MARIA ISABEL GIRALDO and Juan Gonzalo Villa v. Agency For Health Care Administration

208 So. 3d 244, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 18299
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedDecember 12, 2016
DocketCASE NO. 1D16-0392
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 So. 3d 244 (MARIA ISABEL GIRALDO and Juan Gonzalo Villa v. Agency For Health Care Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MARIA ISABEL GIRALDO and Juan Gonzalo Villa v. Agency For Health Care Administration, 208 So. 3d 244, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 18299 (Fla. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

WELLS, LINDA ANN, Associate Judge.

On September 12, 2010, Juan L. Villa suffered catastrophic injury to his spine when the all-terrain vehicle he was riding overturned. Villa, claiming both economic and noneconomic damages, brought products liability and negligence claims against those allegedly liable for his injuries. Florida’s Agency for Healthcare Administration (“AHCA”), which administers Florida’s Medicaid program, 1 paid for portions of Villa’s medical care. By accepting Medicaid benefits, Villa automatically subrogated his right to third-party benefits for the full amount of medical assistance provided by Medicaid and automatically assigned to AHCA his right, title, and interest to those benefits, other than those excluded by federal'law. See § 409.910(6)(a), (b), Fla. Stat. (20Í4); see also 42 U.S.C. § 1396k(a)(l) (requiring states participating in the federal Medicaid program to provide, as a condition of Medicaid eligibility, assignment to the state the right to payment for medical care from any third party). These same benefits also became subject to an automatic lien in AHCA’s favor “for the full amount of medical assistance provided by Medicaid” as soon as Villa began to receive treatment for which AHCA became obligated to pay. § 409.910(6)(c), Fla. Stat. (2014).

On March 2, 2015, AHCA asserted a $322,222.27 Medicaid lien against any future settlement of, or recovery from, the action Villa had brought to recover for the injuries he had incurred in the all-terrain *246 vehicle accident. AHCA later updated the Medicaid lien amount to $324,607.25. 2

A month later, Villa settled his case against one of a number of defendants in his products liability/negligence action. Although the settlement agreement between these two parties did not itemize the different sums that Villa was to recover for each element of damage that he claimed, 3 it did state that his “alleged damages have a value in excess of $25,000,000.00,” and that Villa and the settling defendant had agreed to allocate $4817.56 of the undifferentiated settlement total to Villa’s claim for past medical expenses. 4

Shortly after settling, Villa’s counsel notified AHCA of the settlement and provided AHCA with a copy of the executed settlement agreement, along with an itemization of Villa’s litigation costs in the tort lawsuit. The letter asked AHCA to advise Villa of the amount AHCA would accept from the settlement proceeds to satisfy its Medicaid lien. AHCA responded claiming entitlement to $321,720.16 of Villa’s settlement predicated on its calculation of the amount payable pursuant to the formula set forth in section 409.910(ll)(f) of the Florida Statutes. See § 409.910(ll)(f)l, Fla. Stat. (2014) (capping AHCA’s recovery at one half of the total amount of the settlement proceeds after deducting attorneys’ fees and costs). 5

Villa then petitioned the Division of Administrative Hearings (DOAH) for a formal administrative proceeding to contest the amount designated by AHCA “as recovered medical expense damages” and for a determination of the amount payable to AHCA to satisfy the agency’s Medicaid lien. See § 409.910(17)(b), Fla. Stat. (2015) (providing that a Medicaid recipient may contest the amount designated as recovered medical expense damages under paragraph (ll)(f)). The matter was tried before an administrative law judge (ALJ) the following October, but before a final order could be entered, Villa died, and the co-personal representatives of his estate stepped in. 6

*247 On December 30, 2015, a comprehensive final order was entered rejecting Villa’s claim that less than the $321,720.16 allocated under the paragraph (ll)(f) formula should be allocated as reimbursement for Villa’s medical expenses. In doing so, the ALJ rejected the notion that the $13,881.79 allocation purportedly agreed to by Villa and the settling third-party tort-feasor (based on their $25,000,000.00 estimate of total damages) constituted clear and convincing evidence that an amount less than the paragraph (ll)(f) amount should be allocated, because “neither the agreed total value of ‘alleged’ damages nor the agreed allocation of settlement proceeds [between Villa and the settling third-party tortfeasor] to compensate for past medical expenses ... can be credited as reasonable products of arms-length adversarial negotiation.”

The ALJ also concluded that two-year old hearsay reports from a vocational rehabilitation specialist and an economist failed to supply the evidentiary support essential to the current paragraph (17)(b) challenge because neither report segregated medical damages from non-medical damages and neither reflected circumstances existing at the time of the eviden-tiary hearing. 7 Lastly, the ALJ rejected Villa’s argument that section 409.910(17)(b) impermissibly required him to include any future medical expense award in calculating the amount that must be allocated from his total recovery as available to satisfy the lien at issue.

Villa 8 here challenges the determination that he failed to “prove, by clear and convincing evidence, that a lesser portion of the total recovery should be allocated as reimbursement for past and future medical expenses than the amount calculated by the agency pursuant to the formula set forth in [section 409.910](ll)(f) or that Medicaid provided a lesser amount of medical assistance than that asserted by the agency.” § 409.910(17)(b), Fla. Stat. (2014) (footnote omitted). Villa claims that the factual findings detailed in the final order are unsupported by competent substantial evidence and that the legal conclusions underpinning the final order are erroneous.

We find no error in any of the ALJ’s factual findings or legal determinations. First, we reject Villa’s claim that because the testimony of the two witnesses he called at the evidentiary hearing (one of whom was his trial attorney) was unrebut-ted, that the ALJ had no choice but to accept that testimony as probative. See Fox v. Dep’t of Health, 994 So.2d 416, 418 (Fla. 1st DCA 2008) (“It is well-established that the ALJ was not required to believe [witness’s] testimony, even if unrebut-ted.”). “[T]he trier of fact is never bound to believe any witness, even a witness who is uncontradicted .... It is not our prerogative to judge the credibility of witnesses .... There is no substitute for seeing and hearing persons testify.” Walker v. Fla. Dep’t of Bus. & Prof'l Regulation, 705 So.2d 652, 655 (Fla. 5th DCA 1998) (J. Dauksch, concurring specially).

*248 More to the point, the burden was on Villa to prove by clear and convincing evidence that a lesser amount was to be allocated from the total recovery. Clear and convincing evidence requires:

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Bluebook (online)
208 So. 3d 244, 2016 Fla. App. LEXIS 18299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maria-isabel-giraldo-and-juan-gonzalo-villa-v-agency-for-health-care-fladistctapp-2016.