Medical Recovery Svcs V. Eddins

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 2021
Docket47848
StatusPublished

This text of Medical Recovery Svcs V. Eddins (Medical Recovery Svcs V. Eddins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medical Recovery Svcs V. Eddins, (Idaho 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 47848

MEDICAL RECOVERY SERVICES, LLC, ) an Idaho limited liability company, ) ) Boise, February 2021 Term Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) Filed: September 1, 2021 v. ) ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk MICHAEL D. EDDINS, ) ) SUBSTITUTE OPINION. THE Defendant-Appellant. ) COURT’S PRIOR OPINION __________________________________________) DATED JULY 9, 2021 IS HEREBY WITHDRAWN.

Appeal from the District Court of the Seventh Judicial District of the State of Idaho, Jefferson County. Robert L. Crowley, Jr., Magistrate Judge; Stevan H. Thompson, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part, reversed in part, and the case is remanded.

Lowell N. Hawkes, Chartered, Pocatello, attorney for Appellant. Lowell N. Hawkes argued.

Smith Driscoll and Associates, Idaho Falls, attorneys for Respondent. Bryan D. Smith argued.

_________________________________

BEVAN, Chief Justice. This is a medical collection case involving two medical bills. Medical Recovery Services, LLC, (MRS) sued Michael Eddins to collect on debts that had purportedly been assigned to MRS by Intermountain Emergency Physicians and Intermountain Anesthesia. After a bench trial, the magistrate court dismissed MRS’s complaint, holding MRS lacked standing because it failed to prove a valid assignment occurred. MRS appealed to the district court. That court reversed, holding the magistrate court erred in limiting the admission of two exhibits that MRS relied upon to establish that Eddins’ accounts had been validly assigned to it. Alternatively, the district court held Eddins was judicially estopped from raising the assignment issue at trial because he did not raise 1 it earlier during the litigation. Eddins timely appealed to this Court. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND On March 22, 2014, Eddins went to the emergency room at Eastern Idaho Regional Medical Center (EIRMC) complaining of abdominal pain. Eddins’ appendix was removed and other medical services were performed on his behalf. Eddins received medical treatment from Intermountain Emergency Physicians (IEP) and Intermountain Anesthesia (IA) related to these procedures. Eddins did not pay for the services and the two healthcare providers allegedly assigned the accounts to MRS for collection. On April 20, 2015, MRS filed a complaint against Eddins to collect $996.22 for services he received from IEP, and $1,633.66 for services he received from IA. Eddins filed an answer asserting the charges were not reasonable and demanding a jury trial. Eddins later filed an amended answer and jury demand. On April 4, 2016, MRS filed a motion for summary judgment, which the magistrate court denied after concluding there were material issues of fact regarding the reasonableness of the charges for services provided to Eddins. The parties waived a jury trial and a bench trial was held on April 24, 2018. At the outset, MRS noted the only issue the court addressed at summary judgment was the reasonableness of the fees and asked whether that would be the only issue for trial. Eddins replied he did not have a problem acknowledging he received treatment in the ER and that there was an appendectomy, but reiterated his concerns about the reasonableness of the charges, stating:

I believe everything fits within reasonableness. I would stipulate that before the suit was filed, there was [sic] demand made, letters sent, or letter, whatever. There’s some documents on that that typically we wouldn’t go in; but if he wants to put those in to show that context, I probably wouldn’t have a problem with that. And I – in a big scope I do agree that reasonableness is what we’re talking about here. During trial, MRS sought to introduce two exhibits, Exhibit 2 and Exhibit 6, which purported to show the assignment to MRS of Eddins’ obligations to IEP and IA. Exhibit 2 is relevant to IEP’s claim. It is titled “ASSIGNMENT OF ACCOUNT,” and provides, in relevant part:

WE HEREBY ASSIGN AND TRANSFER OUR CLAIM AGAINST Michael D. Eddins IN THE AMOUNT OF $883.00 OVER TO MEDICAL RECOVERY SERVICES, LLC, WITH FULL POWER AND AUTHORITY TO DO AND PERFORM ALL LEGAL ACTS NECESSARY FOR THE 2 COLLECTION, SETTLEMENT, COMPROMISE OR SATISFACTION OF SAID CLAIM, EITHER IN THE NAME OF THE UNDERSIGNED OR IN THE NAME OF THE AGENCY. (Capitalization in original). Exhibit 2 is signed by Kerrie Finuf, the business officer manager of IEP. Exhibit 6 contains identical language but assigns IA’s claim for $1,448 against Eddins to MRS. Exhibit 6 is signed by Jennifer Waddell of IA. At trial, MRS attempted to introduce Exhibits 2 and 6 during Taylor Thomas Lugo’s testimony. Lugo is the president of MRS and has no direct connection to either medical entity. Eddins objected on foundation, arguing there was no proof from either medical firm that these were valid assignments. Eddins expressed that he would not object to the admission of Exhibit 2 for the limited purpose of showing MRS relied on it. MRS conveyed that Eddins’ foundation objection would be addressed later in the trial when the signatory of Exhibit 2, Ms. Finuf, testified about the document. At that time, MRS agreed to the limited admission of Exhibit 2 solely for the purpose of showing MRS relied on it. When MRS asked to introduce Exhibit 6, Eddins lodged the same objection, stating, “I don’t have a . . . problem, [y]our Honor, for the same reason as the other one, that it’s submitted for purposes of showing they relied upon it. They have not made a showing of actual authority.” Counsel for MRS replied that he would follow up with an additional witness. The magistrate court ruled it was admitting Exhibit 6 for the limited purpose at that time. Later in the trial, Finuf testified she had worked for IEP for 14 years and that “her doctors” put her in charge of all the business aspects of the company, which included assigning billing accounts to MRS for collection as needed. MRS then asked the court to admit Exhibit 2 without limitation to show that the account was properly assigned to MRS. Eddins renewed his objection, arguing that Finuf could not give the time or circumstances, or even the identity, of the person who gave her specific authority to make assignments. The magistrate court reserved ruling to allow the parties to submit more briefing on the issue. Both parties submitted post-trial briefing, however, it is not included in the record on appeal, so we are unable to ascertain what the parties argued in regard to the foundation for Exhibits 2 and 6. MRS never called another witness at trial to clarify the foundation for Exhibit 6. On August 29, 2018, the magistrate court issued its memorandum decision. The court began by noting it had not received testimony or evidence from any officer or director at IEP regarding Finuf’s authority to make assignments on its behalf. Likewise, the court did not receive 3 testimony from Jennifer Waddell, the signatory of Exhibit 6, nor did it receive evidence from any officer or director at IA regarding the authority or agency of Ms. Waddell to make assignments for IA. The magistrate court concluded that MRS lacked standing because it failed to prove the individuals who signed Exhibits 2 and 6 had authority to make assignments for either IEP or IA. Accordingly, the magistrate court dismissed MRS’s claims against Eddins without reaching any conclusion as to the reasonableness of the charges. The magistrate court later awarded attorney fees and costs against both medical entities. On January 7, 2019, MRS filed a timely notice of appeal to the district court. There are no documents that were filed with the district court in the record before this Court. On January 23, 2020, the district court entered its opinion and order on appeal, reversing the magistrate court’s decision and remanding the case.

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Medical Recovery Svcs V. Eddins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medical-recovery-svcs-v-eddins-idaho-2021.