Via Christi Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Reed

247 P.3d 1064, 45 Kan. App. 2d 356
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 2011
Docket101,690
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 247 P.3d 1064 (Via Christi Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Reed) 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
Via Christi Regional Medical Center, Inc. v. Reed, 247 P.3d 1064, 45 Kan. App. 2d 356 (kanctapp 2011).

Opinion

Leben, J.:

Ivan Reed’s car collided with a Union Pacific train, and he received treatment for his traumatic injuries at Via Christi Regional Medical Center. Via Christi filed a hospital lien for the more than $80,000 in services it provided to Reed, and then it filed *357 an action to enforce the lien on the $540,000 in proceeds that Reed eventually received from a personal injury settlement with Union Pacific. Reed counterclaimed and alleged that Via Christi’s bill charges were deceptive and unconscionable in violation of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act (KCPA). Via Christi filed a motion for summary judgment on Reed’s counterclaims, and Reed filed a partial motion for summary judgment that sought to declare Via Christi’s lien invalid because Via Christi didn’t comply with all of the statutory requirements for an effective Hen. The district court enforced Via Christi’s entire lien, awarded the hospital the accrued interest on the lien amount, and dismissed Reed’s KCPA claims. Reed appeals.

The district court properly enforced Via Christi’s lien because the public purpose behind hospital liens — to encourage hospitals to treat patients regardless of the patients’ ability to pay — allows less-than-strict compliance with the statutory Hen creation requirements. But the district court improperly enforced the entire hen amount: The record does not show that the district court considered any facts or evidence that would support its conclusion that enforcing Via Christi’s entire lien amount was an equitable distribution of Reed’s settlement proceeds, especially when Reed recovered less than a quarter of his requested damages from Union Pacific.

Finally, the district court properly dismissed Reed’s KCPA claims. Via Christi’s action to enforce its Hen requires the court to enter an equitable or fair order, so Reed can have no claim for unconscionability, which by definition means unfairness. Via Christi was legally prohibited from collecting an inequitable or unfair amount. Nor are his claims of deception successful. He cannot show that he was harmed by anything Via Christi did because Via Christi never sought personal judgment against him on the bills.

We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to enforce Via Christi’s hen and dismiss Reed’s KCPA claims, but we vacate the hen amount awarded and remand the case for the district court to hold a hearing and make an appropriate finding on what portion of the hen constitutes an equitable distribution of Reed’s settlement proceeds.

*358 Factual and Procedural Background

Ivan Reed sustained life-threatening injuries when his car collided with a Union Pacific Railroad train on November 18, 2001. He was initially taken to a hospital in Hutchinson, Kansas, but was quickly transferred to Via Christi Regional Medical Center in Wichita so that he could receive the trauma care he needed. Reed agrees that he received life-saving treatment at Via Christi.

The next day, Reed’s sister signed a form agreement in which the patient agreed to pay any medical insurance benefits he or she received to Via Christi. Although the agreement contained a promise by the patient to pay for the services Via Christi provided, Reed’s sister had crossed this paragraph out and written “Do not agree to pay” next to it. Reed was hospitalized for 14 days and underwent several surgeries during that time. Reed did not have health insurance, and he didn’t qualify for Medicare. Reed did receive MediKan benefits but only for about $2,000 for his last 2 days in the hospital. Reed did not pay the medical bills.

Almost a year after he was discharged from the hospital, on November 4, 2002, Via Christi filed a hospital hen in the amount of $84,774 for the charges it incurred while treating Reed. Via Christi later agreed to reduce its lien amount to $83,366 so that it wasn’t seeking those charges that had been reimbursed by MediKan. Via Christi named Reed’s automobile-insurance company as the alleged hable third party and served the hen on Reed.

Because of his injuries, Reed was disabled and unable to work. On June 2,2003, he filed a personal-injury tort claim against Union Pacific. Reed and Union Pacific began negotiating a settlement in July 2004; Reed notified Via Christi of the settlement negotiations. Via Christi did not amend its hen statement or file a new hospital hen naming Union Pacific as the hable third-party; nor did Via Christi serve Union Pacific with the lien statement as is required by statute. Via Christi demanded its lien amount from the settlement proceeds; Reed replied that Via Christi’s charges were unreasonable.

Through numerous letters exchanged between the parties’ attorneys, Via Christi and Reed agreed that Reed’s attorney would *359 take Via Christi’s reduced hen amount from the settlement proceeds and place it in the firm’s trust account while the two parties worked out their dispute over the charges’ reasonableness. No formal, written trust agreement was executed.

Reed and Union Pacific settled for $540,000 in August 2004. Union Pacific was aware of Via Christi’s charges and of its claim. In the written settlement agreement between Reed and Union Pacific, Reed and his attorneys represented to Union Pacific that there were no outstanding liens “other than the medical hen of Via Christi Health System” and that of the automobile-insurance carrier. Reed’s attorney disbursed all of the Union Pacific setdement proceeds except Via Christi’s claimed hen amount, which was transferred from the firm’s trust account into an interest-bearing bank account. Reed offered Via Christi a $21,000 check to settle the matter; Via Christi returned the check and reasserted its right to the proceeds held in trust. Reed countered with additional complaints that Via Christi’s charges were unreasonable and assertions that the hen was invalid.

In October 2004, Via Christi filed an action against Reed and his attorneys to enforce its hen and compel distribution of the settlement proceeds. Reed’s answer denied any responsibility to distribute the proceeds, asserted that Via Christi’s hen was invalid, and made a counterclaim that Via Christi’s charges were deceptive and unconscionable in violation of the Kansas Consumer Protection Act.

Both parties moved for summary judgment. First, Via Christi moved for summary judgment in its favor on Reed’s KCPA counterclaims. Reed responded by moving for partial summary judgment on the grounds that Via Christi’s hen was ineffective and that the hospital had no right to the settlement proceeds held in trust. After hearing oral argument from both parties, the district court: (1) held that Via Christi’s hen was effective against Reed and denied Reed’s motion; (2) ruled that Via Christi’s use of the healthcare industry’s universal method of billing was valid as a matter of law and granted Via Christi’s motion on Reed’s KCPA counterclaims; and (3) entered an order requiring Reed to disburse to Via Christi tire full amount of its hen. Reed appeals all three rulings.

*360 When the material facts aren’t in dispute, this court reviews the grant of summary judgment without any required deference to the district court’s decision. Smith v. Kansas Gas Service Co., 285 Kan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P.3d 1064, 45 Kan. App. 2d 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/via-christi-regional-medical-center-inc-v-reed-kanctapp-2011.