Travelers Insurance Company v. Lisa Ann Obusek

72 F.3d 1148, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 37148, 1995 WL 764549
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 29, 1995
Docket94-3666
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 72 F.3d 1148 (Travelers Insurance Company v. Lisa Ann Obusek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Insurance Company v. Lisa Ann Obusek, 72 F.3d 1148, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 37148, 1995 WL 764549 (3d Cir. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

McKEE, Circuit Judge.

We are asked to decide if attendant care services are an “allowable expense” under Section 103 of the Pennsylvania No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance Act, 40 Pa. Con.Stats.Ann. § 1009.103 (repealed) (“No-Fault Act”) when provided by accredited, non-family, medical care providers. 1 We must also decide if, under the circumstances of this ease, this question is ripe for adjudication.

For the reasons that follow, we answer both inquiries in the affirmative. While we thus agree with the district court’s disposition of the two primary issues before it, we also conclude that the district court’s judgment fails to clearly adjudicate the issues that the parties are entitled to have resolved. We will therefore reverse the district courts judgment and will remand for further findings of fact and the entry of an unambiguous judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On October 19, 1979, at the age of 18, Lisa Ann Obusek suffered a severe spinal cord injury while riding as a passenger in an uninsured motor vehicle. 2 Lisa’s spinal cord was severed at approximately the C5-C6 level causing her irreversible neurological injury. She was initially treated at Mercy Hospital and later transferred to St. Francis General Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where she underwent a rehabilitation program. She was eventually discharged from St. Francis, and has been living at home with her parents ever since.

Lisa can move her head and neck but has no use of her legs and only limited movement of her arms. She has no grip in her hands but is able to feed herself when equipped with a cuff and splint. She has no control over her bowels or bladder and urinates *1150 through a catheter. Her disabilities are potentially life-threatening if not properly managed. Lisa’s speech and intellectual capacities were not affected by the accident.

A. Required Care

In a medical report dated September 21, 1989, James McCague, M.D., set forth the extent of Lisa’s physical limitations, and noted that those limitations impaired her respiratory functions thereby making her susceptible to choking. The report concluded that this, along with her susceptibility to life threatening infection from bed sores, meant that she needed frequent monitoring and inspection.

In July of 1988, Erie Independence House, (“EIH”) 3 performed a Health Care Evaluation of Lisa to determine what products, services and accommodations she needed to achieve maximum feasible physical, psychological, social and vocational rehabilitation. The resulting Report was based upon a five day evaluation at EIH, a review of Lisa’s medical records, and an on-site evaluation of her home. The EIH Evaluation made specific recommendations as to those things EIH felt essential for Lisa’s rehabilitation and care, including functional equipment, housing modification and adaptations, psychological counseling, physical therapy and attendant care services. The services and accommodations EIH recommended included a regimen of specific exercises and hygiene. It also recommended that “Miss Obusek should ... receive Attendant Care for all activities of daily living.” EIH Evaluation at 7. EIH defined attendant care services as including, but not limited to, “bowel routines; bladder routines; bathing; dressing; weight shifts; transfers; hygiene care; range of motion; house cleaning; exercise routines; leisure time activities; and wheelchair maintenance, etc.” Id. EIH recommended that the attendant care services be provided on a twenty-four hour a day basis. Id. EIH also recommended that Lisa:

1. [r]eceive 68.67 hours weekly ... of direct personal care assistance, with the understanding that more hours may be necessary if she should become ill.
2. [r]eceive 21.64 hours of ancillary assistance weekly, to maintain her living environment.
3. [h]ave an attendant available to her for the remaining 77.69 hours weekly, after personal care and ancillary services are completed. These hours are necessary to avoid problems, and give assistance throughout the week should problems, based on her physical disability occur.

Id. at 6.

EIH defines an attendant or personal assistant as a person “who facilitates physical or social independency (sic) by dping chores required by the disabled person.” Id. at Attachment # 10, p. 100, quoting George Nelson Wright, Ph.D., Total Rehabilitation at 74 (1st Ed.1980). An attendant “is a paid employee who provides regular, in-home personal care.... An attendant is often the most important person in the life of a disabled individual. Attendant care ... reduces the necessity of institutionalizing disabled persons.” Id. at 101, quoting Total Rehabilitation at 746-747. 4

Staff members of EIH testified that the daily attendant care of quadriplegics can be, and usually is, provided by unskilled lay persons. The only requirements for the job are a high school diploma, a driver’s license and having attained the age of 18. In 1989, EIH paid attendant care providers at the rate of $5.00 per hour.

Gilbert Brenes, M.D., Director of the Spinal Cord Injury Program at Harmarville Rehabilitation Center in Pittsburgh, and the rehabilitation expert hired by Travelers, examined Lisa and concluded that she did not require the services of a registered or licensed practical nurse to provide the attendant care she needs. He did, however, con- *1151 elude that Lisa needed 16 hours a day of attendant care. Additionally, he recommended that a licensed practical nurse “be available to change the Foley catheter, to supervise the attendant care so that is done effectively or at any time that [Lisa] runs into respiratory, skin, autonomic or GU complications.” Joint Appendix at 473a.

Lisa’s mother, Anna Rose Obusek, is a high school graduate who worked as a part-time bookkeeper before Lisa’s accident. She is not a registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse and she does not have a license or certification in either medical or rehabilitative care. However, hospital staff advised Mrs. Obusek on Lisa’s care in the months immediately following Lisa’s accident, and Mrs. Obusek has provided the attendant care and services Lisa has needed to survive since then. This care includes preparation of meals; setting-up of eating utensils; cleaning-up after meals, assisting with drinking and taking medication; transferring Lisa between bed and wheelchair; dressing and undressing; assisting with Lisa’s personal hygiene and grooming; changing, emptying and cleaning the urine bags; bowel stimulation; range-of-motion exercises; changing and sterilizing the Foley catheter; cleaning the bedroom; assisting in the use of exercise equipment; turning Lisa in bed at night; doing laundry; and providing maintenance of wheelchairs.

B. Procedural History

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72 F.3d 1148, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 37148, 1995 WL 764549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-company-v-lisa-ann-obusek-ca3-1995.