Long Beach Memorial Medical Center v. Allstate Ins. Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 19, 2023
DocketB321876
StatusPublished

This text of Long Beach Memorial Medical Center v. Allstate Ins. Co. (Long Beach Memorial Medical Center v. Allstate Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long Beach Memorial Medical Center v. Allstate Ins. Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 9/19/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION SEVEN

LONG BEACH MEMORIAL B321876 MEDICAL CENTER, (Los Angeles County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. 21STCV17810) v.

ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, William F. Fahey, Judge. Reversed with directions. Law Offices of Yoshida & Garcia and Shogo Garcia for Plaintiff and Appellant. Pollak, Vida & Barer, Daniel P. Barer and Anna L. Birenbaum for Defendant and Respondent. INTRODUCTION

Under the Hospital Lien Act (HLA) (Civ. Code, §§ 3045.1- 3045.6), 1 “when a hospital provides care for a patient, the hospital has a statutory lien against any . . . settlement received by the patient from a third person responsible for his or her injuries, or the third person’s insurer, if the hospital has notified the third person or insurer of the lien.” (Mercy Hospital & Medical Center v. Farmers Ins. Group of Companies (1997) 15 Cal.4th 213, 215 (Mercy Hospital).) The HLA prohibits an insurer from paying a patient without paying the hospital the amount of its lien, or as much as can be satisfied from 50 percent of the patient’s recovery from the tortfeasor or insurer. The insurer in this case had notice of the hospital’s lien for treatment provided to the patient and, pursuant to a settlement agreement with the patient, gave him a check for the lien amount made payable to both him and the hospital. Did that comply with the HLA? The hospital, Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, claims it did not and sued the insurer that wrote the check, Allstate Insurance Company, for violating the HLA by making a settlement payment to the patient without paying the Medical Center the amount of its lien. The trial court granted Allstate’s motion for summary judgment, ruling Allstate’s two-payee check, which was never cashed, satisfied its obligation under the HLA. We reach the opposite conclusion: Merely delivering to the patient (or, in this case, his attorney) a check for the lien amount, made payable to

1 Undesignated statutory references are to the Civil Code.

2 both the patient and the hospital, is not payment in satisfaction of the hospital’s lien under the HLA. Therefore, we reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In December 2017 the Medical Center treated Vernon Barnes for injuries he received in a car accident. Afterward Barnes submitted a personal injury claim to Allstate, which insured the driver Barnes claimed was at fault in the accident. The Medical Center informed Allstate by letter that Barnes had incurred $116,714.67 in expenses for his treatment at the Medical Center and that the Medical Center was asserting a lien for that amount under the HLA. In February 2020 Barnes and Allstate settled his claim for $300,000. The settlement agreement provided Allstate would pay this amount by sending Barnes’s attorneys three checks: one made payable to Medicare for $24,230.93, one made payable to Barnes and his attorneys for $159,054.40, and one made payable to Barnes and the Medical Center for $116,714.67, the amount of the lien. The settlement agreement also provided Barnes and his attorneys would indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Allstate and its insured against claims by the Medical Center or anyone else with a statutory right of recovery against Allstate and its insured. Later in February 2020 Allstate sent Barnes’s attorneys a check for $116,714.67 made payable to Barnes and the Medical Center (the February 2020 check). 2 That check, however, was

2 No copy of this check appears in the record, and there is some confusion about whether it included Barnes’s attorneys as

3 never deposited, and by March 2021 it had expired. At that time Allstate sent Barnes’s attorneys a second check for the same amount made payable to the same parties (the March 2021 check). To Allstate’s knowledge, that check was never cashed. In May 2021 the Medical Center filed this action against Allstate, asserting a single cause of action for violating the HLA. The Medical Center alleged that Allstate, having received written notice of the Medical Center’s lien regarding Barnes’s medical treatment, violated the HLA by paying Barnes to settle his personal injury claim without paying the Medical Center the amount of its lien. Allstate filed a motion for summary judgment, contending the Medical Center could not establish one or more elements of its cause of action. Specifically, Allstate argued the undisputed facts established that it “protected the lien by issuing a two-party check including [the Medical Center] as a payee on the check” or, alternatively, that “there has been no payment because the multi-party check has not been cashed.” Allstate did not specify whether the check it referred to was the February 2020 check or the March 2021 check. But the gist of Allstate’s argument appears to have been that, by delivering to Barnes’s attorneys a check for $116,714.67 made payable to Barnes and the Medical Center, Allstate had either (a) made a payment to the Medical Center for the amount of its lien or (b) made no payment to either Barnes or the Medical Center because no such check was ever

payees in addition to Barnes and the Medical Center. Neither party suggests the possible inclusion of Barnes’s attorneys as payees on the check is relevant to the issues in this appeal, and it does not affect our analysis. We treat the check as having been made payable only to Barnes and the Medical Center.

4 cashed. In either event, according to Allstate, the Medical Center could not establish Allstate made a settlement payment to Barnes without paying the Medical Center the amount of its lien. In opposition, the Medical Center agreed the undisputed facts established Allstate had not paid it the amount of its lien because no check payable to the Medical Center had been cashed. The Medical Center disagreed, however, that this also meant Allstate had not made a settlement payment to Barnes. The Medical Center pointed out the settlement agreement between Barnes and Allstate called for Allstate to send Barnes’s attorneys a separate check payable to Barnes and his attorneys for $159,054.40. The Medical Center also cited an exhibit to a declaration by counsel for Allstate in support of the motion for summary judgment that appeared to show just such a check had been issued, mailed, and cashed in February 2020. 3 After a hearing, for which we do not have a reporter’s transcript, the trial court granted Allstate’s motion for summary judgment without written analysis. The Medical Center timely appealed.

3 Allstate asserts that this exhibit was “erroneously- included” [sic] and not properly authenticated and that, had the Medical Center “raised the argument about [this] check in the trial court, Allstate could have responded to that argument during the briefing on the summary judgment motion and could have remedied the incorrect exhibit.” This is an odd assertion, given how clearly the Medical Center raised the argument in its opposition papers (under the heading “The Undisputed Material Facts Show That Vernon Barnes and His Counsel Received Separate Settlement Payment from ALLSTATE of at Least $159,054.40”). In any event, the issue is irrelevant to our resolution of this appeal.

5 DISCUSSION

A. Applicable Law: Summary Judgment Standards “A court may grant a motion for summary judgment only when all the papers submitted show that there is no triable issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” (Fajardo v. Dailey (2022) 85 Cal.App.5th 221, 225, internal quotation marks omitted; see Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (c); Regents of University of California v. Superior Court (2018) 4 Cal.5th 607, 618; Randle v.

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Long Beach Memorial Medical Center v. Allstate Ins. Co., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-beach-memorial-medical-center-v-allstate-ins-co-calctapp-2023.