Rashidi v. Moser

339 P.3d 344, 60 Cal. 4th 718, 181 Cal. Rptr. 3d 59, 2014 Cal. LEXIS 11291
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
DocketS214430
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 339 P.3d 344 (Rashidi v. Moser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rashidi v. Moser, 339 P.3d 344, 60 Cal. 4th 718, 181 Cal. Rptr. 3d 59, 2014 Cal. LEXIS 11291 (Cal. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

CORRIGAN, J.

In professional negligence actions against health care providers, recovery of noneconomic damages is capped at $250,000. (Civ. Code, § 3333.2, enacted as part of the Medical Injury Compensation Reform Act of 1975 (MICRA).) 1 In any action, liability for noneconomic damages is several only, so that defendants pay in proportion to their share of fault. (§ 1431.2, part of the Fair Responsibility Act of 1986, enacted by passage of Prop. 51.) 2

Here we consider whether a jury’s award of noneconomic damages, reduced by the court to $250,000 under MICRA, may be further diminished by setting off the amount of a pretrial settlement attributable to noneconomic losses, even when the defendant who went to trial failed to establish the comparative fault of the settling defendant. The Court of Appeal held that such a further reduction is required by the MICRA cap.

We disagree. It would be anomalous to allow a defendant to obtain a setoff against damages for which he is solely liable. Neither the text nor the history of section 3333.2 reflects such an intent. Rather, the Legislature sought to *721 address the problem of unpredictable jury awards. The limitation on noneconomic damages restrains settlements indirectly, by providing a firm ceiling on potential liability as a basis for negotiation. Only noneconomic damages awarded in court are actually capped.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Trial Court Proceedings

According to the complaint, 26-year-old Hamid Rashidi went to the emergency room at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (Cedars-Sinai) in April 2007 with a severe nosebleed. He was treated and discharged, but returned the next month with the same symptom. Dr. Franklin Moser examined him and recommended surgery. In an operation performed the same day, Moser ran a catheter through an artery in Rashidi’s leg up into his nose. Tiny particles were injected through the catheter to irreversibly block certain blood vessels. The particles were manufactured by Biosphere Medical, Inc. (Biosphere Medical). When Rashidi awoke after surgery, he was permanently blind in one eye.

Rashidi sued Moser and Cedars-Sinai for medical malpractice and medical battery. He sued Biosphere Medical for product liability, failure to warn, negligence per se, breach of express and implied warranty, and misrepresentation. The theory of liability against Biosphere Medical was that its particles were able to travel through very small blood vessels and collateral veins, causing a significant risk they would migrate to places other than the intended sites. They did so here, causing Rashidi’s blindness. Rashidi claimed Biosphere Medical had failed to disclose this risk, or the fact that the particles were irregular in size. Instead it marketed them as being uniform, allowing particular arteries to be accurately targeted.

Rashidi settled with Biosphere Medical for $2 million and with Cedars-Sinai for $350,000. The case went to trial against Moser alone. Moser presented no evidence of Cedars-Sinai’s fault, and the court ruled that the evidence was insufficient to support instructions on Biosphere Medical’s degree of fault. The jury found that Moser’s negligence caused Rashidi’s injury. It awarded $125,000 for future medical care, $331,250 for past noneconomic damages, and $993,750 for future noneconomic damages. The court reduced the noneconomic damages to $250,000, conforming to the MICRA cap.

Moser sought offsets against the judgment for the pretrial settlements with Cedars-Sinai and Biosphere Medical. The court rejected this claim, finding no basis for allocating the settlement sums between economic and noneconomic *722 losses, and noting that the jury made no finding as to the settling defendants’ proportionate fault. Moser appealed, contending he was entitled to offsets against both the economic and noneconomic damage awards. He did not dispute the ruling that he had made an insufficient showing of comparative fault on the part of Cedars-Sinai or Biosphere Medical. Rashidi cross-appealed, challenging the constitutionality of MICRA.

B. The Court of Appeal Decision

The Court of Appeal held that offsets were required. Code of Civil Procedure section 877 allows a nonsettling tortfeasor to set off the amount of a jointly liable tortfeasor’s settlement against damages awarded at trial. However, tortfeasors are jointly liable for only economic damages. Civil Code section 1431.2 imposes “a rule of strict proportionate liability” on noneconomic damages. (DaFonte v. Up-Right, Inc. (1992) 2 Cal.4th 593, 600 [7 Cal.Rptr.2d 238, 828 P.2d 140].) “[E]ach defendant is liable for only that portion of the plaintiff’s noneconomic damages which is commensurate with that defendant’s degree of fault for the injury.” (Evangelatos v. Superior Court (1988) 44 Cal.3d 1188, 1198 [246 Cal.Rptr. 629, 753 P.2d 585].) 3 Accordingly, as the Court of Appeal recognized, when a pretrial settlement does not differentiate between economic and noneconomic losses, a postverdict allocation is required because “only the amount attributable to the joint responsibility for economic damages may be used as an offset.” (Ehret v. Congoleum Corp. (1999) 73 Cal.App.4th 1308, 1320 [87 Cal.Rptr.2d 363].)

A widely accepted method for making such a postverdict allocation was provided in Espinoza v. Machonga (1992) 9 Cal.App.4th 268, 276-277 [11 Cal.Rptr.2d 498] (Espinoza). The percentage of the jury’s award attributable to economic damages is calculated and applied to the settlement, yielding the amount that the nonsettling defendant is entitled to offset. (Espinoza, at p. 277; see Jones v. John Crane, Inc. (2005) 132 Cal.App.4th 990, 1006 [35 Cal.Rptr.3d 144]; Ehret v. Congoleum Corp., supra, 73 Cal.App.4th at p. 1320; Poire v. C.L. Peck/Jones Brothers Construction Corp. (1995) 39 Cal.App.4th 1832, 1838-1839 [46 Cal.Rptr.2d 631].) Following this formula, the Court of Appeal determined that the percentage of Rashidi’s award attributable to economic damages was 8.62 percent ($125,000 in economic damages divided by the total award of $1,450,000). Applying that percentage to the $2 million settlement with Biosphere Medical, the court concluded that *723 $172,400 of the settlement was for economic losses, completely offsetting the jury’s $125,000 economic damages award. Rashidi does not challenge this aspect of the judgment.

The court performed a different calculation for the Cedars-Sinai settlement. Cedars-Sinai, like Moser and unlike Biosphere Medical, is a health care provider protected by MICRA. Therefore, the court first reduced the jury’s award of noneconomic damages to $250,000 under section 3333.2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
339 P.3d 344, 60 Cal. 4th 718, 181 Cal. Rptr. 3d 59, 2014 Cal. LEXIS 11291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rashidi-v-moser-cal-2014.