Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates. v. William Pretsch

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 31, 2008
DocketW2008-00653-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates. v. William Pretsch (Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates. v. William Pretsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates. v. William Pretsch, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON November 18, 2008 Session

PSALMS, INC. d/b/a KIRBY PINES ESTATES. v. WILLIAM PRETSCH

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-000459-06 Karen R. Williams, Judge

No. W2008-00653-COA-R3-CV - Filed December 31, 2008

Appellant nursing home appeals the trial court’s award of a portion of the damages it sought from Appellee, the son of one of its residents. The Appellee had previously signed a guaranty to cover expenses that his mother could not meet on her own. At the initial hearing, Appellant failed to meet its burden of proof concerning damages, and the trial court re-opened the proof on its own motion to allow Appellant more time to produce the missing evidence. Finding that the trial court abused its discretion in so doing, and that, in the absence of the new proof, Appellant failed to carry its burden, we reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed

J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J., W.S., and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., joined.

C.J. Barnett, Memphis, TN, for Appellant Paul C. Peel, Memphis, TN, for Appellant

John S. Golwen, Memphis, TN, for Appellee Colleen D. Hitch, Memphis, TN, for Appellee

OPINION

In 1987, Appellee William Pretsch’s parents, William F. and Elizabeth Pretsch, moved into the residential community operated by Appellant Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates (“Kirby Pines”). At that time, Mr. and Mrs. Pretsch asked their son for a letter stating that he would assist with the payment of their bills if necessary. On July 20, 1987, Mr. Pretsch provided his parents with a handwritten letter (the “July 1987 Letter”) that stated, in pertinent part, that he would supplement his parents’ monthly income by a minimum of five hundred dollars per month if needed. On August 7, 1987, Mr. and Mrs. Pretsch executed a Resident Agreement (the “Agreement”) with the Appellant. Mr. Pretsch was not a party to this Agreement and testified that he never saw the Agreement prior to its execution by his parents. According to the record, Kirby Pines offers three types of accommodations: independent living in a “Living Accommodation,” assisted living in a “Personal Care Unit,” and “Permanent Nursing Care” in a nursing facility. At the time Mr. Pretsch’s parents entered Kirby Pines, they resided in independent living. However, the Agreement termed a “life-care contract,” entitled Mr. and Mrs. Pretsch to change residences within the various facilities available at Kirby Pines as their health and needs changed. According to the Agreement, Mr. and Mrs. Pretsch were required to submit a deposit of $64,400.00 at the time they entered Kirby Pines. The Agreement also provides that the resident’s estate will be entitled to a refund of 50% of the deposit at the time of the resident’s death unless the funds have otherwise been exhausted. Under th e Agreement, the resident is entitled to 365 days of “temporary or permanent nursing care.” Thereafter, the resident will be required to reimburse Kirby Pines for “temporary or permanent nursing care” from the funds that would otherwise have been returned to the resident’s estate.

The Agreement provides that Kirby Pines will conduct an annual review of the applicable insurance policies of each resident. To accomplish this, Kirby Pines sends an annual letter and a survey to the residents requesting updated information. Kirby Pines asserts that, if a resident fails to return the survey, it assumes that there have been no changes to the last information provided.

Appellee’s father died in 1994. Prior to that time, Mr. Pretsch asserts that his parents did not share information regarding their finances with him. In fact, Mr. Pretsch states that he did not begin handling his mother’s financial affairs until 2000. Mr. Pretsch contends that, from the time he began managing the payment of his mother’s account at Kirby Pines, there were “numerous billing problems.” Specifically, Mr. Pretsch questioned charges of approximately $400.00 billed by Kirby Pines in 2001. Kirby Pines ultimately retracted this amount from Mrs. Pretsch’s bill. In 2003, Mr. Pretsch questioned a $4,000 charge. Following a meeting with Kirby Pines, Mrs. Pretsch was required to pay only $2,500 of the $4,000. Mr. Pretsch asserts that, at this meeting, Kirby Pines assured him that his mother’s account was fully paid. However, approximately one month later, Kirby Pines failed to bill some $1,300 in monthly pharmacy charges. This omission went on for approximately three months before Mr. Pretsch contacted Kirby Pines to inform it of the error. Kirby Pines subsequently sent a bill for the charges which was paid in full.

According to Kirby Pines, once Mr. Pretsch began managing his mother’s finances, he discovered that his mother had failed to pay the premiums for her supplemental Medicare insurance, which insurance was required under the Agreement. Although Mr. Pretsch attempted to contact the insurance carrier to bring the account up to date and reinstate his mother’s insurance, the company allegedly refused. Consequently, Mr. Pretsch attempted to obtain different insurance coverage for his mother, with no success. Kirby Pines contends that Mr. Pretsch did not notify it of the lapse in Mrs. Pretsch’s Medicare insurance. The record indicates that the Medicare supplemental insurance covers co-pays that Medicare does not cover. According to the record, Medicare (not Kirby Pines) determines the monetary amount charged for services and co-pays. Residents are responsible for co- pays that insurance does not cover. Kirby Pines has contracted with Rehab Care Works to perform physical therapy for its residents. Rehab Care Works performs the services and then bills Kirby Pines. Kirby Pines pays Rehab Care Works and then bills Medicare. Rehab Care Works charges

-2- Kirby Pines 70% of the Medicare fee schedule on a part B plan. Kirby Pines keeps 30% of the payment from Medicare.

According to Kirby Pines, in 2002, Mrs. Pretsch began receiving physical therapy services and nursing home care and/or assisted living services chargeable under Medicare A and B. In 2002, Mrs. Pretsch incurred $570.90 in Medicare B co-pays. In the same year, her Medicare A co-pays totaled $8,018.50. In 2004, she received Medicare A services and incurred $876.00 in Medicare A co-pays.

In December 2002, Kirby Pines hired Renee Rines as their health care accounting manager. This position had been vacant for some six months prior to Ms. Rines’ arrival. Ms. Rines discovered a large backlog of Medicare claims and insurance claims that had not been submitted. In 2003, Ms. Rines discovered the unpaid Medicare claims for Mrs. Pretsch. In 2004, Ms. Rines learned that Mrs. Pretsch’s insurance had lapsed. It was at this time that Ms. Rines notified Mr. Pretsch that his mother had an outstanding debt in the amount of $9,465.40. The outstanding charges purportedly arose from physical and occupational therapy services rendered to Mrs. Pretsch. Specifically, Kirby Pines notified Mr. Pretsch that it was seeking to recover the amount of co-payments that would have been paid by the Medicare Supplement had her insurance not lapsed. As noted above, the Agreement requires Ms. Pretsch to carry Medicare Supplemental insurance to cover these amounts; however, the Agreement also requires Kirby Pines to “review the medical and surgical insurance plan of each Resident annually.” Although it is undisputed that Mrs. Pretsch’s supplemental insurance lapsed in 1994, Mr. Pretsch contends that Kirby Pines’ breach of the Agreement in not performing an annual review of his mother’s insurance coverage should bar recovery of these charges, especially in light of the fact that Kirby Pines sought recovery of the funds some ten years after the lapse.

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Bluebook (online)
Psalms, Inc. d/b/a Kirby Pines Estates. v. William Pretsch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/psalms-inc-dba-kirby-pines-estates-v-william-prets-tennctapp-2008.