Opinion
WILLHITE, J.
Verdugo Hills Hospital (Hospital) petitions for a writ of supersedeas directing the trial court to reduce the amount of its appeal bond. Code of Civil Procedure section 917.1 requires the posting of an undertaking to stay a money judgment pending appeal. (Code Civ. Proc., § 917.1, subd. (a)(1).)
It sets the amount of the undertaking, if provided “by an admitted surety,” at “one and one-half times the amount of the judgment.” (§ 917.1, subd. (b).) The Hospital’s appeal is from a medical malpractice judgment which, as stated in the judgment, has a present value of approximately $14.8 million, but which has been entered as a periodic payments judgment under section 667.7 requiring monthly payments that cease in October 2065 or upon plaintiff’s death, whichever occurs first. The trial court calculated the amount of the appeal bond based on the lump sum present value of the judgment. The Hospital contends that the amount of the bond should be calculated only on that portion of the judgment currently due or that may come due during the
appeal. We hold that the lump sum present value of the judgment against the Hospital is the “amount of the judgment” for the purpose of calculating the undertaking required to stay the judgment under section 917.1.
BACKGROUND
Through his guardian ad litem (his mother Nancy Leung), plaintiff Aidan Leung sued Verdugo Hills Hospital and Steven Wayne Nishibayashi, M.D., for professional negligence.
Plaintiff alleged that he was bom at the Hospital in March 2003 showing symptoms of neonatal jaundice, but the Hospital failed to provide his parents sufficient warnings and information about the condition. He also alleged that Dr. Nishibayashi failed to diagnose and treat the condition. As a result, three days after birth plaintiff developed bilirubin deposits in his brain that caused severe brain damage and motor impairment.
The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in July 2007 finding both the Hospital and Dr. Nishibayashi negligent. The jury awarded damages of $78,375 for past medical costs, and $250,000 for noneconomic damages. It awarded $82,782,000 for future medical care, and fixed the present value at $14 million. It awarded $13.3 million for loss of future earnings, with a present value of $1,154,000. Apportioning fault, the jury found the Hospital 40 percent negligent, Dr. Nishibayashi 55 percent negligent, and plaintiff’s parents 5 percent negligent.
Following trial, plaintiff reached a court-approved settlement with Dr. Nishibayashi. He is not a party to this proceeding.
At the Hospital’s request, following lengthy briefing and hearing, the court issued a periodic payments judgment in November 2007 pursuant to section 667.7. In the judgment, the court declared the Hospital jointly and severally liable for 95 percent of all economic damages found by the jury and severally liable for its 40 percent share of noneconomic damages. The court ordered that plaintiff would recover damages from the Hospital as follows: (1) $1,274,793.52, due immediately, representing noneconomic damages, past medical expenses, and a portion of future lost earnings and future medical expenses; (2) $330,055.63, due December 1, 2007, representing future medical expenses and other items from the date of judgment through October 31, 2008; and (3) monthly periodic payments beginning November 1, 2008, pursuant to an attached schedule, this portion of the judgment to cease upon plaintiff’s death or October 1, 2065, whichever occurs first. The court also
awarded $1,085,338.86 in prejudgment interest under Civil Code section 3291, and $221,034.93 in costs.
As part of the judgment, the court ordered the Hospital to provide security for the periodic payments within 30 days in the form of a bond from an admitted California surety, or an annuity from an approved list of companies sufficient to fund the periodic payments. The court also ordered that if the Hospital failed to post such security, then plaintiff would recover from the Hospital the sum of $14,893,277.56, representing the present value of the judgment.
The court issued a separate stay of the judgment to expire 10 days after the last date on which a notice of appeal could be filed. The Hospital appealed from the judgment, and plaintiff filed a cross-appeal.
The Hospital then filed an ex parte application requesting the court to set the amount of the appeal bond under section 917.1. The Hospital posited three alternative judgment amounts against which to apply the 1.5 multiplier: (1) the portion of the judgment presently due, plus that portion of the periodic payments that will come due during the estimated pendency of the appeal; (2) the preceding portions of the judgment, plus the cost of an annuity to secure the periodic payments portion of the judgment; or (3) the present value of the judgment. The Hospital advocated the first alternative. The court, agreeing with plaintiff, adopted the third, and required the Hospital to post a bond in the amount of more than $22 million ($22,339,916.34, or 1.5 times the $14,893,277.56 present value of the judgment).
The Hospital filed a petition for writ of supersedeas in this court, requesting that we set aside the trial court’s ruling and order the amount of the bond set at 1.5 times the amounts of the judgment that are presently due and that will likely come due during the appeal. We summarily denied the petition for failure to show entitlement to extraordinary relief.
The Hospital then posted the required appeal bond of more than $22 million, at an annual premium of $64,680. Twenty days later, even though the posting of the appeal bond stayed the judgment and its requirement of security for the periodic payments, the Hospital purchased an annuity to secure the periodic payments at a premium of more than $5.1 million.
The Hospital moved under section 996.030 to substitute a lesser bond, arguing that the $22 million bond was excessive in light of the purchase of the annuity to secure the periodic payments. Again, the Hospital sought to have the bond amount calculated based on the portion of the judgment presently due plus that portion of the periodic payments that will come due
during the estimated pendency of the appeal. The Hospital calculated the requested bond amount at $5,399,278.41 (assuming the appeal is pending up to Nov. 1, 2012) or $5,802,046.41 (assuming the appeal is pending up to Nov. 1, 2013). The trial court denied the motion.
For the second time, the Hospital petitioned this court for a writ of supersedeas, and for the second time we summarily denied the petition. The California Supreme Court, however, granted the Hospital’s petition for review and transferred the case back to us, with directions to vacate our denial and issue an order to show cause. We complied, and have received additional briefing from the Hospital and plaintiff.
DISCUSSION
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Opinion
WILLHITE, J.
Verdugo Hills Hospital (Hospital) petitions for a writ of supersedeas directing the trial court to reduce the amount of its appeal bond. Code of Civil Procedure section 917.1 requires the posting of an undertaking to stay a money judgment pending appeal. (Code Civ. Proc., § 917.1, subd. (a)(1).)
It sets the amount of the undertaking, if provided “by an admitted surety,” at “one and one-half times the amount of the judgment.” (§ 917.1, subd. (b).) The Hospital’s appeal is from a medical malpractice judgment which, as stated in the judgment, has a present value of approximately $14.8 million, but which has been entered as a periodic payments judgment under section 667.7 requiring monthly payments that cease in October 2065 or upon plaintiff’s death, whichever occurs first. The trial court calculated the amount of the appeal bond based on the lump sum present value of the judgment. The Hospital contends that the amount of the bond should be calculated only on that portion of the judgment currently due or that may come due during the
appeal. We hold that the lump sum present value of the judgment against the Hospital is the “amount of the judgment” for the purpose of calculating the undertaking required to stay the judgment under section 917.1.
BACKGROUND
Through his guardian ad litem (his mother Nancy Leung), plaintiff Aidan Leung sued Verdugo Hills Hospital and Steven Wayne Nishibayashi, M.D., for professional negligence.
Plaintiff alleged that he was bom at the Hospital in March 2003 showing symptoms of neonatal jaundice, but the Hospital failed to provide his parents sufficient warnings and information about the condition. He also alleged that Dr. Nishibayashi failed to diagnose and treat the condition. As a result, three days after birth plaintiff developed bilirubin deposits in his brain that caused severe brain damage and motor impairment.
The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict in July 2007 finding both the Hospital and Dr. Nishibayashi negligent. The jury awarded damages of $78,375 for past medical costs, and $250,000 for noneconomic damages. It awarded $82,782,000 for future medical care, and fixed the present value at $14 million. It awarded $13.3 million for loss of future earnings, with a present value of $1,154,000. Apportioning fault, the jury found the Hospital 40 percent negligent, Dr. Nishibayashi 55 percent negligent, and plaintiff’s parents 5 percent negligent.
Following trial, plaintiff reached a court-approved settlement with Dr. Nishibayashi. He is not a party to this proceeding.
At the Hospital’s request, following lengthy briefing and hearing, the court issued a periodic payments judgment in November 2007 pursuant to section 667.7. In the judgment, the court declared the Hospital jointly and severally liable for 95 percent of all economic damages found by the jury and severally liable for its 40 percent share of noneconomic damages. The court ordered that plaintiff would recover damages from the Hospital as follows: (1) $1,274,793.52, due immediately, representing noneconomic damages, past medical expenses, and a portion of future lost earnings and future medical expenses; (2) $330,055.63, due December 1, 2007, representing future medical expenses and other items from the date of judgment through October 31, 2008; and (3) monthly periodic payments beginning November 1, 2008, pursuant to an attached schedule, this portion of the judgment to cease upon plaintiff’s death or October 1, 2065, whichever occurs first. The court also
awarded $1,085,338.86 in prejudgment interest under Civil Code section 3291, and $221,034.93 in costs.
As part of the judgment, the court ordered the Hospital to provide security for the periodic payments within 30 days in the form of a bond from an admitted California surety, or an annuity from an approved list of companies sufficient to fund the periodic payments. The court also ordered that if the Hospital failed to post such security, then plaintiff would recover from the Hospital the sum of $14,893,277.56, representing the present value of the judgment.
The court issued a separate stay of the judgment to expire 10 days after the last date on which a notice of appeal could be filed. The Hospital appealed from the judgment, and plaintiff filed a cross-appeal.
The Hospital then filed an ex parte application requesting the court to set the amount of the appeal bond under section 917.1. The Hospital posited three alternative judgment amounts against which to apply the 1.5 multiplier: (1) the portion of the judgment presently due, plus that portion of the periodic payments that will come due during the estimated pendency of the appeal; (2) the preceding portions of the judgment, plus the cost of an annuity to secure the periodic payments portion of the judgment; or (3) the present value of the judgment. The Hospital advocated the first alternative. The court, agreeing with plaintiff, adopted the third, and required the Hospital to post a bond in the amount of more than $22 million ($22,339,916.34, or 1.5 times the $14,893,277.56 present value of the judgment).
The Hospital filed a petition for writ of supersedeas in this court, requesting that we set aside the trial court’s ruling and order the amount of the bond set at 1.5 times the amounts of the judgment that are presently due and that will likely come due during the appeal. We summarily denied the petition for failure to show entitlement to extraordinary relief.
The Hospital then posted the required appeal bond of more than $22 million, at an annual premium of $64,680. Twenty days later, even though the posting of the appeal bond stayed the judgment and its requirement of security for the periodic payments, the Hospital purchased an annuity to secure the periodic payments at a premium of more than $5.1 million.
The Hospital moved under section 996.030 to substitute a lesser bond, arguing that the $22 million bond was excessive in light of the purchase of the annuity to secure the periodic payments. Again, the Hospital sought to have the bond amount calculated based on the portion of the judgment presently due plus that portion of the periodic payments that will come due
during the estimated pendency of the appeal. The Hospital calculated the requested bond amount at $5,399,278.41 (assuming the appeal is pending up to Nov. 1, 2012) or $5,802,046.41 (assuming the appeal is pending up to Nov. 1, 2013). The trial court denied the motion.
For the second time, the Hospital petitioned this court for a writ of supersedeas, and for the second time we summarily denied the petition. The California Supreme Court, however, granted the Hospital’s petition for review and transferred the case back to us, with directions to vacate our denial and issue an order to show cause. We complied, and have received additional briefing from the Hospital and plaintiff.
DISCUSSION
The Hospital contends that the amount of the appeal bond necessary to obtain a stay of a periodic payments judgment should be 1.5 times the amount of the judgment that is or may become due during the pendency of the appeal. A writ of supersedeas may issue to correct the amount of the bond required. (See
Gallardo
v.
Specialty Restaurants Corp.
(2000) 84 Cal.App.4th 463, 469 [100 Cal.Rptr.2d 884].) We hold, however, that the trial court properly set the amount of the appeal bond based on the lump sum present value of the judgment, and therefore deny the writ petition.
Section 917.1 provides in relevant part that “[ujnless an undertaking is given, the perfecting of an appeal shall not stay enforcement of [a] judgment or order ... for ...[][].. . [m]oney or the payment of money . . . .” (§ 917.1, subd. (a)(1).)
The purpose of the undertaking requirement is “to
protect the judgment won in the trial court from tiecoming uncollectible while the judgment is subjected to appellate review. [Citation.] A successful litigant will have an assured source of funds to meet the amount of the money judgment, costs and postjudgment interest after postponing enjoyment of a trial court victory.”
(Grant v. Superior Court
(1990) 225 Cal.App.3d 929, 934 [275 CaL.Rptr. 564].) In implementing this purpose, section 917.1 does not tailor the amount of the undertaking to the peculiarities of the judgment. To the contrary, it is rigidly formulaic: “The undertaking shall be for
double the amount of the judgment or order
unless given by an admitted surety insurer in which event it shall be for
one and one-half times the amount of the judgment or order.”
(§ 917.1, subd. (b), italics added.) The statute provides no exception for lump sum judgments payable over time.
It is true, as pointed out by amici curiae California Medical Association et al. (see fn. 3,
ante),
that in the case of appeals from spousal support orders, courts approve setting the amount of the appellate undertaking based on the spousal support installments that will come due during the probable duration of the appeal. (See, e.g.,
Sharon v. Sharon
(1885) 67 Cal. 185, 220 [7 R 456];
Hogan
v.
Locke Paddon
(1928) 91 Cal.App. 606, 612 [267 P. 392];
Schallman v. Haas
(1917) 33 Cal.App. 28, 30 [164 P. 336].) But this approach is the product of necessity in spousal support appeals, there being no other way to calculate the undertaking in the absence of any lump sum award. These decisions do not suggest that in a case such as this, in which there is a lump sum damage award that may be paid over time, the undertaking must be based only on the amounts due or to come due during the appeal rather than the lump sum judgment.
Here, certain portions of the judgment against the Hospital were due immediately, namely, $1,274,793.52 (representing noneconomic damages, past medical expenses, and a portion of future lost earnings and future medical expenses), $1,085,338.86 in prejudgment interest under Civil Code section 3291, and $221,034.93 in costs. The judgment also made $330,055.63
due December 1, 2007 (representing future medical expenses and other items from the date of judgment through Oct. 31, 2008). The periodic payments portion of the judgment was ordered pursuant to an attached schedule, and required monthly payments beginning November 1, 2008, to cease upon plaintiff’s death or October 1, 2065, whichever occurs first. It is undisputed that the present value of the damages (including costs and interest) set forth in the judgment is $14,893,277.56. That figure, which is the amount that would be due were the damages to be paid as a lump sum, is logically the amount of the money judgment for bonding under section 917.1. Requiring the lump sum judgment to be bonded is consistent with the purpose of section 917.1, in that it assures that the entire judgment will not become uncollectible if the judgment debtor becomes insolvent.
Contrary to the Hospital’s assertions, section 667.7 does not transform the present value of this judgment into a judgment of lesser value for purposes of calculating the amount of the required undertaking under section 917.1. Section 667.7 simply provides an alternative method, if future damages exceed $50,000, for ultimately paying those damages. In such a case, the statute requires the court, on a party’s request, to “enter a judgment ordering that money damages or its equivalent for future damages of the judgment creditor
be paid in whole or in part by periodic payments rather than by a lump-sum payment.”
(§ 667.7, subd. (a); see also
id.,
subd. (f) [legislative intent, in part, was to “authorize the entry of judgments in malpractice actions against health care providers which provide
for the payment
of future damages through periodic payments rather than lump-sum payments” (italics added)].)
In entering the periodic payments judgment, the court must determine the details of how the lump sum present value of the damage
award will be paid out over time. These details include setting “the dollar amount of the payments, the interval between payments, and the number of payments or the period of time over which payments shall be made.” (§ 667.7, subd. (b)(1).) In setting such a payment schedule, however, the court is not altering the amount of the judgment. It is simply determining how that judgment will be paid. As the California Supreme Court observed, “the court’s function ... is similar to the authority long exercised by courts in
the
disbursement of the proceeds of a judgment
under a number of well-established statutory schemes.”
(American Bank & Trust Co.
v.
Community Hospital
(1984) 36 Cal.3d 359, 376 [204 CaL.Rptr. 671, 683 P.2d 670], italics added
(American Bank).)
The Hospital contends that the approximately $14.8 million present value of the judgment here cannot be the amount of the judgment under section 917.1. The reason: Under the periodic payments judgment entered by the trial court, the court ordered the Hospital to provide security for the periodic payments within 30 days in the form of a bond from an admitted California surety, or an annuity from an approved list of companies sufficient to fund the periodic payments. Only absent such security did the court order that plaintiff would recover from the Hospital the lump sum $14,893,277.56 present value. According to the Hospital, because it purchased an annuity as security for the periodic payments, the judgment will never be due as a lump sum. Rather, the judgment as it now exists requires periodic payments, approximately $3 million of which is currently due, plus future payments that cease upon plaintiff’s death or October 1, 2065, whichever occurs first.
The Hospital’s purchase of the annuity did not reduce the amount of the judgment pending appeal. That amount was and remains approximately $14.8 million in present value. The purchase of the annuity merely effectuated one of the alternative methods specified in the judgment by which the Hospital could satisfy the judgment. And it did so prematurely,
after
the judgment was already stayed. The court entered the judgment on November 2, 2007, and on the same day granted a stay through and including 10 days beyond the last day on which a notice of appeal could be filed. The Hospital filed its notice of appeal on January 2, 2008. Following the trial court’s setting of the amount of the appeal bond at approximately $22 million, and this court’s initial denial of supersedeas, the Hospital purchased its bond on February 4, 2008. It filed proof of the bond and a notice of stay on February 8, 2008. The Hospital did not purchase the annuity securing the periodic payments until February 28, 2008, 20 days after the entire judgment had been stayed pending appeal. The Hospital’s premature purchase of the annuity was apparently a tactical choice—an attempt to present a change in circumstances so as to justify its renewed supersedeas petition. Regardless, by its purchase of the annuity the Hospital had no more authority to purportedly change the amount of the stayed judgment than did the trial court have the authority to purportedly change it by enforcing the security condition.
The Hospital contends that using the lump sum present value to fix the amount of the appeal bond would violate the purpose of section 667.7. In
American Bank, supra,
36 Cal.3d 359, the court held that section 667.7 is rationally related to MICRA’s (Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act)
goal of reducing insurance costs. The court referred, in part, to MICRA’s legislative history suggesting that “one of the factors which contributed to the high cost of malpractice insurance was the need for insurance companies to retain large reserves to pay out sizeable lump sum awards. The adoption of a periodic payment procedure permits insurers to retain fewer liquid reserves and to increase investments, thereby reducing the costs to insurers and, in turn, to insureds.”
(American Bank, supra,
36 Cal.3d at pp. 372-373.) According to the Hospital, because appeal bonds must be secured by pledged assets, setting the bond amount based on the present value of the entire judgment—an amount that cannot come due during the appeal—undermines the purpose of section 667.7.
We note that the Hospital has presented no evidence concerning the amount of liquid assets it or its insurer has had to pledge to obtain its bond, and no evidence that its or its insurer’s ability to invest has been materially impaired. Nor has the Hospital presented any evidence that the need to post appeal bonds based on the lump sum present value of medical malpractice judgments has overburdened the health care industry or its insurers. More importantly, that the Legislature intended section 667.7 to reduce the amount of liquid reserves necessary to
pay out
sizable lump sum judgments says nothing about whether the Legislature also intended to reduce the amount of assets (which may or may not be liquid) necessary to secure an appellate undertaking to
stay enforcement
of such a judgment. As we have noted, section 667.7 simply provides an alternative method for ultimately paying a future damage award. Nothing in section 667.7 (nor in MICRA as a whole) suggests that the Legislature was concerned about health care providers or their insurers having to pay appeal bond premiums, or about their having to pledge assets for the relatively short time the appeal bond is necessary.
Further, the Hospital’s complaint that it has been required to pledge assets to bond the $14.8 million lump sum judgment rings particularly hollow. The Hospital unnecessarily spent more than $5.1 million to purchase an annuity to secure the periodic payments judgment, even though the judgment was stayed pending appeal. By contrast, the annual premium of the Hospital’s $22 million appeal bond is only $64,680.
Finally, the Hospital contends that section 917.1, by its very language, contemplates that the amount of the judgment to be bonded is the amount that is currently due or that will come due up to 30 days after the remittitur is issued. Section 917.1, subdivision (b), provides in relevant part that “[t]he undertaking shall be on condition that if the judgment or order or any part of it is affirmed . . . , the party ordered to pay shall pay the amount of the judgment or order, or the part of it as to which the judgment or order is affirmed, as entered after the receipt of the remittitur [as well as interest and
costs that may be awarded]. . . . The undertaking shall be for double the amount of the judgment or order unless given by an admitted surety insurer in which event it shall be for one and one-half times the amount of the judgment or order. The liability on the undertaking may be enforced if the party ordered to pay does not make the payment within 30 days after the filing of the remittitur from the reviewing court.” (§ 917.1, subd. (b).)
According to the Hospital, under these provisions the surety will pay any amount due that the judgment debtor does not pay within 30 days of the remittitur. Therefore, the amount of the judgment to be bonded under section 917.1 is necessarily only the portion of the judgment that is currently due or will become due before 30 days after the remittitur. Because under a periodic payments judgment the entire lump sum present value will not be due before issuance of the remittitur, that sum cannot be the amount of the judgment to be bonded.
The Hospital overstates the import of the relevant language. These provisions of section 917.1 do not suggest that the Legislature contemplated only the presently due amounts of a lump sum judgment, or amounts due within 30 days of the remittitur, need be bonded. These provisions do simply this. First, they set a necessary condition of the undertaking: following affirmance of the judgment in whole or in part, the liable party “shall pay the amount of the judgment,” or such part of it as is affirmed, “as entered after the receipt of the remittitur.” (§ 917.1, subd. (b).) Next, they set the amount of the undertaking: 1.5 times the amount of the judgment if given by an admitted surety; otherwise, double the amount. Finally, they provide the timeframe for enforcement of the undertaking: if the party fails to pay within 30 days after issuance of the remittitur, the undertaking may be enforced.
In stating that the undertaking may be enforced, the statute does not state that it may be enforced only for the amounts currently due or due within 30 days after the remittitur, rather than for the entire lump sum judgment. To the contrary, it is entirely consistent with the purpose of section 917.1—to secure the judgment pending appeal—that if the undertaking is enforced, the judgment creditor of a lump sum judgment payable over time be able to receive the entire judgment amount from the surety. If the bond were only in the amount that came due during appeal, the judgment creditor would have no assurance of collecting future payments, despite the fact that the judgment reflects a lump sum damage award.
We conclude that the trial court properly set the amount of the Hospital’s appeal bond at 1.5 times the lump sum present value of plaintiffs judgment against the Hospital.
DISPOSITION
The petition for writ of supersedeas is denied. Costs to plaintiff.
Epstein, P. J., and Suzukawa, J., concurred.
The petition of appellant Verdugo Hills Hospital for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 18, 2009, S168534. George, C. J., did not participate therein.