Langevin v. State

196 Misc. 2d 809, 763 N.Y.S.2d 730, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 971
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJune 27, 2003
DocketClaim No. 95763
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 Misc. 2d 809 (Langevin v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langevin v. State, 196 Misc. 2d 809, 763 N.Y.S.2d 730, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 971 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

[810]*810OPINION OF THE COURT

Donald J. Corbett, Jr., J.

Claimant Daniel J. Langevin1 has been a voluntary admittee to the Rochester Psychiatric Center (RPC) since at least March 1, 1991. According to the claim, he began to complain of pain to his face, jaw and eye on or about February 22, 1995, which allegedly went untreated resulting in an infection of the brain requiring, inter alia, several surgeries. His claim is for damages for personal injuries resulting from the alleged negligence and medical and dental malpractice of the personnel of RPC. Defendant’s answer contains a counterclaim pursuant to Mental Hygiene Law § 43.03 for the cost of the various services provided to claimant at RPC from March 1, 1991 to February 28, 1997, after allowing for Medicare, in the net amount of $1.4 million plus, supplemented in May of 2001 to $1.7 million plus.

Claimants’ motion seeks partial summary judgment dismissing defendant’s counterclaim as an impermissible contingent counterclaim. Defendant’s cross motion seeks summary judgment on its counterclaim, and claimants’ cross motion seeks leave to amend their reply to add new affirmative defenses. Each of these motions will be discussed individually.

Claimants’ initial motion seeks a dismissal of defendant’s counterclaim under state law.2 The defendant’s counterclaim is for the costs of services admittedly rendered to the claimant by RPC. Pursuant to Mental Hygiene Law § 43.01, no person may be denied services because of an inability or failure to pay a fee. Sections 43.01 and 43.03 require the commissioner to establish fees for these services, and liability for these fees is imposed on the patient, among others. Section 43.07 provides the various procedures which may be utilized to collect these fees. While nothing in this section specifically authorizes the use of a setoff for the purpose of collecting these fees, it has been held “that the Comptroller possesses the authority to do so as a function of his constitutional and statutory duty to audit all vouchers before payment.” (Matter of Carlon v Regan, 98 AD2d 544, 546 [1984], affd as mod 63 NY2d 1011 [1984].) The State’s current policy of seeking payment for the services provided by the Department of Mental Hygiene by way of a [811]*811counterclaim in negligence or malpractice actions brought by the patient against the State has been upheld (see, Siegel v Surles, 239 AD2d 115 [1997] [affirming on the reasoning of Justice LebedefFs unpublished decision], appeal dismissed 90 NY2d 934 [1997]; Genao v State of New York, 178 Misc 2d 512 [1998]).

Claimants seek a dismissal of the State’s counterclaim on the basis of a decision rendered by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York in Brown v Stone (66 F Supp 2d 412 [1999]). In Brown, the District Court held that counterclaims for payment of services provided by the Department of Mental Hygiene in malpractice and negligence actions against the State constitute impermissible contingent counterclaims because such counterclaims were contingent on the success of the underlying negligence or malpractice action and, as a matter of state law, contingent counterclaims are proscribed. In reaching this decision, the District Court relied, in part, on Geddes v Rosen (22 AD2d 394 [1965], affd 16 NY2d 816 [1965]), which noted that a counterclaim must be sufficient to support an independent cause of action against the plaintiff in the same capacity in which plaintiff sues. The District Court went on to reason that the “ability to pay” is a condition precedent to liability under the Mental Hygiene Law and that the State effectively has no independent cause of action because the plaintiffs are indigent3 and, therefore, the State cannot meet its burden of proving that the plaintiffs had the ability to pay (see, Brown v Stone, 66 F Supp 2d 412, 431 [1999], supra, citing In re Mangan’s Will, 83 NYS2d 393 [1948]). The District Court’s reasoning in this regard is misplaced. A brief review of the legislative history of the Mental Hygiene Law will hopefully clarify this situation.

Former section 24 of the Mental Hygiene Law contained both contribution and recovery provisions. Historically, a contribution statute authorizes a department which provided care or assistance to compel current contribution from the patient or from a responsible relative. Such provisions generally contain the proviso that the patient or relative could be compelled to contribute only if possessed of sufficient ability to do so during the period when the care or assistance was furnished. [812]*812Indeed, subdivision (4) of former section 24 of the Mental Hygiene Law, the contribution provision, contained such a proviso.4

In contrast, recovery statutes authorize a department to recover from a patient or responsible relative who may not have been possessed of sufficient ability at the time the care or assistance was rendered but who later came into assets. Recovery statutes are intended to permit recovery from windfalls, such as personal injury recoveries or inheritances (see, Matter of Colon, 83 Misc 2d 344 [1975]). Subdivision (6) of former section 24 of the Mental Hygiene Law permitted the commissioner to bring an action against the patient if s/he was later found to be holding assets. Similar to other recovery statutes, there was no proviso requiring the patient to have been of sufficient ability at the time the care or assistance was rendered.

In 1972, the Mental Hygiene Law was recodified. The District Court in Brown v Stone (66 F Supp 2d 412, 431 [1999], supra) states that sections 43.03 and 43.07 of the recodified Mental Hygiene Law have been construed as being recovery statutes and references Matter of Seelen (87 Misc 2d 360 [1976], supra). Nothing in Seelen supports this conclusion. In Seelen, the Surrogate’s Court actually concluded that article 43 of the Mental Hygiene Law was a contribution statute which purportedly authorizes the department to compel current contribution from the patient or a responsible relative. The Surrogate’s Court, while correctly noting that section 43.03 (a) of the recodified Mental Hygiene Law omitted the requirement of the former statute’s contribution provision (former § 24 [4]) that contribution may only be compelled from persons who were of sufficient ability to pay, concluded that the ability to pay was nonetheless to be read into all contribution statutes.

With respect to the recovery provision of the former law (§ 24 [6]), the Surrogate’s Court in Seelen incorrectly stated that this provision was repealed when the Mental Hygiene Law was recodified, but concluded that this repeal was not intended by the Legislature and that sections 43.03 and 43.07 of the recodified law should be construed, as intended, to permit recovery by the department (see, Matter of Seelen, 87 Misc 2d 360, 364, 365 [1976], supra).

Contrary to this conclusion of the Surrogate’s Court in Seelen, the recovery provisions of the former Mental Hygiene Law [813]*813were not repealed when the law was recodified; rather, subdivision (6) of former section 24 was merely replaced by sections 43.03 and 43.07 of the recodified law (see, derivation table for the 1972 recodification of the Mental Hygiene Law attached to defendant’s mem of law as part of exhibit A).

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Bluebook (online)
196 Misc. 2d 809, 763 N.Y.S.2d 730, 2003 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langevin-v-state-nyclaimsct-2003.