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Posted on Nov 17 2017 1:19PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The
Tennessee Supreme Court issued a very important decision today on the appeal in
the Dedmon case. Many people have
been waiting on this decision from the plaintiff’s side and the defendant’s
side. The Dedmon case was the case
where the Tennessee Court of Appeals ruled that defendants, in personal injury
cases, could introduce evidence of the discounted amounts accepted by health providers
or paid by insurance companies. I
previously blogged on this
prior ruling here.
The
Tennessee Supreme Court reversed the key part of the prior Tennessee Court of
Appeals decision today. The key part in
the new case (and a good summary of the current status of the law on this
issue) is the following:
In sum, we hold that
the definition of “reasonable charges” under the Hospital Lien Act set forth in
West v.
Shelby County Healthcare Corp., 459 S.W.3d 33 (Tenn. 2014), does not apply
directly to determinations of “reasonable medical expenses” in personal injury
cases; the West definition of “reasonable charges” is limited in application to
interpretation of the Hospital Lien Act. We also decline to alter existing law
in Tennessee regarding the collateral source rule. Consequently, the Plaintiffs
may submit evidence of Mrs. Dedmon’s full, undiscounted medical bills as proof
of her “reasonable medical expenses,” and the Defendants are precluded from submitting
evidence of discounted rates for medical services accepted by medical providers
as a result of Mrs. Dedmon’s insurance.
The Defendants remain free to submit any other competent evidence to rebut the
Plaintiffs’ proof on the reasonableness of Mrs. Dedmon’s medical expenses, so
long as the Defendants’ proof does not contravene the collateral source
rule. Thus, we affirm the Court of
Appeals’ decision to reverse the trial court’s grant of the Defendants’ motion
in limine, but we reverse the Court of Appeals to the extent that it held that
the Defendants could introduce evidence of lesser amounts accepted by Mrs.
Dedmon’s medical providers in order to rebut the Plaintiffs’ proof on
reasonableness.
As
a result, this basically returns the status of the law on this issue in
Tennessee to the prior status quo. Usually,
the only evidence that a jury will now hear about the medical bills in a case
is the amount of the medical bills charged by the medical care provider. This effectively greatly inflates (in many
situations) the amount of “medical bills” for an injury. However, this is the law in Tennessee. I expect this will not be the end of this
issue and the Tennessee Legislature will take a look at trying to find a
solution in the coming years.
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Posted on Jul 22 2017 10:10AM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Legislature
passed a new law in 2017 that governs appropriate statutory construction. This is an interesting change that has
application to all of the words in the Tennessee Code that do not have a
definition provided in the code. This
new law was passed as Public Chapter No. 302 and signed into law by Governor Bill
Haslam on May 5, 2017, and it took effect immediately. It is codified now in T.C.A. § 1-3-105. This statute is not often cited to but is
important to know about because it provides definitions for certain words
provided for in the Tennessee Code (such as “property”, “highway”, “real
property”, “age of majority”, “record” and other terms).
This new law provides as
follows:
(b) As used in this code, undefined words shall be given their natural
and ordinary meaning, without forced or subtle construction that would limit or
extend the meaning of the language, except when a contrary intention is clearly
manifest.
It appears to me that
this new statute is designed to prevent judicial overreach in redefining terms
outside of their normal meaning.
Sometimes in cases, key terms in statutes do not have a definition
within the Tennessee Code and the lawyers and the Court must interpret the
term. This new law provides guiding
principles for statutory construction that are intended to prevent odd or
unique interpretation of key terms in statutes.
The only way to interpret a word beyond the “natural and ordinary
meaning” is if the “contrary intention is clearly manifest”. That is a very high standard and should not
be taken lightly. I interpret that
standard to be when the statute actually misuses a word and a contrary
interpretation is compelled by the clear intent of the legislation. This should rarely be applied.
Some specific terms
that are defined in this statute (T.C.A. § 1-3-105) that may be helpful to
review and remember include the following:
(1) “Age of majority” means eighteen (18) years of age or older; except
that when purchasing, consuming or possessing alcoholic beverages, wine or beer
as those terms are defined in titl...
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Posted on Dec 28 2016 4:44PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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An interesting case dealing with a civil procedure
situation was recently decided by Tennessee Court of Appeals. This case is Ace
Design Group Inc. v. Greater Christ Temple Church Inc., No.
M2016-00089-COA-R3-CV 2016 WL 7166408, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016). In this case, the Defendant had a Registered
Agent listed with the Tennessee Secretary of State with a specific
address. Initially the Plaintiff
attempted to serve the Defendant’s Registered Agent at the address listed with
the Secretary of State, however, it was an incorrect address for the Registered
Agent, therefore, the service of process was returned “unserved”. However, subsequent to that, the Registered
Agent was served at his business address after the attorney for the Plaintiff
did some research to determine where the Registered Agent was actually located. As a result, the Registered Agent actually
received service of process of the lawsuit.
Despite this fact, the Defendant Church, did not respond to the
Complaint or the Motion for Default Judgment.
As a result, Default Judgment was entered against the church with
damages totaling approximately $132,000.00.
This case was appealed to the Tennessee
Court of Appeals and the Defendant argued that actual service on the Registered
Agent was not effective because it was not served on the Registered Agent at
the address listed with the Secretary of State.
However, it was undisputed that the Registered Agent was actually served
personally. This argument was quite
confusing because it makes no sense. The
Tennessee Court of Appeals found this argument had no merit. Specifically, the Court found that “in
serving process, it is not the address or location where service is achieved
that is paramount; rather, it is whether the proper party is served that
establishes compliance with the process requirements.” Ace
Design at p. 5. The Court further
stated that “personal service of written notice within the jurisdiction is the
classic form of notice always adequate in any type of proceeding.” citing Mullane v.
Central Hanover Bank and Trust Company, 339 U.S. 306, 313 (1950).
The Defendant also argued that once the
service was returned “unserved” at the address listed with the Secretary of
State, then service needed to be completed at the church’s physical address. The Tennessee Court of Appeals also rejected this
argument. Specifically, it found the
church’s status as a Tennessee corporation required it to have a Registered
Agent in the state pursuant T.C.A. 48-15-101.
This statute provides as follows:
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Posted on Oct 22 2016 1:56PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Court of
Appeals recently dealt with an issue that has not been previously discussed by
Tennessee Appellate courts in Melanie
Jones, Individually and on behalf of Matthew H. V. Shavonna Rachelle Windham,
et al., No. W2015-00973-COA-R10-CV, 2016 WL 943722 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016). The question deal with the situation where an
employer and employee are both sued due to the actions of the employee in
causing an automobile accident (while working for the employer). The employer, in the Answer to Complaint,
admitted they were vicariously liable for the actions of the employee. The question, therefore, was whether the
plaintiff could still proceed with other claims against the employer including
negligent hiring, negligent retention and negligence per se for their own
independent negligent actions when they had already admitted vicarious liability
for the actual accident.
For some reason, the
plaintiff wanted to pursue various individual cause of actions directly against
the employer in this case. Perhaps they
thought it would increase the damages because the employer took actions that
were inappropriate. Interestingly, many
other state courts have decided this issue and they are basically evenly split
on how to handle this situation. Thus, the
Tennessee Court of Appeals went into a detailed assessment of the various
positives and negatives of both avenues.
The Court ultimately held that the “an employer’s admission of vicarious
liability does not bar a plaintiff from proceeding against the employer on
independent claims of negligence.” Jones
at 5.
The Court admitted
that this holding does make it necessary for trial courts to potentially guard
juries from being prejudice by evidence against the employer after vicarious
liability is already admitted. As a
result, the Court discussed in detail the possibility of trying to avoid that
prejudice by using jury instructions or ultimately by bifurcating the
proceedings under Tennessee Rule
of Civil Procedure 42.02. This rule
provides as follows:
The court for convenience or to avoid prejudice may in jury trials order a
separate trial of any one or more claims, cross-claims, counterclaims, or
third-party claims, or issues on which a jury trial has been waived by all
parties. For the same purposes the court may, in nonjury trials, order a
separate trial of any one or more claims, cross-claims, counterclaims,
third-party claims, or issues.
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Posted on Jun 7 2016 3:21PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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A very important
Tennessee Court of Appeals opinion was issued on June 2, 2016. In this case, Jean Dedmon v. Debbie Steelman, No. W2015-01462-COA-R9-CV (Tenn. Ct. App.
June 2, 2016), the Court discussed whether the amount an insurance
company actually pays for medical services in a personal injury action, is, as
a matter of law, the “reasonable” amount of medical expenses. In order to recover medical expenses under
Tennessee law, in a personal injury action, the plaintiff must prove the
medical expenses were reasonable and necessary.
The reason the Dedmon decision is so important is because of the West v. Shelby County Healthcare Corp., 459 S.W.3d 33 (Tenn. 2014) decision. In the West
case, the Tennessee Supreme Court, when interpreting the Tennessee Hospital
Lien Act, essentially found that a hospital’s non-discounted charges reflected
in their lien, were not reasonable because they do not reflect what is actually
being paid in the marketplace. The Court
found that, under the Tennessee Hospital Lien Act, the amount actually paid for
the hospital charges were the reasonable charges for the services provided, not
the amounts billed which were, as a matter of law, unreasonable.
Since the time of the West decision, several trial courts and some Federal
district courts have decided that the West case reasoning also applies to personal injury
actions. They have found that essentially,
in a personal injury action in the State of Tennessee, evidence of the actual
amount actually paid for medical bills is the only amount that can be
introduced into evidence, not the amount billed or charged by the
provider. The reason is, due to
insurance industry dynamics, there is almost always a significant difference in
the amount billed or charged by the provider and the amount actually paid by
insurance, Medicare or otherwise. For
instance, in the Dedmon case, the total amount of “incurred” medical expenses
were $52,482.87 (the amount charged by the providers). However, the plaintiff’s health insurance
carrier only paid $18,255.42. As a
result, there is a significant disparity between the amount billed and the
amount actually paid.
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Posted on Apr 17 2016 3:49PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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A recent case dealt
with an attempted amendment to add personal injury damages after the initial
suit only requested property damages.
The case was State
Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Robert Blondin, No.
M2014-01756-COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 1019609 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2016). This case was about a July 7, 2009 automobile
accident that occurred where an individual sustained personal injury and
property damages. State Farm Insurance
filed a Civil Warrant on May 17, 2010 to recover amounts paid to their own insured
under the uninsured motorist provision of their policy. State Farm sued the allegedly at fault driver
for property damage only as outlined in their initial Civil Warrant. On July 15, 2010, after the 1 year statute of
limitations for personal injury, State Farm filed a motion to amend the Civil
Warrant to assert personal injury damages as well. The General Sessions Court denied the motion
due to the fact the statute of limitations had expired. State Farm then appealed to the Circuit Court
where this request was also denied and then the case was set for trial. State Farm next voluntarily dismissed the
case without prejudice prior to trial.
After the dismissal
without prejudice, State Farm refiled the action in General Sessions Court on
January 31, 2012. This time, State Farm’s
Civil Warrant was for personal injury and property damages. Ultimately, the Circuit Court, on appeal from
General Sessions Court, went forward with the trial and allowed the case to be
tried seeking both personal injury and property damages. The Court awarded personal injury and
property damages at the trial. This case
was then appealed to the Tennessee Court of Appeals over the statute of
limitations issue.
The Tennessee Court of
Appeals reversed the decision of the trial Circuit Court. The Court found that “the statute of
limitations operated to deprive the General Sessions Court of subject matter
jurisdiction to hear the claim for personal injuries”. State
Farm at p. 3. Further, the appeals
and voluntary dismissal by State Farm did not operate to revive or extend the statute
of limitations because the statute of limitations was already extinguished. State
Farm at p. 3. The Court also
discussed State Farm’s argument that the saving statute under T.C.A.
§ 28-1-105 somehow permitted State Farm to re-file the previous action and
rely upon the prior filing of the lawsuit to extend statute of limitation. The Court noted that the saving statute did
permit State Farm to re-file the cause of action but it did not resurrect the
previously barred cause of...
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Posted on Jan 3 2016 4:03PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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A recent Tennessee Court of Appeals decision
dealt with a case where a Trial Judge granted Summary Judgment on behalf of a
defendant and instructed the parties to prepare an Order without first making
any findings of fact or providing a legal basis for the Court’s decision. The case of Bobby
McEarl v. City of Brownsville, No. W2015-00077-COA-R3-CV, 2015 WL 6773544 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 2015) was a premises liability case where the Court granted
summary judgment in favor of the defendant.
However, the Court did not explain its ruling. Instead, the Court simply stated “I don’t
think – I don’t think the city is responsible here. I am granting the defendant’s
motion.” The trial court then instructed
the parties to prepare competing orders for the court to review. The Court ultimately adopted an order
granting summary judgment for various reasons.
The question on appeal was whether this
method for deciding a motion for summary judgment was appropriate under Tennessee
Rules of Civil Procedure 56.04. This
rule provides as follows:
The motion shall be
served at least thirty (30) days before the time fixed for the hearing. The
adverse party may serve and file opposing affidavits not later than five days
before the hearing. Subject to the moving party’s compliance with Rule 56.03,
the judgment sought shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact
and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. The
trial court shall state the legal grounds upon which the court denies or grants
the motion, which shall be included in the order reflecting the court's ruling.
A summary judgment, interlocutory in character, may be rendered on the issue of
liability alone although there is a genuine issue as to the amount of damages.
Additionally, the Tennessee Supreme Court rendered
a decision in 2014 discussing this rule of civil procedure in the Smith
v. UHS of Lakeside, Inc., 439 S.W.3d 303 (Tenn. 2014) decision. The
Tennessee Supreme Court provided direction to Tennessee trial courts that they
are required to state the legal grounds upon which the Court denies or grants a
motion for summary judgment. This is a mandatory requirement.
As a result, the Tennessee Court of Appeals
in the McEarl
case found the trial court’s grant of summary judgment must be vacated and the
cas...
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Posted on Apr 19 2015 6:00PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Sometimes I like to write about specific
issues that have come up in my own law practice. When I confront certain issues, I assume there
are other attorneys and individuals who deal with the same concerns. One of those issues I recently addressed is how
damages are calculated when there is damage to real property. Tennessee courts have been fairly consistent
on this subject over the years. The
Tennessee Court of Appeals’ decision of Fuller
v. Orkin, 545 S.W.2d 103 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1975), discussed the
appropriate measure of damages for real property as follows:
[T]he measure of
damages for injury to real estate is the difference between the reasonable
market value of the premises immediately prior to and immediately after injury
but if the reasonable cost of repairing the injury is less than the
depreciation in value, the cost of repair is the lawful measure of damages. Of course, the trier of fact can also take
into consideration the reasonable cost of restoring the property to its former
condition in arriving at the difference in value immediately before and after
the injury to the premises.
Another resource Tennessee attorneys use on
these kinds of issues are the Tennessee Pattern Jury Instructions. These are the instructions that most
Tennessee judges use to advise the jurors of the law in a case. The current 2014 Tennessee Pattern Jury Instruction
on this specific issue provides as follows:
T.P.I.—CIVIL 14.45 Damage to Real Property
The measure of damage to real property is the lesser of the following
amounts:
1 The reasonable cost of repairing the damage to the property; or
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Posted on Feb 8 2015 11:37PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Supreme Court in Brenda
Benz-Elliott v. Barrett Enterprises, LP, No. M2013-00270-SC-R11-CV, 2015 WL 294635
(Tenn. 2015) has provided an opinion that attempts to clarify how
statute of limitations should be applied for Tennessee cases. Over the years numerous Tennessee appellate decisions
have cited the “gravaman of the complaint” rule in order to determine which
statute of limitations applies to a case.
(Benz-Elliott
at 7, 8). In this case, the Tennessee
Supreme Court noted that defining exactly what this actually means has proven difficult
over time. If you desire to read a
detailed analysis of the historical citations to this rule and the general “fuzziness”
in the actual application of this rule, this case provides a lengthy discussion
of these issues. For the purposes of
this blog post, however, I am mainly going to address the ultimate conclusion
of the Tennessee Supreme Court that is an attempt to clarify confusing
pre-existing precedent.
Ultimately, the Tennessee Supreme Court
found that when choosing the appropriate statute of limitations for a case
“courts must ascertain the gravaman of each claim, not the gravaman of the
complaint in its entirety.” Benz-Elliott
at 8. The Court then found the
court’s should use a specific “two-step approach” test that has previously been
discussed in Tennessee decisions in order to determine the gravaman of a
claim. This holding is stated as
follows:
Today we clarify
that the two-step approach articulated in Vance and applied in Alexander and Harvest Corp.
is the correct framework for courts to employ when ascertaining the gravamen of
a claim for the purpose of choosing the applicable statute of limitations. When
utilizing this approach, a court must first consider the legal basis of the
claim and then consider the type of injuries for which damages are sought. This
analysis is necessarily fact-intensive and requires a careful examination of
the allegations of the complaint as to each claim for the types of injuries
asserted and damages sought. Contract
Law and Practice § 12:78, at 595 (2006).
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Posted on Dec 21 2014 9:20PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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The Tennessee Court of Appeals recently
decided an issue of first impression in Tennessee involving an offer of
judgment. The case of Kaitlyn Alexis
McGinnis v. Aubie L. Cox, No. M2014-00102-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 5512451 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2014),
discussed a situation where a plaintiff provided a Rule 68 offer of judgment and
then revoked it within the ten day time period found in Tennessee Rule of
Civil Procedure 68. After the attempted revocation of the offer,
the defendants went ahead and accepted the offer within the ten day timeframe
provided under Rule 68. The plaintiffs
refused to comply with the offer of judgment.
The defendants filed a motion to enforce the offer of judgment in the
Trial Court. The Trial Court had a
hearing and granted the motion to enforce the offer of judgment. This issue was appealed to the Tennessee
Court of Appeals.
The Tennessee Court of Appeals noted that
there are no Tennessee cases that have addressed this issue in the past. In this case the Court framed the appeal as
being the singular issue of “whether a Rule 68 offer of judgment may be revoked
by the offeror within the ten-day time period for acceptance on the basis that
the offeror changed his mind?” McGinnis at 2. The text of Rule 68 of the Tennessee Rules of
Civil Procedure is as follows:
At any time more than 10 days before the trial begins, a party defending
against a claim may serve upon the adverse party an offer to allow judgment to
be taken against the defending party for the money or property, or to the
effect specified in the offer, with costs then accrued. Likewise a party
prosecuting a claim may serve upon the adverse party an offer to allow judgment
to be taken against that adverse party for the money or property or to the
effect specified in the offer with costs then accrued. If within 10 days after
service of the offer the adverse party serves writt...
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