Nacino v. Chandler

71 P.3d 424, 101 Haw. 473
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 21, 2002
Docket23572
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 P.3d 424 (Nacino v. Chandler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nacino v. Chandler, 71 P.3d 424, 101 Haw. 473 (hawapp 2002).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, J.

The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (the circuit court) properly reduced from $141,422.19 to $21,213.33 the medical assistance lien which the State of Hawaii, Department of Human Services (DHS) held pursuant to Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 346-37 (1993 & Supp.1997) against the $600,000.00 in settlement proceeds that Appellant-Appellee Gerry Nacino (Nacino), a Medicaid benefits recipient, recovered from a third-party tortfeasor.

We conclude that the circuit court incorrectly reduced DHS’s medical assistance lien amount. Accordingly, we reverse that portion of the Final Judgment. The Final Judgment is affirmed in all other respects. 1

BACKGROUND

The relevant facts in this case are not in dispute. On March 15, 1996, Nacino, who was twenty-two years old, suffered severe and permanent brain and orthopedic injuries when a moped on which he was a passenger and which was being driven by a seventeen-year-old acquaintance, Troy Simio (Sunio), collided with a pick-up truck owned by the City and County of Honolulu (the City). Na-cino’s damages as a result of his injuries included: severe pain and suffering; emotional distress; loss of enjoyment of life; loss of wages and/or lifetime earning capacity; and medical, hospital, rehabilitative, attendant, institutional, nursing, and life care costs. 2

Pursuant to applications submitted by Na-cino or on his behalf, DHS paid for all of Nacino’s medical care and treatment expenses arising out of the moped incident. Each of these applications included one of the following assignment of rights provisions, *475 as required by HRS § 346-29(c) (Supp. 2001) 3 :

(6) ASSIGNMENT AND AGREEMENT:
Assignment of rights: I understand that by applying for medical assistance, I am assigning to the State of Hawaii [ (the State) ], my rights to medical support or any other third party payments for medical care the entire time I am receiving assistance.
(7) ASSIGNMENTS AND AGREEMENT:
• ASSIGNMENT OF RIGHTS: . . . I am assigning to the [State] my rights to any third party payments for medical care. I will cooperate in obtaining third party payments. I must use my household’s private medical coverage before Medicaid will help with eligible costs.

Nacino also executed a separate DHS Assignment of Payment form, which provided, in pertinent part:

FOR VALUE RECEIVED, [Nacino] hereby hereby [sic] assigns to [DHS] ... and authorizes any of my representatives, agents, attorneys or insurers to pay to DHS, from any money due me as compensation for injuries received in, and medical costs incurred as a result of, an accident or incident on or about March 15, 1996 a sum of money equal to that paid by DHS for my hospital, medical and other similar expenses necessitated by said accident or incident.
Should compensation for my injuries received in the above referenced accident be paid to me directly, I agree to reimburse [DHS] the medical costs paid on my behalf as a result of said accident from any judgment, settlement or insurance proceeds received.

On June 28, 1996, Nacino, by his guardian ad litem, filed a lawsuit in the circuit court against Sunio and the City, seeking to recover damages from Sunio and the City as a result of the March 15, 1996 accident. Although authorized by HRS § 346-37(c) (Supp.1997) 4 to intervene in the lawsuit, DHS did not do so. However, DHS did provide numerous notices to the attorneys representing the parties to the lawsuit, as well as interested insurers and other interested parties, that it held an assignment of Nacino’s rights in any recovery and would pursue reimbursement due to it at the appropriate time. DHS also filed a notice in Nacino’s lawsuit of DHS’s “medical assistance lien existing pursuant to [HRS] § 346-37, for medical payments made on behalf of [Nacino].”

There were significant weaknesses in Naci-no’s ease against the City. Regarding liability, the only competent witnesses to the accident were the driver and passenger of the City pick-up truck, who both claimed that the moped was speeding and on the wrong side of the road when the accident occurred. Although Nacino disputed these witnesses’ claim, proving his position would be difficult, since Sunio had “disappeared” before he could be deposed and Nacino himself had very limited recollection of the accident. In addition, the City was prepared to offer evidence that: Nacino and Sunio had been tres *476 passing at the time of the accident; the moped was a stolen vehicle that had been “jury-rigged” to the moped’s battery in order to be operable; and Nacino was contribu-torily negligent for not wearing a helmet or other form of protection and for riding on the back of the moped, which, by law, was allowed to carry only one person, the driver.

By a letter dated March 24, 1998, Nacino’s attorney informed DHS’s attorney of a proposal by the City’s attorney to recommend settlement of Nacino’s case for $600,000.00 anid sought from DHS “a waiver or, if that is not possible, a very substantial discounting of [DHS’s] lien in this matter,” which at the time, amounted to $141,422.19. Nacino’s attorney also proposed establishing a “special needs trust” 5 for the benefit of Nacino, explaining, in part, as follows:

The great advantage this trust has is that it would allow [Nacino] to continue to receive the safety net benefits he currently receives, and the proceeds from the trust, administered by a trustee, could be used to benefit him in ways the government programs do not, by, for example, providing attendant care or companion services which he needs because he is subject to seizures, despite the fact that he is on two anti-seizure medications.... [Nacino’s] girlfriend had to quit work in order to take care of him and be with him during the days, and the trust proceeds could be used to relieve her of this responsibility, in order to allow her to return to school to pursue her desire to be an accountant. I am also advised that it might be possible for the trust to purchase a modest apartment or residence for them; and that pursuant to statute, that residence, if purchased, would be the source of reimbursement to the State. In confidence, my client has expressed interest in a settlement at that amount, if it is possible to get a waiver of the State’s lien in this matter. With a waiver, the amount that would be available to fund the trust after attorney’s fees and costs would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $350-360,-000.00.
On the other hand, if the lien must be repaid, the amount available to fund the trust would be about $210-220,000.00.

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Related

Parkhurst v. Wilson-Coker
848 A.2d 515 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2004)
Nacino v. Koller
71 P.3d 417 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2003)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P.3d 424, 101 Haw. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nacino-v-chandler-hawapp-2002.