be entirely inappropriate for Plaintiffs’ counsel to sue their former clients [i.e., the State], challenging the underlying statute that they so willingly, either by implication or otherwise, believed to be a valid statute a few short months ago.” Thus, the trial court disqualified Sykes and Vilos on the ground that the Rules of Professional Conduct precluded Sykes and Vilos from attacking a statute that gave rise to the agreements they had signed as a condition of representing Medicaid recipients.

The plaintiffs petitioned for interlocutory appeal, and we granted the petition. The plaintiffs argue that (1) the trial court erred in ruling that Sykes and Vilos’s current representation is “substantially factually relat *61 ed” to their prior agreement to represent the State; (2) the State had no expectation of confidentiality in any information it conveyed to Sykes and Vilos; (3) the State waived any right to object to Sykes and Vilos’s representation of the class action plaintiffs; and (4) the district court abused its discretion by failing to weigh the beneficial and harmful effects of disqualification.

II. RULE 1.9 OF THE RULES OF PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT

A. Standard of Review

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Bluebook (online)
962 P.2d 58, 347 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 1998 Utah LEXIS 61, 1998 WL 397343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houghton-v-department-of-health-utah-1998.