In Re Doctors Hospital, Inc.

6 B.R. 390, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5151
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedMay 12, 1980
DocketBankruptcy 79-00185
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 B.R. 390 (In Re Doctors Hospital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Doctors Hospital, Inc., 6 B.R. 390, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5151 (D.D.C. 1980).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

(Trustee’s Application for Authority to Pile Suits)

ROGER M. WHELAN, Bankruptcy Judge.

The sole issue presented to this court by the Trustee’s application for authority to file suits, and the opposition filed thereto by Group Hospitalization, Inc. (Blue Cross-Blue Shield) (hereinafter “GHI”) is whether the Trustee in Bankruptcy for Doctors Hospital, Inc., David Machanic, Esq., (hereinafter “the Trustee”) should be authorized to institute plenary law suits directly against numerous individual patient subscribers insured by GHI in order to recover for hospital services rendered through September 22, 1979 by the now bankrupt Doctors Hospital. Although Doctors Hospital actually filed its petition in bankruptcy on September 18, 1979 1 , the Trustee in Bankruptcy, by prior court order dated September 18, 1979, was expressly authorized to operate the business which in fact he did through September 22, 1979. As a result of the operation of the business, the Trustee claims that there are approximately $295,481.39 in uncollected accounts receivable. 2 These accounts receivable are, moreover, subject to a valid perfected security interest in favor of Riggs National Bank which is presently owed approximately $138,000.00. 3 This secured creditor, as a party in interest, has a real interest in seeing that maximum realization is made on all accounts receivable, and its interest, in this regard, was noted at the time of trial hearing.

The core of the controversy emerges as a conflict between GHI and Doctors Hospital as a result of an alleged set-off which GHI claims against the amounts now claimed by the Trustee for hospital services to GHI patient subscribers. In substance, GHI claims that Doctors Hospital, as a result of its contractual arrangement with GHI, is obligated to:

“... look only to the corporation [GHI] for payment thereof, hospital service to *392 the participants of the corporation’s plan,

In addition, GHI claims that as a result of prior overpayments made to Doctors Hospital, which includes an advance deposit of $197,800.00, that Doctors Hospital is in fact indebted to it. The Trustee in Bankruptcy, on the other hand, contends that the primary legal responsibility for the payment of these hospital services (both in-patient and out-patient services rendered by Doctors Hospital) rests with the individual patients, and because of the present dispute with GHI and their consequent refusal to pay for such services, that he should be authorized by this court to proceed with direct law suits against the individual patient subscribers. 4

After a hearing in open court on these issues, and after due consideration of the documentary evidence presented by both parties, and after assessing the credibility of the witnesses, the court finds the following facts.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On February 1, 1972, Doctors Hospital and GHI entered into a contractual relationship whereby Doctors Hospital became a participating hospital, and, pursuant to that contract, Doctors Hospital expressly agreed that:

“The Hospital shall furnish, and look only to the Corporation for payment thereof, hospital service to the participants of the Corporation’s plan, according to contracts made between the Corporation and its subscribers, and the same hospital service to participants of other Hospital Service Plans with which the Corporation has an Inter-Plan Service Benefit Agreement;..." 5

Relevant to the continuing relationship between GHI and Doctors Hospital is the undisputed fact that the individual patient subscribers are entitled to specific and designated “hospital services” and these are deemed to be service benefits and not mere indemnity provisions. (See GHI’s Exhibit 2.)

Part of the present controversy centers about an “advance deposit” which GHI advanced to Doctors Hospital 6 and which, the court finds, is a monetary payment to Doctors Hospital for patient services, and which in turn was deposited to Doctors Hospital’s general checking account. In this regard, *393 specific references made to Paragraph XIV 7 which provides that:

“Payments by the Corporation to the Hospital, in additional [sic] to an advance deposit, shall be made promptly at least weekly. Such advance deposit shall recognize, to the extent deemed reasonable and proper and according to the Corporation’s records, the length of stay of the Corporation’s participants; the Hospital’s claim processing time; the corporation’s claim processing time; and the transit time from and to the hospital.” [emphasis added]

The aforementioned contractual provisions specifically links the advance deposit to “the length of stay of the Corporation’s participants” and coupled with the testimony of Benjamin Giuliani, GHI’s vice president, the court finds that this deposit was, in fact, adjusted annually to reflect the various factors relating to patient expense experience.

Furthermore, the testimony of Benjamin Giuliani establishes that this deposit was intended to supply Doctors Hospital with needed operating funds in order to defray daily hospital care rendered to GHI patients. In fact, this witness explained in detail the average hospital stay, the processing time necessary to clear the billed hospital charges, and the time necessary to transmit eventual payment to Doctors Hospital. 8 The court finds, therefore, that a logical nexus exists between the advance deposit and the hospital services rendered to GHI patients. This is further buttressed by the fact that Paragraph XIV, following the payment provisions of the prior two *394 paragraphs (Paragraphs XII and XIII), expressly refers to:

“... in additional] [sic] to an advance deposit ...”

According to the testimony of Benjamin Giuliani, and the accounting figures introduced in evidence (GHI Exhibit 4), there were covered charges of $265,943.13 due to Doctors Hospital as of the close of business in September, 1979. 9 These covered charges were submitted to GHI by Doctors Hospital and were calculated but not paid because of alleged monies due and owing to GHI for prior overpayments made to Doctors Hospital by GHI. These alleged over-payments relate to prior annual audit adjustments which, according to GHI, amount to a net figure of $126,431.00. This is the figure ultimately claimed to be due and owing to GHI as reflected in the affidavit of Benjamin Giuliani 10 .

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Bluebook (online)
6 B.R. 390, 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-doctors-hospital-inc-dcd-1980.