Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund v. St. Mary's Hospital of Milwaukee

561 N.W.2d 797, 209 Wis. 2d 17, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 161
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 18, 1997
Docket95-3294
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 561 N.W.2d 797 (Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund v. St. Mary's Hospital of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund v. St. Mary's Hospital of Milwaukee, 561 N.W.2d 797, 209 Wis. 2d 17, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 161 (Wis. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

SCHUDSON, J.

The Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund (PCF) appeals from the trial court's summary judgment dismissing its action against St. Mary's Hospital of Milwaukee. PCF alleged that St. Mary's failed to comply with the requirements of § 655.23(3), STATS. (1983-84), 1 and, therefore, was not *20 entitled to receive approximately $3.6 million in excess insurance payments for three claims PCF paid during the 1985-1986 period of alleged noncompliance. The trial court concluded that St. Mary's had complied with the statute and therefore was entitled to receive the PCF payments. Because we conclude that St. Mary's failed to comply, that PCF was not estopped from seeking recovery, and that PCF was entitled to restitution for its payments to St. Mary's, we reverse.

I. LEGAL BACKGROUND

To analyze the issues in this appeal, it is necessary to understand the statutory relationship between the PCF and health care providers such as St. Mary's Hospital. Recently, the supreme court explained:

The [PCF] was created by the legislature in 1975 in response to a perceived medical malpractice crisis. Concerned about what it viewed as the increasing cost and possible decreasing availability of health care in Wisconsin, the legislature promulgated a new system for processing medical malpractice claims.
As part of this statutory scheme, the legislature established the [PCF] with the intention that it would finance a portion of the liability incurred by health care providers in medical malpractice actions. Health care providers are required to assume financial responsibility for a limited portion of any malpractice claim filed against them, either by purchasing liability insurance, self-insurance, or posting a cash or surety bond.
Health care providers must also pay annual assessments to the [PCF]. From these assessments the [PCF] pays the portion of a successful claim against a health care provider in excess of either the amount of coverage mandated by the statute or the *21 coverage which a provider actually carries, whichever is greater.

Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund v. Wisconsin Health Care Liab. Ins. Plan, 200 Wis. 2d 599, 607, 547 N.W.2d 578, 580-81 (1996) (footnote and statutory citations omitted).

Section 655.27(1), STATS., stated that the PCF is liable "only for payment of claims against health care providers . . . who have complied with this chapter," and § 655.23(5), STATS., limited a provider's primary malpractice liability by providing secondary PCF payments only "if the health care provider has met the requirements of this chapter." Thus, under the clear and unambiguous words of the statutes, if a provider complied with the requirements for participation in the PCF, it was entitled to receive secondary PCF insurance coverage; if a provider failed to comply, it was not entitled to PCF coverage.

As the supreme court noted, to comply with Chapter 655, Stats., a health care provider must, among other things, maintain primary malpractice liability coverage in one of three statutorily-specified ways. Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund, 200 Wis. 2d at 607, 547 N.W.2d at 581. Section 655.23(3)(a), Stats., in part, provided:

Every health care provider permanently practicing or operating in this state either shall insure and keep insured the provider's liability by a policy of insurance issued by an insurer authorized to do business in this state. . ., shall qualify as a self-insurer, or shall furnish to the commissioner a cash or surety bond in accordance with the requirements of this chapter. . . . The submission of a cash or surety bond, or qualification as a self-insurer, shall *22 be subject to the approval of the commissioner and is valid only when approved by the commissioner.

(Emphasis added.) In this case, the parties agree that if St. Mary's maintained primary malpractice insurance so as to qualify for secondary insurance through the PCF, it did so only as a self-insurer; the other two statutory options are not involved. 2 The principal issue therefore is whether St. Mary's "qualified] as a self-insurer."

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The summary judgment submissions were voluminous, consisting of correspondence, affidavits, and numerous documents including the relevant insurance contracts. Distilled to its essence, the undisputed factual record established:

In 1983, St. Mary's applied to the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance (OCI) for approval of its self-insurance plan — a plan developed through its affiliation with the Daughters of Charity National Health System, Inc. (DCNHS), an organization providing insurance-related services to DCNHS member institutions. 3 The OCI rejected the St. Mary's self-insurance plan. According to Robert Luck, an OCI attorney who participated in reviewing the St. Mary's/DCNHS plan, *23 the OCI rejected the plan "because, among other things, the plan involved risk pooling among various hospitals within the DCNHS and would have constituted the unauthorized conduct of the business of insurance in violation of Wisconsin law."

Following the OCI's rejection of its self-insurance plan, St. Mary's, through its insurance agent, Marsh & McLennan, Inc., arranged for Aetna Casualty & Surety Company to "front" the St. Mary's/DCNHS self-insurance plan — i.e., to issue a primary liability policy under the Aetna name with coextensive deductible and coverage limits of $200,000 per claim and $600,000 per year, the applicable primary coverage amounts then required by Chapter 655, STATS. On June 21, 1983, Wayne Taylor, DCNHS Director of Risk Management, wrote a letter to the administrator of St. Mary's explaining that the Aetna "fronting" plan would "allow St. Mary's Hospital to participate in all the practical aspects of the [DCNHS] self-insured program along with the other hospitals in the system." The "effective result of all this," he further explained in his deposition, provided "self-insurance, as opposed to purchasing insurance on a first-dollar basis from an insurance company, where they ultimately assume all of the risk." Thus, in reality, the St. Mary's Aetna fronting policy established the DCNHS insurance arrangement the OCI had rejected. Aetna provided its name; the policy never referred to any involvement of DCNHS.

The St. Mary's/Aetna policy presented another problem. The deductible endorsement provided that Aetna "may pay any part or all of the deductible amount and, upon notification of the action taken, [St. Mary's] shall promptly reimburse [Aetna]" and "pay an additional premium" for each reimbursed claim. *24

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Bluebook (online)
561 N.W.2d 797, 209 Wis. 2d 17, 1997 Wisc. App. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wisconsin-patients-compensation-fund-v-st-marys-hospital-of-milwaukee-wisctapp-1997.