Krause v. Merickel

344 N.W.2d 398, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1237
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 17, 1984
DocketC5-82-1648
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 344 N.W.2d 398 (Krause v. Merickel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krause v. Merickel, 344 N.W.2d 398, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1237 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

KELLEY, Justice.

Following a swimming accident in which 16-year-old respondent James S. Krause sustained injuries rendering him quadriplegic, he and his father, respondent Stuart Krause, jointly commenced an action to recover damages sustained by James as well as for damages sustained by his father. Before trial the case was settled for $100,-000. Respondents proposed to allocate 70% of the settlement proceeds to the father with the remainder to James. Appellant, *400 the Minnesota Commissioner of Public Welfare, intervened in the pending action asserting that the State of Minnesota had a lien for medical assistance furnished to James, that the proposed allocation failed to award James a pro rata share of the proceeds based on relative damages sustained by the two plaintiffs, and that therefore the state was being deprived of recovery on its medical assistance lien. The trial court held that there need not be pro rata allocation. It did, however, adjust the proposed allocation so the father received approximately 62% and the son approximately 38% of the proceeds. Appellant Commissioner of Public Welfare appeals from that allocation order. By filing a notice of review, respondents raise issues as to the validity of the medical assistance liens filed. We affirm.

On July 21, 1971, when James Krause was a minor 16 years old and a resident of his parents’ home, he received injuries in a swimming accident on the Otter Tail River resulting in quadriplegia. His father, Stuart Krause, was responsible for James’ medical costs during his minority. When James reached the age of majority, he became eligible for medical assistance. Minn. Stat. ch. 256B (1982). Since March 1974, substantially all of James’ medical expenses have been paid by the Department of Public Welfare under that statutory program. As of August 14, 1982, the state had paid $149,769.15 for his medical expenses ($107,608.32 through Wadena County; $42,160.83 through Hennepin County).

Following James’ accident, Stuart Krause had consulted with several attorneys to explore chances of tort recovery against third parties. Krause was advised, in substance, that the chances of recovery were slight to non-existent. However, shortly before the expiration of the statute of limitations, present counsel agreed to prosecute a lawsuit, and Stuart Krause agreed to finance the case if his expenses and losses were paid first out of any settlement or judgment, a proposition to which James, then an adult, acceded. Accordingly, in 1977 Stuart and James jointly filed this action against six individual defendants. 1 Shortly thereafter, a Department of Public Welfare recovery unit wrote the Krauses’ attorney informing him that the state had expended large sums for medical assistance rendered to James and indicated that a medical assistance lien pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 256B.042 (1982) would soon be executed and forwarded. The same letter inquired whether the Krauses’ attorney would represent the county and Department of Public Welfare’s “interests in this matter.” In response, the attorney for the Krauses accepted representation of the state and county’s interests until such time as an actual conflict of interest arose between the Krauses and the state.

A medical assistance lien in the amount of $50,678.29, plus future payments, was filed by the director of the Wadena County Department of Social Services pursuant to “Minnesota Statutes 1963, Chapter 393.10.” Later the Krauses questioned the validity of the 1977 lien. The Department of Public Welfare then filed additional liens with the clerks of the district courts in both Wadena and Hennepin counties in May of 1982. 2

After discussions with Department of Public Welfare personnel sometime prior to the fall of 1981, the Krauses’ attorney concluded that he could no longer represent both the state and counties’ interests and the Krauses’ interests since settlement negotiations were going on, and the interests of the Krauses and the state appeared to conflict. Thereafter he discussed matters relative to the case and the settlement negotiations with an assistant attorney general assigned to the Department of Public *401 Welfare. In September 1981, he sought the state’s approval of the allocation of a possible settlement. The parties could not agree on allocation. Subsequently, the ease was settled early in 1982. The Kraus-es proposed a proceed allocation which would first compensate the father for his costs and losses. Before settling the case, the Krauses’ attorney asked if the state would contribute to the legal costs to try the ease, a proposition to which the state never agreed. After the settlement was made, the state was notified. Thereupon, the Commissioner of Public Welfare intervened in the pending action, making a claim to enforce the state’s lien interest. 3

The Krauses’ proposed allocation of the total settlement of $100,000 was 70% to the father, Stuart Krause, and 30% to the son, James Krause. Appellant-intervenor claimed the proposed allocation was unreasonable and not proportionally related to the actual damages sustained by each plaintiff. Appellant claimed the proposed allocation would have the effect of defeating the state’s lien rights. After hearing, the trial court modified the proposed disposition to the Krauses. It allocated to Stuart Krause $61,933 for out-of-pocket medical expenses he had incurred together with the reasonable value of around-the-clock care he and his wife had given James while he resided in their home. The trial court disallowed Stuart Krause’s claim for loss of James’ services while James was a minor, adding the amount of that claim to the amount allocated to James, making his share $38,067. 4

1. We first consider respondents’ contention that the Wadena County Welfare Department’s 1977 lien filing under Minn. Stat. § 393.10 (1982) is void. That statute provides that the county board or welfare board “may perfect and enforce its lien by following the procedures set forth in sections 514.69, 514.70 and 514.71.” Those latter sections govern the procedure for lien filings by hospitals providing medical services. Respondents now claim this 1977 Wadena lien is void on several grounds: the lien was not filed in the county in which each hospital rendering service was located; there was no service of the lien upon those parties claimed to be liable for the costs (the defendants in the tort action); the lien did not list the names and addresses of the hospitals rendering the services; the lien did not list the name of the operator of each hospital rendering service; the lien did not list the admission and discharge dates of each hospitalization; the lien did not list the addresses of the claimed liable parties; the lien was not filed within the required 180 days after each hospital discharge; and, finally,'the amount of the lien was overstated.

Appellant responds that the Krauses were not prejudiced even if the lien filing was technically defective. Further, appellant argues that adapting the hospital lien filing sections of Minn.Stat. ch. 514 (1982) to a medical assistance lien logically requires the substitution of “county welfare agency” for the words “the operator of such hospital” that appear in section 514.-69.

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Bluebook (online)
344 N.W.2d 398, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krause-v-merickel-minn-1984.