University of Kansas Hospital Authority v. Board of Franklin County Comm'rs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 26, 2020
Docket120472
StatusPublished

This text of University of Kansas Hospital Authority v. Board of Franklin County Comm'rs (University of Kansas Hospital Authority v. Board of Franklin County Comm'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Kansas Hospital Authority v. Board of Franklin County Comm'rs, (kanctapp 2020).

Opinion

No. 120,472

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS HOSPITAL AUTHORITY, Appellee/Cross-appellant,

v.

BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF FRANKLIN COUNTY, KANSAS, Defendant/Cross-appellee,

and

CITY OF OTTAWA, KANSAS, Appellant/Cross-appellee.

SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 22-4612 requires certain government agencies to pay the medical expenses incurred by persons in their custody.

2. K.S.A. 2019 Supp. 22-4612 conveys the legislature's intent to hold government agencies liable for medical costs incurred for the treatment people receive while in their custody. This statute, in conjunction with K.S.A. 22-4613, is rooted in the principle that government agencies have a duty to treat people in their care humanely.

3. The test for determining whether a government agency has an obligation to pay a person's medical expenses is whether a person is in the agency's custody when the decision was made to obtain medical treatment.

1 4. A formal arrest is not always necessary to show a person is in custody. Instead, whether a person is in custody turns on the facts of each case.

5. A party seeking summary judgment must show that there are no disputed issues of material fact and that judgment may therefore be entered as a matter of law—essentially, that there is nothing the fact-finder could decide that would change the outcome. The district court's task does not change simply because all parties have filed summary- judgment motions on stipulated facts. Each motion must be separately and independently reviewed under these summary-judgment standards.

6. Under K.S.A. 8-2104(d), when a person is stopped by law enforcement for felonious traffic offenses, law enforcement has a legal duty to arrest the offender—to take the offender into custody and bring him or her before a judge. The officer conducting the stop has no discretion whether to take the offender into custody.

Appeal from Wyandotte District Court; ROBERT P. BURNS, judge. Opinion filed June 26, 2020. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with directions.

David Cooper, of Fisher, Patterson, Sayler & Smith, LLP, of Topeka, and Jeannette L. Wolpink and Michael K. Seck, of the same firm, of Overland Park, for appellant/cross-appellee.

Jennifer Martin Smith, of Alderson, Alderson, Conklin, Crow & Slinkard, L.L.C., of Topeka, for appellee/cross-appellant.

Patric S. Linden, Kevin D. Case, and Cory R. Buck, of Case Linden P.C., of Kansas City, Missouri, for defendant/cross-appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., GREEN and WARNER, JJ.

2 WARNER, J.: This case stems from a disagreement over who should pay the hospital bills a man incurred when he was injured in a fiery crash after fleeing from Ottawa police officers. Kansas statutes require certain government agencies to pay for the medical care a person receives while in their custody. The district court, based on stipulated facts, granted summary judgment in favor of the hospital in its claim against the City of Ottawa, finding as a matter of law that the police officers would have been required to arrest the man but for his injuries. We must decide whether the undisputed facts show the injured man was in the city's custody when he received his hospital treatment.

After reviewing the parties' allegations and arguments, we conclude there are unanswered factual questions that prevent us from deciding the billing dispute between the city and the hospital. We therefore reverse the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the hospital and remand the case to resolve these lingering questions. We also affirm the district court's judgment in favor of another government entity, the Franklin County Board of County Commissioners, as the county is not responsible to pay the injured man's medical expenses in this case.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On an April evening in 2014, Ottawa Police Sergeant A.J. Schmidt observed a man speeding through Ottawa in a Ford Expedition without its headlights on. Sergeant Schmidt recognized the driver, who had been arrested the previous evening for drug charges and had been released earlier in the day. Sergeant Schmidt radioed another Ottawa police officer to confirm the man's driver's license had been suspended. The sergeant then attempted to pull the Expedition over. The driver did not stop. Instead, he accelerated, leading Sergeant Schmidt and other officers on a high-speed chase through

3 the city. Sergeant Schmidt later agreed this event was "a felony fleeing and [e]luding situation."

The man drove northbound on Old US-59 Highway. He then entered US-59 Highway, driving the wrong way up the exit-ramp, and headed north toward the Ottawa city limit, still without headlights. Sergeant Schmidt told the officers to continue to pursue the driver until Stafford Road, which is near Ottawa's northern city limit. The Ottawa officers observed the Expedition exit the highway via the southbound on-ramp at Stafford Road. When they exited the highway at Stafford Road via the proper ramp, they no longer could see the vehicle.

Several Franklin County sheriff's deputies had overheard the chase on their radios and apparently began looking for the vehicle around the area where the Ottawa officers had lost sight of it. It did not take long before a Franklin County deputy found a crashed vehicle, fully engulfed in flames, in a ditch near the intersection of US-59 and Stafford Road. The Franklin County deputy approached the burning car and heard a voice calling for help. The deputy immediately radioed for emergency assistance.

The deputy found the car's driver lying on the ground, suffering from what appeared to be fractures of all four of his limbs. Sergeant Schmidt, who had by that time arrived at the crash scene, and several Franklin County deputies began moving the driver away from the flaming vehicle and surrounding grass fire.

When the EMS technicians arrived, they began assisting the driver. Knowing the driver had been recently arrested on drug charges, Sergeant Schmidt asked the man if he had taken any drugs the health care providers needed to be aware of; he responded that he had taken methamphetamine earlier that day. None of the law enforcement officers at the scene searched the driver. He also was never formally placed under arrest, though the parties later stipulated that Sergeant Schmidt had the authority to arrest the driver at the

4 scene of the crash even though it was outside the Ottawa city limits. (Sergeant Schmidt later testified that he advises Ottawa police officers not to take a suspect into custody if that individual needs medical care so the city does not have to pay the medical bills.) The driver was transported to the University of Kansas Medical Center by emergency helicopter.

The driver remained in the hospital for 10 days. During that time, he was placed on a police-hold by Wyandotte County for several outstanding warrants in that jurisdiction and guarded by Wyandotte County officers. Neither the City of Ottawa nor Franklin County placed a hold on him while he was in the hospital. The man's injuries included two broken legs, a broken ankle, a broken arm, a broken wrist, a collapsed lung, and nine fractured ribs. He did not have any health insurance and did not receive Medicaid assistance.

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University of Kansas Hospital Authority v. Board of Franklin County Comm'rs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-kansas-hospital-authority-v-board-of-franklin-county-commrs-kanctapp-2020.